Kidney Flashcards Based on Written 4-5

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106 Terms

1
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What are the most common causes of AKI in dogs?

toxic, infectious

2
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What are the most common causes of AKI in cats?

Obstruction, unknown

3
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What usually causes AKI in the hospital?

Use of nephrotoxic drugs

Hemodynamic instability left untreated

Volume overload

4
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What are causes of hemodynamic / volume responsive AKI?

Hypovolemia

Decreased CO

Systemic vasodilation

Renal vasoconstriction

5
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What are the characteristics of hemodynamic AKI?

Rapidly reversible once inciting cause is eliminated

6
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How do you treat hemodynamic AKI?

Restoration of perfusion

7
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What are causes of renal AKI?

Prolonged ischemia, infectious disease, toxins, systemic disease

8
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What are the phases of renal AKI?

  1. Initiation/induction

  2. Extension

  3. Maintenance

  4. Recovery

9
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During what phase of renal AKI are clinical and laboratory findings visible?

Maintenance

10
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How do you treat renal AKI?

Remove inciting cause

11
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What are causes of obstructive AKI?

Any cause of urinary tract obstruction

12
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What are the characteristics of obstructive AKI?

Rapidly reversible with restoration of urine flow, repair, and removal of urine that accumulated outside of urinary system

13
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What grade of AKI is non-azotemic?

Grade 1

14
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What are C/S of AKI?

Non-specific but over a short period of time

15
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What is on physical exam of AKI?

Dehydration, oral ulceration, tongue tip necrosis, renomegaly and renal pain

16
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What is the USG of a intrinsic AKI?

Isosthenuric

17
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What is the USG of a hemodynamic AKI?

Adequately concentrated

18
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What on a dipstick indicate PCT damage?

Glucosuria, proteinuria, ketonuria

19
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What is the urine pH on AKI?

Acidic usually

20
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What can WBCs with AKI inidcate?

Acute tubular necrosis, glomerulonephritis, pyelonephritis, nephrotic syndrome

21
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What can RBCs with AKI indicate?

Vasculitis, glomerulonephritis

22
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What can epithelial casts with AKI indicate?

Tubular damage like acute necrosis or glomerulonephritis

23
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What are the most common changes on biochem with AKI?

Azotemia, hyperphosphatemia, hyperkalemia, metabolic acidosis

24
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If BUN is disproportionately increased compared to creatinine what should you look for?

GI bleeding

25
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If a cat has severe azotemia but is still eating and has mild C/S what should you look for?

Lily intoxication or nephron-ureteral obstruction

26
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If there is hyponatremia, hyperkalemia, metabolic acidosis, hyperphosphatemia what should you look for?

Uroabdomen

27
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If you have hyperproteinemia, hypercalcemia, hyperphosphatemia, and azotemia what should you look for?

Cholecalciferol or grape intoxication

28
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If you have thrombocytopenia, elevated liver enzymes, hypokalemia what do you need to think?

Leptospirosis

29
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If you have a high anion gap metabolic acidosis and hypocalcemia what do you need to think?

Ethylene glycol toxicityq

30
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What are causes of renal hyperechogenicity on US?

Ethylene glycol, grapes, lilies

31
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What are causes of subcapsular fluid?

Leptospirosis, lymphoma

32
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What are IV positive contrast studies not useful for AKI?

Low GFR

33
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What is the first step of when you have a patient with AKI?

Rule out things that are not directly related to the kidney like obstruction

34
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What are the steps if you have a patient with AKI?

  1. Rule out things not directly related to kidney like obstruction or rupture

  2. Determine if it is pre-renal

  3. Start specific testing for renal AKI causes

35
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How can you detect is a patient has a pre-renal AKI?

Check BP

Test response to fluids and if no improvement in 8-12 hrs then it is intrinsic

36
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If you have an AKI, where should samples come from to do a culture?

Renal pelvis is pyelectasia is present and urinary bladder

37
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How do you test for ethylene glycol toxicity?

Commercially available in house kits, but only accurate in the first few hours

38
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What is a FNA useful for diagnosing a specific cause of AKI?

Lymphoma

39
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Why are patients with AKI so sensitive to fluid therapy?

The kidneys may not be able to increase urine output to get rid of excessive volume

40
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What is the impact of volume overload on the kidneys?

Interstitial edema causing impaired oxygenation

Renal edema caused decreased GFR

Elevated BP

Increased mortality

41
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What is required to remove excess fluid during volume overload?

Hemodialysis

42
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What fluids do you give during AKI?

Buffered like Ringer’s Lactate

43
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Why do you give buffered fluids during AKI?

Unbuffered solutions can cause metabolic acidosis and worsen GFR

44
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What is the ROSE model?

Fluid therapy model used during AKI

45
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What do you do during the Rescue phase of ROSE?

Replace fluid deficit swithin 4-6 hours to restore normal perfusion

46
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How do you calculate fluid deficit?

Body weight X estimated % dehydration X 1000

47
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What happens during the optimize phase of ROSE?

Balance the Ins and Outs to maintain a neutral fluid balance

Manage electrolytes (hypo or hyperkalemia)

Bicarbonate therapy if metabolic acidosis is present

Manage blood pressure

48
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How do you calculate the outs of fluid loss?

Urine output in mL/kg/hr and 22 mL/kd/day for insensible losses

49
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How can you treat hypertension during the Optimize phase of ROSE?

Amlodipine

50
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What do you do during the Stabilize phase of ROSE?

Use enteral routes to provide nutrition and fluids

Manage GI signs with antiemetics and PPIs

51
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When can you begin the de-Escalate phase of ROSE?

