Title: Polycystic Kidney Disease
1Polycystic Kidney Disease
- Definition
- 1. Hereditary disease characterized by cyst
formation and massive kidney enlargement - 2. Adult form of disorder is autosomal dominant
polycystic kidney disease and accounts for 10 of
persons in End Stage Renal Disease (ESRD) - Pathophysiology
- 1. Renal cysts are fluid-filled sacs affecting
nephrons cysts fill, enlarge, multiply thus
compressing and obstructing kidney tissue renal
parenchyma atrophies, becomes fibrotic - 2. Cysts occur elsewhere in body including liver,
spleen
2Polycystic Kidney Disease
- Manifestations
- 1. Disease is slowly progressive symptoms
develop in age 30 40s - 2. Common manifestations include
- a. Flank pain
- b. Microscopic or gross hematuria
- c. Proteinuria
- d. Polyuria and nocturia (impaired ability to
concentrate urine) - e. UTI and renal calculi are common
- f. Hypertension from disrupted renal vessels
- g. Kidneys become palpable, enlarged, knobby
- h. Symptoms of renal insufficiency and chronic
renal failure by age of 50 60
3Polycystic Kidney Disease
- Collaborative Care Determine extent of
polycystic kidney disease - Diagnostic tests
- 1. Renal ultrasonography primary choice for
diagnostic assesses kidney size, identifies and
locates renal masses cysts, tumors, calculi - 2. Intravenous pyelography (IVP) evaluate
structure and excretory function of kidneys,
ureters, bladder - 3. CT scan of kidneys detects and differentiates
renal masses
4Polycystic Kidney Disease
- Management
- 1. Mainly supportive prevent further renal
damage from UTI, nephrotoxic substances,
obstruction, hypertension - 2. Fluid intake of 2000 2500 mL to prevent UTI,
calculi - 3. Control of hypertension with ACE inhibitors
and other antihypertensive agents - 4. Eventually require dialysis or transplantation
(typically good candidates)
5Polycystic Kidney Disease
- Nursing Care and Nursing Diagnoses
- 1. Risk for Ineffective Coping address genetic
counseling and screening for family members - 2. Excess Fluid Volume
- 3. Anticipatory Grieving
- 4. Knowledge Deficit of measures to preserve
kidney function
6 Clients with Renal Failure
- Definition
- 1. Condition in which kidneys are unable to
remove accumulated metabolites from blood leads
to altered fluid, electrolyte and acid-base
balance - 2. May be due to kidney (primary disorder) or
resulting from another disease in another organ
or systemic (secondary disorder) - 3. Classified as acute (abrupt onset and may be
reversible) or chronic (develops slowly and
insidiously with few symptoms until kidneys are
severely damaged and unable to meet bodys
excretory needs) - 4. Common and costly disease with people with End
Stage Renal Disease requiring dialysis or
transplant to live - 5. 5 year survival rate for clients on dialysis
is 31.3
7 Clients with Renal Failure
- Acute Renal Failure (ARF)
- 1. Definition
- a. Rapid decline in renal function with azotemia
fluid and electrolyte imbalances - b. High mortality rate but is related to clients
being seriously ill and aged - Risk Factors
- a. Major surgery or trauma
- b. Infection
- c. Hemorrhage
- d. Severe heart failure, liver disease
- e. Lower urinary tract obstruction
- f. Use of nephrotoxic contrast media and
medications
8 Clients with Renal Failure
- Pathophysiology involved with cause categories
- a. Prerenal
- 1. 55 60 cases of ARF
- 2. Cause Conditions that affect renal blood flow
and perfusion - A .Decrease vascular volume
- B .Decrease cardiac output
- C .Decrease vascular resistance
- b. Intrarenal
- 1. 35-40 cases of ARF
- 2. Cause Acute damage to renal parenchyma and
nephron - a. Acute glomerulonephritis
- b. Vascular disorders including vasculitis,
malignant hypertension, arterial or venous
occlusion
9 Clients with Renal Failure
- c. Acute Tubular Necrosis (ATN) Destruction of
tubular epithelial cell with abrupt decline in
renal function from - 1. Prolonged ischemia (gt2 hours) as with surgery,
