Introduction
Introduction
Introduction
Chronic kidney disease (CKD) is an umbrella term that describes kidney damage or a decrease in the glomerular filtration rate (GFR) for 3 or more months. CKD is associated with decreased quality of life, increased health care expenditures, and premature death. Risk factors include cardiovascular disease, diabetes, hypertension, and obesity. Diabetes is the primary cause of CKD. Between 25% and 40% of patients with type 1 diabetes and 5% to 40% of those with type 2 diabetes develop kidney damage. Diabetes is the leading cause of renal failure in patients starting renal replacement therapy. The second leading cause is hypertension, followed by glomerulonephritis and pyelonephritis; polycystic, hereditary, or congenital disorders; and renal cancers. Source: Brunner and Suddarths Textbook of Medical Surgical Nursing 12 th Edition by Smeltzer et.al Vol. 2 page 1313 The Kidney Disease Outcomes Quality Initiative (K/DOQI) of the National Kidney Foundation (NKF) defines chronic kidney disease as either kidney damage or a decreased glomerular filtration rate (GFR) of less than 60 mL/min/1.73 m2 for 3 or more months. Whatever the underlying etiology, the destruction of renal mass with irreversible sclerosis and loss of nephrons leads to a progressive decline in GFR. The different stages of chronic kidney disease form a continuum in time. In 2002, K/DOQI published its classification of the stages of chronic kidney disease, as follows:
In stage 1 and stage 2 chronic kidney disease, GFR alone does not clinch the diagnosis. Other markers of kidney damage, including abnormalities in the composition of blood or urine or abnormalities on imaging studies, should also be present in establishing a diagnosis of stage 1 and stage 2 chronic kidney disease.
The K/DOQI definition and classification of chronic kidney disease allow better communication among physicians and facilitate intervention at the different stages. Patients with chronic kidney disease stages 1-3 are generally asymptomatic; clinical manifestations typically appear in stages 4-5 . Early diagnosis and treatment of the underlying cause and/or institution of secondary preventive measures is imperative in patients with chronic kidney disease. These may delay, or possibly halt, progression. The medical care of patients with chronic kidney disease should focus on the following:
Delaying or halting the progression of chronic kidney disease Treating the pathologic manifestations of chronic kidney disease Timely planning for long-term renal replacement therapy Source: http://emedicine.medscape.com/article/238798-overview
diet. Impaired urine concentration, nocturia (excessive urination at night), and mild anemia are common findings. Renal function is easily impaired by stress. Renal failure is indicated by severe azotemia, acidosis, impaired urine dilution, severe anemia, and a number of electrolyte imbalances, such as hypernatremia, hyperkalemia, and hyperphosphatemia. ESRD is characterized by two groups of clinical manifestations: deranged excretory and regulatory mechanisms and a distinctive grouping of gastrointestinal, cardiovascular, neuromuscular, hematologic, integumentary, skeletal, and hormonal manifestations. The kidneys can no longer maintain homeostasis.
Source: Medical Surgical Nursing: Clinical Management for Positive Outcomes 7th Edition by: Joyce M. Black & Jane Hokanson Hawks Vol. 1 p. 949 Risk Those at highest risk for CRF are individuals with diabetes (causing 75% of all cases) or hypertension. Disease conditions or toxins that directly affect kidney function increase risk. Advancing age, family history, and smoking also increases the risk of CRF. Men have a slightly higher risk of developing CRF and ESRD than women because they are more likely to have underlying conditions such as hypertension and cardiovascular disease. The incidence of ESRD is 3.6 times higher in African Americans and 1.5 times higher in Hispanics than in whites (Krause). Source: http://www.mdguidelines.com/renal-failure-chronic
According to the Philippine Renal Disease Registry, diabetes mellitus was responsible for 42 percent of kidney diseases among dialysis patients in 2009. Hypertension, on the other hand, contributed 25 percent, closely followed by kidney inflammation, 20 percent. Kidney disease and kidney failure are important public-health problems because of the increasing prevalence of genetically transmitted diseases like diabetes and hypertension, the two most common causes of CKD worldwide. While it is true that it may not be the no. 1 killer disease among Filipinos, renal disease has its own bizarre way of creeping into a complacent, sedentary population. Source: http://www.pia.gov.ph/news/index.php?article=1141338790357