Title: Kidney disease in hypertension and diabetes. Diagnosis, treatment.
1Kidney disease in hypertension and diabetes.
Diagnosis, treatment.
- Ludmila Brunerova
- II. Dpt of Internal Medicine FNKV
- and Mediscan Euromedic
2- Diabetic nephropathy
- Nephropathy in hypertension
3Diabetic nephropathy - definition
- nephropathy caused by diabetes (Kimmelstiel
Wilson glomerulosclerosis as a microangiopathy
disease) - nephropathy as a macroangiopathy disease in
diabetes - urinary tract infection in diabetic patients
4Kidney disease in diabetes
- ? Diabetic nephropathy (DN)
- ? Non-diabetic nephropathy
- ? glomerular
- ? primary glomerulonephritis
- ? secondary glomerulopahies
- ? non-glomerular
- ? renovascular disease
- ? chronic TIN (tubulointerstitial nephritis)
- ? necrosis of papilla
- ? polycystic renal disease
- ? reflux nephropathy
- ? Iatrogenic renal impairment (drugs,
radiocontrast)
5Pathophysiology
Hyperglycaemia
Glycation endproducts (AGE)
Vasoactive systems
Hemodynamic changes
activation of signal transduction PKC, MAP
kinase, NF-?B
Reactive oxygen radicals
Growth factors
Cell cycle changes
Tubulointerstitial fibrosis
Proteinuria
Glomerulosclerosis
Renal failure
6(No Transcript)
7Epidemiology
- 4-8 diabetic patients
- type 1 diabetes mellitus
- proteinuria 25-45 type 1 diabetic patients
- microalbuminuria 20-30 type 1 diabetic patients
- maximal prevalence after 15 years of diabetes
duration - small risk of development of diabetic nephropathy
after 25 years of diabetes duration
8- type 2 diabetes mellitus
- prevalence 25 after 15 years of diabetes
duration ( Pima Indians 50) - year incremental in incidence of microalbuminuria
15-25 in bad control of risk factors
9Epidemiology of chronic renal failure in diabetic
patients
- good evidence
- since 1990 diabetic nephropathy has been one of
the three most common causes of renal failure - prevalence of diabetics in dialysis therapy 35,
mortality 29 (versus 20 in nondiabetic patients)
10Phases of diabetic nephropathy
- Phase 1 hyperfiltration-hypertrofic
- . functional changes
- hyperfiltration (? GF o 20-40)
- hyperperfusion
- renal hypertrophy
- asymptomatic
11- Phase 2 latent
-
- . normalization of functional changes, onset of
morphologic changes - after 2-4 years of diabetes duration
- GF ? or normal, albuminuria not present
- thickening of basal membrane
- mesangial thickening
- asymptomatic
12- Phase 3 incipient diabetic nephropathy
- . progression of morphologic
changes, microalbuminuria, normal function - after 6-15 years of diabetes duration
- GF normal, typical morphologic changes
- microalbuminuria (30-300mg/24 hours)
- in 20 DM1, 80 progress to phase 4, marker of
nephropathy progression - in 40 DM2, only 20-40 progress to phase 4,
marker of endothelium dysfunction (cardiovascular
morbidity and mortality) - ? asymptomatic, or hypertension in DM2
13- Phase 4 manifest diabetic nephropathy
- . proteinuria, renal insufficiency
- after 10-20 years of diabetes duration
- proteinuria gt 300mg/24 hours, 15-40 incremental
per year - GF ? in 0,17 ml/s/year renal insufficiency
- hypertension, nephrotic syndrome, progression of
other diabetic complications, complications of
renal insufficiency
14- Phase 5 chronic renal failure, need for RRT
- gt 20 years of diabetes duration
- gt 7 years of proteinuria duration
- high mortality (cardiovascular complications)
- complications of renal failure
15Lab tests
- diagnosis of DN persistent albuminuria gt
30mg/24 hours (2/3 measurements in 6 months), in
presence of diabetes, after exclusion of other
renal disease - urine chs
- examination of proteinuria
- examination of renal function
- Ultrasound of kidneys
16Proteinuria
- physiological 15-25mg/24 hours
- mikroalbuminuria 30-300mg/24 hours
(20-200ug/min), - Transient 30-100mg/24 hours resp. 20-70ug/min
- persistent 100-300mg/24 hours resp 70-200ug/min
- albuminuria gt 300mg/24 hours (resp.
200ug/min)0,5g/day - gt3,5g/24 hours nephrotic proteinuria
17Evaluation of renal function
- S-crea
- GFR
- MDRD
- Cystatin C
S-crea (umol/l)
900
500
100
0,2
1,0
2,0
GFR (ml/s)
18Principles of diagnosis I.