severe hypovolemia, sepsis, trauma, burns - 2. Nephrotoxins
- a. Aminoglycoside antibiotics
- b. Radiologic contrast media
- c. Other potential drugs NSAIDs, heavy metals,
ethylene glycol (antifreeze) - 3. Nephrotoxins have increased risk with clients
with preexisting renal insufficiency or state of
dehydration - 4. Rhabdomyolysis excess myoglobin from skeletal
muscle injury clogs renal tubules (muscle trauma,
drug overdose, infection) - 5. Hemolysis red blood cell destruction
10 Clients with Renal Failure
- Postrenal
- 1. lt5 cases of ARF
- 2. Cause Obstructive prevents urine excretion
- a. Benign prostatic hypertrophy
- b. Renal or urinary tract calculi or tumors
11 Clients with Renal Failure
- Course and Manifestations of ARF in 3 phases
- a. Initiation Phase
- 1. Lasts hours to day
- 2. Begins with initiating event ends when
maintenance phase begins - 3. Good prognosis if treated at this phase
- 4. Few manifestations identified when
maintenance phase begins - b. Maintenance Phase
- 1. Characterized by significant fall in GFR and
tubular necrosis - 2. Oliguric or non-oliguric but kidneys not
eliminating wastes, water, electrolytes, acids
azotemia, fluid retention, electrolyte imbalances
(hyperkalemia, hypocalcemia, hyperphosphatemia),
acidosis (impaired hydrogen ion elimination) - 3. Anemia after several days due to suppressed
erythropoetin secretion impaired immune function
12 Clients with Renal Failure
- 4. Salt and water retention leading to
hypertension and risk for heart failure and
pulmonary edema - 5. Hyperkalemia cardiac dysrhythmias and EKG
changes, muscle weakness, nausea, diarrhea - 6. Confusion, disorientation, agitation or
lethargy, hyperreflexia, possible seizures, coma - 7. Vomiting, decreased or absent bowel sounds
- c. Recovery Phase
- 1. Progressive tubule cell repair and
regeneration return of GFR to pre-ARF levels - 2. Diuresis occurs as kidney recover but BUN,
Creatinine, potassium and phosphate remain high - 3. Renal function improves rapidly first 5 25
days but improvement may continue for up to a
year
13 Clients with Renal Failure
- Collaborative Care
- a. Prevention of ARF is goal for all clients,
especially those at high-risk - 1. Preserve kidney perfusion by adequate vascular
volume, cardiac output and blood pressure - 2. Limiting use of nephrotoxic medications or
using minimal effective dose, maintaining
hydration, monitoring renal function tests - b. Treatment goals
- 1. Identify and correct underlying cause
- 2. Prevent additional renal damage
- 3. Restore urine output and kidney function
- 4. Compensate for impaired renal function
maintain fluid and electrolyte balance
14 Clients with Renal Failure
- Diagnostic tests to identify ARF
- a. Urinalysis
- 1. Fixed specific gravity 1.010 (low)
- 2. Proteinuria, if glomerular damage
- 3. Presence of red blood cells (glomerular
dysfunction), white blood cells (inflammation),
renal tubule epithelial cells (ATN) - 4. Cell casts (protein and cellular debris molded
in shape of tubular lumen) brown color may
indicate hemoglobinuria or myoglobinuria - b. Serum BUN and creatinine
- 1. Creatinine rises rapidly (24 48 hours) and
peaks in 5 10 days rise is slower if output
maintained - 2. Halt in rise of BUN and Creatinine signals
onset of recovery
15 Clients with Renal Failure
- Serum Electrolytes
- 1. Monitored to determine whether to initiate
dialysis - 2. Moderate rise in potassium
- 3. Hyponatremia related to water excess
- d. CBC showed moderate anemia and low hematocrit
(Iron and folate may be low and add to anemia) - e. Renal ultrasound used to identify any
obstruction, identify acute from chronic renal
failure - f. CT scan identify obstruction and kidney size
- g. IVP, retrograde pyelography, or antegrade
pyelography - 1. Assess renal structure and function
- 2. Retrograde and antegrade testing less toxicity
from contrast media - h. Renal biopsy determine cause, differentiate
acute from chronic
16 Clients with Renal Failure