If azotemia and weight are stable on fixed IV and enteral fluids

52
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How do you know you can continue to taper fluids during the ROSE model?

If urine output decreases in line with the decrease in fluid while maintaining a stable weight and perfusion markers

53
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What can you give to patients with oliguria or anuria to manage fluid overload?

Furosemide

54
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How do you test to see if furosemide will be useful to prevent fluid overload?

Give a single test does to see if kidneys will respond (will need to be a higher dose due to lower GFR)

If there is a refractory oliguria/anuria then giving more diuretics will not help and dialysis should be considered

55
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When is renal replacement therapy useful?

Only in first 48 hours of presentation if there is

  • Fluid overload

  • Severe progressive intrinsic renal azotemia

  • Refractory hyperkalemia

  • Persistent oliguria

  • Severe persistent acid-base disturbances

56
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What is the mortality rate of AKI?

50%ish with most getting CKD after

57
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Does AKI with polyuria have a better or worse prognosis than oliguria?

Better

58
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T/F pre or post-renal azotemia is common to be present concurrently with CKD?

True

59
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What are the risk factors for CKD?

Prior AKI

Familial or breed predisposition

Glomerular disease

Amyloidosis

Tubulointerstitial nephritis

60
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What is CKD staging based on?

Creatinine and SDMA

61
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A patient with CKD is non-azotemic with maybe a change in USG what stage is it?

Stage 1

62
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A patient with CKD has mild azotemia but no systemic signs, what stage is it?

Stage 2

63
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A patient with CKD has moderate azotemia and systemic signs, what stage is it?

Stage 3

64
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A patient with CKD has severe azotemia and systemic signs. There might be uremia, what stage is it?

Stage 4

65
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What are the substage of CKD based on?

Proteinuria based on UPC taken twice over 2 weeks

Blood pressure measured multiple times over 1-2 weeks

66
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If you treat the a patient with CKD and hypertension how does it change the classification?

You keep it the same, but say treating hypertension at the end

67
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What are the goals of CKD treatment?

Slow progression and preserve remaining kidney function

Maintain quality of life

68
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What is the NEPHRONS acronym for CKD treatment?

Nutrition

Electrolytes

Phosphate, proteinuria, pressure, pH

Hydration status

Retention of wastes

Other renal insults to avoid

Neuroendocrine changes

Serial monitoring

69
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When do you start to recommend a renal diet for CKD?

If there is Stage II CKD or stage I with proteinuria or hyperphosphatemia

70
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Why do you not start a patient on a renal diet in the hospital?

They will associate that diet with the hospital and will not eat it at home

71
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What are the key characteristics of a renal diet?

High palatability and caloric density

Modified amounts of high quality and digestible protein

Low phosphorus content

Increased fat

Fermentable fiber

Alkalinizing

Higher potassium and lower sodium

72
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What is really important in the diet of CKD patients?

That they eat enough food to not lose any weight

73
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Hypokalemia with CKD can cause what?

Weakness, lethargy, inappetence, constipation, reduced renal blood flow and GFR

74
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What supplements can be used to treat hypokalemia with CKD?

Potassium citrate or potassium gluconate

75
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What is a good potassium level?

> 4 mmol/L

76
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Why do dogs not get hypokalemia with CKD?

They are on ACEi or ARBs which cause potassium retention

77
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In what stage of CKD can HYPERkalemia develope?

Stage IV

78
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What is associated with progression of CKD?

Hyperphosphatemia

79
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How long does it take for phosphate levels to go to normal after starting renal diet?

1-2 months, so check phosphate levels 4-6 weeks after starting therapy and recheck every 3-4 months

80
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At what stage of CKD is a renal diet not enough to control hyperphosphatemia?

Stage IV

81
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What phosphate binders can be used to control hyperphosphatemia?

Aluminum hydroxide, lanthanum carbonate, chitosan, calcium carbonate

82
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Why do you get proteinuria with CKD?

Increased protein in diet puts a strain on the PCT

83
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When do you begin treating proteinuria during CKD with ACEi or ARBs?

UPC > 0.5 in dogs or 0.4 in cats

84
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How do you treat proteinuria during CKD?

ACEi or ARB

85
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What is the goal of proteinuria treatment with CKD?

Decrease UPC by 50% of baseline

86
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At what BP do you begin treating hypertension with CKD?

> 160 mmHg

87
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What is the first line of hypertension therapy in dogs?

ACEi or ARB

88
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What is the first line of hypertension therapy in cats?

Calcium channel blocker

89
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What is the second line of hypertension therapy in cats?

ACEi or ARB with a calcium channel blockers

90
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What is the second line of hypertension therapy in dogs?

Calcium channel blocker

91
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If a dog with CKD has severe hypertension what can you give?

ACEi or ARB with a calcium channel blockers

92
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What stage of CKD gets metabolic acidosis?

Stage III and stage IV

93
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Why is dehydration common in CKD patients?

Inability to match water intake with loss or when vomiting increases loss

94
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What are mechanisms to improve hydration with CKD?

Have fresh water in different forms

Feed wet food

SQ fluid in cats

Via feeding tube

95
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How do you prevent accumulation of uremic toxins during CKD?

Using a renal diet with fermentable fibers that trap nitrogen in the gut

96
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What antiemetics can be used with CKD?

Maropitant or ondansetron

97
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What appetite stimulants can be used with CKD?

Mirtazapine

Capromorelin

98
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What are some other renal insults to avoid with CKD?

Nephrotoxic drugs

Pre-renal insults

Post-renal insults

Infections

99
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What are some underlying causes of anemia with CKD?

GI bleeding

Underlying infections

Nutritional deficiencies

100
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What is darbepoetin?

EPO analogue