- Diagnosis clinical (ADA, 2003)
- Progressing proteinuria in patients with
longeterm history of type 1 DM gt 10 let - Microalbuminuria preceded
- With diabetic retinopathy
- Without microscopic hematuria
- With normal ultrasound finding
19Principles of diagnosis- II.
- Diagnostic problems in type 2 DM
- Proteinuria can be present in time of diagnosis
- Coincidence with retinopathy is less frequent in
type 2 DM - Microscopic hematuria in progressed stages of
diabetic nephropathy - Relatively frequent concomittance with non
diabetic nephropathy
20Dif dg
- Typical clinical-laboratory finding for DN
- Long history of diabetes
- Diabetic retinopathy present
- Mikroalbuminuria (longterm)? proteinuria ?
nephrotic proteinuria ? renal insufficiency - Renal biopsy not indicated
21Dif dg
- Typical finding in renovascular disease
- Elderly, sclerotic
- With renal insufficiency (s-crea 130-200umol/l)
- Small proteinuria (lt1-2g/24 hours)
- Hypertension
- Ultrasound asymetry, bilateral small kidneys,
reduced cortex - Biopsy not indicated
- Doppler, MRA, DSA
22Dif dg
- Atypic finding in patient with DM
- Rapid progression of proteinuria and renal
insufficiency - Short history of diabetes, no retiopathy
- Glomerular erythrocyturia
- Discrepancy ultrasonography vs clinical
- Chronic renal insufficiency without proteinuria
and/or retinopathy - Renal biopsy indicated to exclude
glomerulonephritis
23Dif dg
- inflammation sediment
- With positive cultivation urinary tract
infection, asymptomatic bakteriuria - With sterile pyuria TBC, necrosis of renal
papilla
24Metabolic control diabetes, Lipids, obesity Glycaemic control (IIT, event. gliquidon, low protein diet), weight reduction
smoking stop smoking
hypertension albuminuria Optimal BP control with target BP lt 130/80mmHg Renoprotective ACEi sartans
Urinary tract infection Early treatment
25angiotenzinogen
Cascade after ACEi
renin
angiotenzin I.
AT1R
Cascade after sartans
ACE
chymase
Cascade after direct inhibition of renin
angiotenzin II.
Inacive peptides
bradykinin
NO, PG
AT1R
AT2R
vasoconctriction, atherosclerosis inflammation
vasodilatation
?
26Case 1
- Man, 42 years
- Type 1 diabetes for 23 years, CSII
- Diabetic retinopathy
- Microalbuminuria first evidenced 8 years ago
- Smoking, no other treatment
- Now coming for hypertension and oedema of legs
27Case 1
- Lab urea 18mmol/l, s-crea 198umol/l
- Na 145, K 5,9 Ca 2,1 P 1,9
- albumin 22g/l, glycaemia 13mmol/l
- Cholesterol 6,4 mmol/l, LDL 4,4 HDL 0,9 Tg 1,7
- Urine protein 2, glucose 2
- GF 0,75ml/s, proteinuria 8,6g/day
28Case 1
- What is patients problem?
- How would you treat the patients?
29Case 2
- Type 2 diabetic woman 44 years, obese
- Diabetes for 2 years, good control on diet, no
other diseases, no medication - In preventive check found hypertension 190/100,
urea 14mmol/l, s-crea 239umol/l - Urine protein 1, erythrocyte 85, glomerular
origin, proteinuria 1,8g/day - Ultrasound bilateral kidney 87mm, cortex 9mm
30Case 2
- Does the patient have diabetic nephropathy?
- Why?
- What other examination would you recommend?
- How would you treat the patient?
31Conclusion I.
- Diabetic nephropathy microvascular complication
connected to poor glycaemic control - leading cause for need of dialysis
- Prevention and therapy nephroprotective
strategies BP control (ACEi, sartans), glycaemic
control, lipid control
32Kidney disease in hypertension
- kidney and regulation of blood pressure
- exretion of salt and water (volume of
extracelullar fluid) - endocrine function secretion of
vasoconstrictors (RAS) and vasodilatators (Pg,
calicrein, kinins) - perception of osmolarity and volume (pressure)
33Kidneys?? hypertension
- role of kidneys in primary hypertension
(unability to excrete salt load) - kidney disease as cause of secondary hypertension
(renoparenchymal, renovascular) - hypertension causes renal damage
- hypertension is the leading factor of progression
of kidney disease
34kidney disease
damage of medulla
intrarenal ischaemia
? GF
RAAS
? SAS
? Pg, kinins
? natrium excretion
? ECF
hypertension
35Hypertension-induced renal dysfunction
- hypertension nephropathy longterm hypertension
causes kidney damage - ischaemic nephropathy - atherosclerotic changes
in macrovessels (altogether with diabetes,
hyperlipidaemia).. renovascular hypertension - vascular nephropathy (nephrosclerosis)
affection of smaller renal vessel causes kidney
dysfunction - renovascular kidney disease vascular
nephrosclerosis ischemic nephropathy
36Epidemiology of hypertension-induced nehropathy
(HIN)
- 3rd after ischaemic heart disease and stroke
- RR of kidney dysfunction 12,5x ?