- Medications
- a. Intravenous fluids and blood volume expanders
to restore renal perfusion - b. Low dose Dopamine (Intropin) intravenous
infusion to increase renal blood flow and improve
cardiac output - c. Diuretic Furosemide (Lasix) or osmotic
diuretic such as mannitol along with intravenous
fluids washes out nephrons prevents oliguria
reducing azotemia and electrolyte imbalance - d. Antihypertensive medications including ACE
inhibitors to limit renal injury
17 Clients with Renal Failure
- Medications to prevent possible complications
- 1. Prevention of gastrointestinal bleeding (at
risk due to stress, impaired platelet function) - a. Antacids
- b. H2 receptor antagonists
- c. Proton-pump inhibitors
- 2. Hyperkalemia serum K gt 6.5 mEq/L puts client
at risk for cardiac arrest - a. Calcium chlorides
- b. Bicarbonate
- c. Insulin and glucose
18 Clients with Renal Failure
- d. Sodium polystyrene sulfonate (Kayexalete)
- 1. Removes potassium from body primarily in large
intestine - 2. If given orally, is combined with sorbitol
- 3. May be given as retention enema with tap water
enema to follow after 30 60 minutes - 3. Hyperphosphatemia
- a. Aluminum hydroxide (AlternaGEL, Amphojel,
Nephrox) - b. Binds with phosphates in GI tract and is
eliminated from bowel
19 Clients with Renal Failure
- Fluid Management
- a. Once vascular volume and renal perfusion
restored, fluids are restricted - b. Often intake is calculated by adding output
from previous 24 hours and 500 ml for insensible
losses - c. Fluid balance monitored by daily weights and
serum Na level
20 Clients with Renal Failure
- Dietary Management
- a. Renal insufficiency and underlying disease
creates increased rate of catabolism (breakdown
of body proteins) and decreased rate of anabolism
(tissue repair) - b. Client needs adequate nutrition and calories
to prevent catabolism but protein intake needs to
be limited to minimize azotemia - c. Protein limited to 0.6g/kg body weight per
day protein should be of high biologic value
(contains essential amino acids) - d. Carbohydrate intake is increased for adequate
calories and protein-sparing effect
21Clients with Renal Failure
- Dialysis
- a. Dialysis is the diffusion of solute molecules
across semipermeable membrane from area of higher
solute concentration to lower concentration - b. Dialysis used to remove excess fluid, waste
products from client with renal failure can
rapidly remove nephrotoxins from blood
22A hemodialysis system
23Continuous arteriovenous hemofiltration (CAVH)
24An arteriovenous fistula
25An arteriovenous shunt in the forearm
26Options for long-term vascular access for
hemodialysis
27Peritoneal dialysis
28Manual peritoneal dialysis via an implanted
abdominal catheter (Tenckhoff catheter)
29Clients with Renal Failure
- Hemodialysis Dialysis process
- a. In this type of dialysis, blood is taken from
client via vascular access and pumped into a
dialyzer blood is separated from the dialysate
(dialysis solution) by semipermeable membrane - b. Processes of diffusion and ultrafiltration
remove waste products, electrolytes, excess water - c. Glucose, electrolytes, water can pass through,
but larger molecules (protein, red blood cells)
are blocked - d. Substances can be added to dialysate to
diffuse into the blood of the client - e. Client with ARF may undergo hemodialysis daily
initially, then 3 4 times/week according to
client condition 3 4 hours at a time
30Clients with Renal Failure
- Complications associated with hemodialysis
- a. Hypotension, most common, related to changes
in osmolality, rapid removal from vascular
department, vasodilation - b. Bleeding related to platelet function and use
of heparin during dialysis - c. Infection, local or systemic Staphylococcus
aureus septicemia associated with infected
vascular access site higher rates of hepatitis B
and C, cytomegalovirus, HIV in hemodialysis
clients
31Clients with Renal Failure