37Pathology of HIN
- benign nephrosclerosis
- stenosis of renal arteries
- malign nephrosclerosis
38Benign nephrosclerosis
- in autopsy 16-18 men and 15-27 women
- clinical follow up 15 of patients with
hypertension - pathology thickening of arterial wall,
hyalinosis, infiltration of interstitium,
interstitial atrophy and fibrosis - smaller kidneys
39systemic hypertension
vasoconstriction of afferent artery
hypoperfusion
impairment of renal vessel autoregulation
RAS
dilatation of afferent artery
tubulointerstitial fibrosis and dysfunction
hyperperfusion, hyperfiltration
? GF
proteins to mesangium and Bowmans capsula
renal failure
40Clinical symptoms and lab test
- asymptomatic
- nycturia (tubuluinsterstitial changes in
concetration) - early lab findings microalbuminuria (5-40),
small proteinuria (lt1h/day), hyperurikemia,
normal renal function - late lab findings renal dysfunction,
- ? S-crea, chronic renal failure (3)
41Diagnosis and dif dg
- longterm history of hypertension
- exclusion of other renal diasease
- hypertonic eye changes
- small proteinuria
- dif dg ischaemic nephropathy (bilateral renal
arterial stenosis), cholesterol microembolization
42Treatment
- blood pressure control 130/80 (125/75)
- diet, salt intake
- ACE inhibitors, sartans, verapamil other
antihypertensive drugs - intensive treatment of other risk factors
(lipids, glycemia)
43Malign nephrosclerosis
- rare
- lt1 of patients with hypertension (severe)
- pathogenesis failure of renal vessel
autoregulation - pathology proliferation endarteritis, fibrinoid
necrosis of afferent arteries and capilaries
necrotic glomerulonephritis
44Clinical findings and lab tests
- extreme hypertension
- headache, encephalopathy, coma
- neuroretinopathy
- left heart failure
- proteinuria (nephrotic)
- erythrocyturia
- cylinder
- progressing renal insufficiency
45Therapy
- therapy of emergent hypertension
- ICU
- i.v. antihypertensives (nitrates, urapidil,
labetalol) - hemodialysis
- mortality 30
46Stenosis of renal artery/ies
- Hypertension or CKD due to hemodynamicaly
significant (gt75) renal arterial stenosis (RAS)
3 - Renovascular diseases renal arterial stenosis
with/without hypertension - Ischaemic nephropathy renal dysfunction due to
renal ischaemia (bilateral RAS)
47Renal arterial stenosis - causes
- Atherosclerosis (high age, 80)
- Fibromuscular dysplasia (younger women, 25)
- Embole, aneurysm, dissection, malformation
- Arteritis
- Extramural pressure (tumors, fibrosis, uretheral
obstruction, cysts) - . RAAS activation
48Renovascular hypertension- clinical
- sudden onset, worsening
- retinopathy
- negative family history
- smoking
- vascular history (IHD, PAD)
- renal function impairment after ACEi
- abdominal murmur
49Renal arterial stenosis - diagnosis
- Lab hypokalemia, ? PRA, ? aldosterone (secondary
hyperaldosteronism), proteinuria, ? S-crea - Ultrasound renal asymetry (10-15mm), cave
bilateral stenosis, IR - Dynamic renal scintigraphy with enalaprilate
- MRA
- DSA
50Renal arterial stenosis - therapy
- Aims
- hypertension control
- preservation of renal function
- PTA fibromuscular dysplasia and
hypertension/renal dysfunction, others? - Surgery (aortorenal bypass) aneurysm, restenosis
- Pharmacological slow titration of ACEi/AT1 (Cave
k.i. bilateral stenosis), diuretics, other
antihypertensives
51Ischaemic nephropathy
- ? GF due to hemodynamic significant obstruction
of blood flow in both renal arteries or in renal
artery of solitary kidney or renal failure due to
total kidney aperfusion - atherosclerotic renovascular disease
- atheroembolic kidney disease
52Epidemiology
- 15-16 progress to ESRD (3rd after diabetic
nephropathy and chronic glomerulonephritis) - ? mortality in dialysis (average survival 27
months)
53Atherosclerotic renovascular disease (ARD)
- bilateral renal arterial stenosis 25-30
patients with renovascular disease - more frequent in diabetics
- after Tx 3-10
54Forms of ARD
- Acute renal failure or Rapidly progressing renal
insufficiency - sudden occlusion of stenotic renal arteries with
thrombosis, or embolization - trias nephralgia hypertension hematuria (
leucocytosis, subfebrile) - ? poststenotic perfusion after ACEi or sartans
- in 2 weeks after treatment, ARF in 6-10 patients
with significant stenosis
55Forms of ARD
- chronic renal insufficiency and failure
- chronic kidney ischaemia due to hypoperfusion in
significant renal arterial atherosclerotic
stenosis - asymptomatic. left heart failure (RAS)
- loss of renal function - ? GF 4ml/min/year
- collateral circulation
56Diagnosis and dif dg
- progression of renal insufficiency of unknown
origin in elderly hypertonic patiens with
atherosclerotic history (stroke, MI) - rapid and significant impairment of renal
function after antihypertensives (not only ACEi,
sartans) - dif dg acute tubular necrosis, other
nehropathies connected with hypertension
57Hypertension-induced nephropathy Ischaemic nephropathy
age 40-60 gt 60
race Afroamerican Caucasian
cause hypertension atherosclerosis
mech perfusion change in HT hypoperfusion
goal lowering of BP stenosis correction
surviv relatively good poor
58Examination
- ultrasound doppler
- dynamic scintigraphy ( enelaprilate)
- MRA of renal arteries
- CTA of renal arteries
- DSA of renal arteries
59Therapy
- revascularization - reperfusion!
- bypass
- PTA
- conservative treatment in k.i. of invasive
- BP control, intervention of risk factors
- ASA
60Prognosis and prevention
- good prognosis in mild renal insufficiency
(s-crealt 130 umol/l) - stabilization of renal function in s-crea 130-265
umol/l - poor outcomes in severe renal dysfunction
(s-creagt265 umol/l) 50 progress to ESRD - effect of revascularization on hypertension
mostly poor, preventive in pulmonary oedema - prevention general prevention of
atherosclerosis
61Atheroembolic kidney disease
- embolization of parts (cholesterol) of
atheromatic plaque to peripheral circulation
(arteries 150-250 um) induction of inflammation - spontaneous (aneurysm of aorta, anticoagulation
therapy) - after intervention (DSA, PTA)
- 0,6-6
62Atheroembolic kidney disease
- Acute cholesterol microembolization
- suddan lumbal pain, subfebrile
- hypertension, oliguria
- proteinuria, hematuria
- abdominal (vomitus, ileus, GIT bleeding,
spleen infarction) - nervous (paresthesia, paresis, amaurosis, TIA)
- skin (cyanosis, livedo, ulceration of
peripheral parts of limbs)
63Acute cholesterol microembolization
- diagnosis difficult
- coincidence with intervention
- impairment of renal function
- eosinophilic leucocyturia
- biopsy (microembolization)
- dif dg other causes of ARI
- therapy nephroprotection (hydration, blood
pressure control), poor outcome
64Atheroembolic kidney disease
- Chronic cholesterol microembolization
- successive embolization from exulcerated
atherosclerotic plaques in elderly sclerotic
patients - successive development and progression of renal
dysfunction - lab nonsignificant (proteinuria in FSGS)
- ultrasound aneurysm of abdominal aorta
65Case III.
- 76 year-old woman
- History of hypertension (for 40years), type 2
diabetes on diet, MI (2x), stroke 1x - Multicombination antihypertensive therapy,
statins - BP 150/95mm Hg
- S-crea 140umol/l, urea 17mmol/l
- Urine protein 1, no erythrocytes, proteinuria
0,9g/day - Ultrasound bilateral kidney 80mm, cortex 7mm
66Case III.
- What nephropathy does the patient have?
- What else could she have?
- What examination would you recommend?
- How would you treat the patient?
67Case IV.
- Woman 40 years
- Sudden unset of severe hypertension 190/100,
normal urea and creatinin, normal urine - Therapy with perindopril in dose 10mg started, Ca
blocker (amlodipin 10mg) and BB (metoprolol
100mg) added - After 2 months BP 110/60, urea 16mmol/l,
creatinin 349umol/l - Ultrasonography asymetry of kidneys (R 85mm, L
108mm)
68Case IV.
- What type of hypertension did the patient
obviously had? - What was wrong in the diagnostic process?
- What was wrong in the therapy?
- What examination would you recommend?
- What treatment?
69Conclusion II.
- Relation between hypertension and renal function
reciprocal - Untreated hypertension leads to renal damage
- Kidney diseases lead to hypertension
- Prevention and therapy blood pressure control
to target - Inhibitors of RAS, revascularization if possible
70Conclusion
- Diabetes is the leading cause for dialysis
treatment in developed countries - Reciprocal relationship between hypertension and
renal disease - Untreated hypertension causes renal damage and
failure