- 13. Continuous Renal Replacement Therapy (CRRT)
- a. Technique used, which allows more gradual
fluid and solute removal than hemodialysis used
for clients with ARF unable to tolerate
hemodialysis - b. Done over period of 12 hours or more
- 14. Vascular Access for Hemodialysis
- a. Acute or temporary access is gained inserting
double lumen catheter into subclavian, jugular,
or femerol vein - b. Blood is drawn from proximal portion of
catheter and returned to circulation through
distal end of catheter
32Clients with Renal Failure
- Arteriovenous (AV) fistula created for longer
term access for dialysis - 1. Surgical anastomosis of artery and vein in
non-dominant arm, usually radial artery and
cephalic vein - 2. Usually cannot use fistula for hemodialysis
access for a month while it matures - 3. Nurse or client can assess functional fistula
for complications - a. Thrombosis (clotted off) check for palpable
thrill, audible bruit - b. Infection check for redness, drainage
- 4. Venipunctures and blood pressures should not
be done in arm with the AV fistula - 5. AV fistulas are commonly used for vascular
access for dialysis clients with chronic renal
failure
33Clients with Renal Failure
- Peritoneal dialysis process involves
- a. Peritoneal membrane of client is used as
dialyzing surface - b. Warmed sterile dialysate instilled into
peritoneal cavity through a catheter that has
been inserted into peritoneal cavity - c. Metabolic waster products and excessive
electrolytes diffuse into dialysate while it
remains in abdomen - d. Water diffusion is controlled by glucose in
the dialysate which acts as an osmotic agent - e. Fluid is drained off by gravity into sterile
bag at set intervals, thus removing waste
products and excess fluid
34Clients with Renal Failure
- Disadvantages of peritoneal dialysis
- a. Dialysis is more gradual and may be slow for
ARF - b. Risk of peritonitis
- c. Contraindicated for clients with abdominal
surgery, peritonitis, significant lung disease - Health Promotion Prevention of ARF
- a. Maintenance of fluid volume and cardiac output
- b. Reduce risk of exposure to nephrotoxins
- c. Report output lt 30 ml per hour in clients at
risk - d. Report dehydration, monitor renal function
tests in clients receiving nephrotoxic
medications
35Clients with Renal Failure
- Nursing Diagnoses for clients in ARF
- a. Excess Fluid Volume
- b. Imbalanced Nutrition Less than body
requirements - c. Deficient Knowledge
- Home care Client who is recovering from ARF
will need teaching for prescribed diet and fluid
intake, avoidance of nephrotoxins, prevention of
infection, continue under medical supervision
36Clients with Renal Failure
- Client with Chronic Renal Failure (CRF)
- Definition
- a. Progressive renal tissue destruction and loss
of function - b. May progress over many years without being
recognized until kidneys are unable to excrete
metabolic wastes and regulate fluid and
electrolytes End-stage Renal Disease (ESRD) - c. Incidence is increasing especially in older
adults higher in African Americans, Native
Americans - d. Conditions causing chronic renal failure
diffuse bilateral disease of kidneys with
progressive destruction and scarring diabetes is
leading cause of ESRD then hypertension
37Clients with Renal Failure
- Pathophysiology and Manifestations of Stages
- a. Decreased Renal Reserve Early Stage
- 1. Unaffected nephrons compensate for lost
nephrons - 2. GFR is about 50 of normal
- 3. Client is asymptomatic
- 4. BUN and serum creatinine are normal
- b. Renal Insufficiency
- 1. GRF falls to 20 50 of normal
- 2. Azotemia and some manifestations
- 3. Insult to kidneys could precipitate onset
renal failure (infection, dehydration, exposure
to nephrotoxins, urinary tract obstructions)
38Clients with Renal Failure
- c. Renal failure
- 1. GRF lt 20 of normal
- 2. BUN and serum creatinine rise sharply
- 3. Oliguria, manifestations of uremia
- d. End-stage renal disease (ESRD)
- 1. GRF lt 5 of normal
- 2. Renal replacement therapy necessary to sustain
life
39Clients with Renal Failure
- ESRD Uremia (urine in blood)
- a. Early manifestations
- 1. Nausea, apathy, weakness, fatigue
- 2. Progresses to frequent vomiting, increasing
weakness, lethargy, confusion - b. Fluid and electrolyte effects
- 1. Urine less concentrated with proteinuria and
hematuria - 2. Sodium and water retention
- 3. Hyperkalemia (Muscle weakness, paresthesia,
EKG changes) - 4. Hyperphosphatemia, hypocalcemia,
hypermagesemia - 5. Metabolic acidosis
40Clients with Renal Failure
- Cardiovascular effects
- 1. Systemic hypertension
- 2. Edema and heart failure pulmonary edema
- 3. Pericarditis metabolic toxins irritate
pericardial sac less often now with dialysis - 4. Cardiac tamponade fluid in pericardial sac
- Hematologic effects
- 1. Anemia contributing to fatigue, weakness,
depression, impaired cognition, impaired cardiac
function - 2. Impaired platelet function
- Immune system effects
- 1. WBC declines
- 2. Humoral and cell-mediated immunity impaired
- 3. Fever suppressed
41Clients with Renal Failure
- Gastrointestinal effects
- 1. Anorexia, nausea, vomiting, hiccups
- 2. GI ulcerations, increased risk for GI bleeding
- 3. Uremic fetor urinelike breath odor
- Neurologic effects
- 1. Changes in mentation, poor concentration
- 2. Fatigue, insomnia
- 3. Psychotic symptoms, seizures, coma
- 4. Peripheral neuropathy restless leg
syndrome, sensations of crawling, prickling - 5. Muscle weakness, decreased deep tendon
reflexes, gait disturbances
42Clients with Renal Failure
- Musculoskeletal effects
- 1. Renal osteodystrophy (renal rickets)
characterized by osteomalacia (bone softening)
and osteoporosis - 2. Bone tenderness and pain
- Endocrine and metabolic effects
- 1. Elevated uric acid levels risk for gout
- 2. Resistance to insulin, glucose intolerance
- 3. High triglyceride and lt HDL levels resulting
in accelerated atherosclerotic process - 4. Menstrual irregularities reduced testosterone
levels - Dermatologic effects
- 1. Yellowish hue to skin
- 2. Dry skin with poor turgor
- 3. Pruritis due to metabolic wastes deposited in
skin - 4. Uremic frost crystallized deposits of urea on
skin
43Clients with Renal Failure
- Collaborative Care
- a. Eliminate factors that further decrease renal
function - b. Maintenance of nutritional status with minimal
toxic waste products - c. Identify and treat complications of CRF
- d. Preparation for dialysis or renal
transplantation
44Clients with Renal Failure
- Diagnostic Tests Identify CRF and monitor renal
function by following levels of metabolic wastes
and electrolytes - a. Urinalysis fixed specific gravity at 1.010
excess protein, blood cells, cellular casts - b. Urine culture identify infection
- c. BUN and serum creatinine evaluate kidney
function - 1. BUN levels
- a. Mild azotemia 20 50 mg/dL
- b. Severe renal impairment gt 100 mg/dL
- c. Uremic symptoms gt 200mg/dL
- 2. Creatinine levels gt4 mg/dL indicate serious
renal impairment - d. Creatinine Clearance evaluates GFR and renal
function - 1. Decreased renal reserve 32.5 130 mL/min
- 2. Renal insufficiency 10 30 mL/min
- 3. ESRD 5 10 mL/min
45Clients with Renal Failure
- e. Serum electrolytes monitored throughout
course of CRF - f. CBC moderately severe anemia with hematocrit
20 30 low hemoglobin reduced RBCs and
platelets - g. Renal ultrasonography CRF decreased kidney
size - h. Kidney biopsy diagnose underlying disease
process differentiate acute from chronic
46Clients with Renal Failure
- Medications
- a. General effects of CRF on medication effects
- 1. Increased half-life and plasma levels of meds
excreted by kidneys - 2. Decreased drug absorption if phosphate-binding
agents administered concurrently - 3. Low plasma protein levels can lead to toxicity
when protein-bound drugs are given - 4. Avoid nephrotoxic meds or give with extreme
caution - b. Diuretics (furosemide, other loop diuretics)
- 1. Reduce edema
- 2. Reduce blood pressure
- 3. Lower potassium
- c. Antihypertensive medications ACE inhibitors
preferred - d. Sodium bicarbonate or calcium carbonate
correct mild acidosis - e. Oral phosphorus binding agents (calcium
carbonate, calcium acetate) to lower phosphate
levels and normalize calcium levels - f. Aluminum hydroxide for acute treatment of
hyperphosphatemia
47Clients with Renal Failure
- g. Vitamin D supplements to improve calcium
absorption - h. To treat dangerously high potassium levels
- 1. Intravenous bicarbonate, insulin, glucose
- 2. Sodium polystyrene sulfonate (Kayexalate)
- i. Folic acid, iron supplements to combat anemia
- j. Multiple vitamin supplement
- Dietary and Fluid Management
- a. Early in course of CRF diet modifications to
slow kidney failure, uremic symptoms, and
complications - b. Restrict proteins (40 gm/day) of high biologic
value - c. Increase carbohydrate intake (35kcal/kg/day)
- d. Limit fluid to 1 2 L per day limit sodium
to 2 g/day - e. Restrict potassium (60 -70 mEq/day) no salt
substitutes - f. Restrict phosphorus foods (meat, eggs, dairy
products)
48Clients with Renal Failure
- Renal Replacement Therapies considered when
medications and dietary modifications are no
longer effective - a. Hemodialysis establish vascular access
(create AV fistula) months ahead - b. Peritoneal dialysis can be initiated when
indicated training client and/or family involved - c. Transplantation tissue typing and
identification of living related potential donors
including health assessment of donor - Dialysis
- a. Considerations
- 1. Dialysis manages ESRD, but does not cure it
- 2. Hemodialysis or peritoneal dialysis is
constant factor of life - 3. Depending on individual client situation and
total health, client may prefer death to dialysis
49Clients with Renal Failure
- Hemodialysis for ESRD
- 1. Treatments are 3 times per week for 9 12
hours - 2. Specific dialysis orders according to body
size, residual renal function (based on that
days current lab test results), dietary intake,
concurrent illnesses - 3. Complications during treatment are hypotension
and muscle cramps dialysis disequilibrium
syndrome - 4. Long term complications are infection and
vascular access problems - 5. Cardiovascular disease is leading cause of
death for hemodialysis clients higher death rate
than clients on peritoneal dialysis or
transplanted
50Clients with Renal Failure
- Peritoneal Dialysis for ESRD
- 1. Continuous ambulatory peritoneal dialysis
(CAPD) most common - 2. 2 liters of dialysate instilled into
peritoneal cavity and catheter sealed empty and
replace every 4 6 hours - 3. Continuous cyclic peritoneal dialysis (CCPD)
uses delivery device during nighttime hours and
continuous dwell during day - Advantages over hemodialysis
- a. Eliminates vascular access and heparinization
- b. Avoids rapid fluctuation in extracellular
fluid - c. Diet intake is more liberal with fluids and
nutrients - d. Regular insulin can be added to dialysate to
manage hyperglycemia for diabetics - e. Client more able to self-manage
51Clients with Renal Failure
- Disadvantages of peritoneal dialysis
- a. Less effective metabolite elimination
- b. Risk for infection (peritonitis dialysate
returns cloudy should be straw colored) - c. Serum triglyceride levels increase
- d. Altered body image with peritoneal catheter
52Clients with Renal Failure
- Kidney Transplant
- a. Background
- 1. Treatment of choice for ESRD
- 2. Primarily limited by availability of kidneys
- 3. Many persons on waiting list for kidney
- 4. Improves survival and quality of life for ESRD
client - b. Organ Donors
- 1. Majority are from cadavers
- 2. Transplants from living donors increasing
- 3. Close match between blood and tissue type
desired HLA are compared 6 in common is perfect
match - 4. Living donors must be in good physical health
nephrectomy is major surgery and remaining kidney
must be healthy
53Placement of a transplanted kidney.
54Placement of a transplanted kidney in the right
iliac fossa
55Clients with Renal Failure
- Cadaver donors
- 1. Cadaver kidney from persons who
- a. Meets criteria for brain death
- b. Are aged lt 65 years old
- c. Are free of systemic disease, malignancy, or
infection including HIV, hepatitis B, C - 2. Kidney removed and preserved by hypothermia
- a. Transplant in 24 48 hours
- b. Use technique continuous hypothermic
pulsatile perfusion, and transplant up to 3 days - 3. Donor kidney placed in lower abdominal cavity,
renal artery, vein, and ureter are anastomosed
56Clients with Renal Failure
- Immunosuppressive therapy
- 1. Necessary to block immune response that would
reject transplanted organ - 2. Medications include
- a. Glucocorticoids prednisone and
methylprednisolone used for maintenance and
treatment of acute rejection episodes - b. Azathioprine inhibits cellular and humoral
immunity metabolized by liver - c. Mycophenolate mofetil more potent and minimal
bone marrow suppression - d. Cyclosporine affects cellular immunity is
hepatotoxic and nephrotoxic
57Clients with Renal Failure
- Rejection
- 1. Can occur at any time
- 2. Acute rejection
- a. Occurs within months of transplant
- b. Cellular immune response with T cells
- c. Few manifestations
- 1. Rise in serum creatinine
- 2. Possibly oliguria
- d. Treatment
- 1. Methylprednisolone
- 2. OKT3 monoclonal antibody
- 3. Chronic rejection
- a. Develops months to years post transplant
- b. Major cause of graft loss
- c. Involves both humoral and cellular immune
response - d. Manifestations (same as renal failure)
- 1. Progressive azotemia
- 2. Proteinuria
- 3. Hypertension
58Clients with Renal Failure
- Complications of kidney transplant
- 1. Hypertension
- 2. Glomerular lesions with manifestations of
nephrosis - 3. Increased risk for myocardial infarction and
stroke - Complications associated with long-term
immunosuppression - 1. Infection bacterial, viral, fungal in blood,
lung, CNS - 2. Tumors carcinoma in situ in cervix,
lymphomas, skin cancers - 3. Steroid use leads to bone problems, peptic
ulcer disease, cataract formation
59Clients with Renal Failure
- Health Promotion
- a. Ensure all clients with impaired renal
function are well hydrated, especially while
receiving nephrotoxic drugs - b. Encourage clients with ESRD to explore
transplant options - Nursing Diagnoses
- a. Impaired Tissue Perfusion renal
- b. Imbalanced Nutrition Less than body
requirements - c. Risk for Infection
- d. Disturbed Body Image
60Clients with Renal Failure
- Home Care
- a. CRF and ESRD are long-term processes requiring
client management - b. Extensive teaching required
- 1. Monitoring health status
- 2. Compliance with fluid and dietary restriction
and medications - 3. Care involved with hemodialysis, peritoneal
dialysis, or living with transplant -