Acute Renal Failure-6
Acute Renal Failure-6
Acute Renal Failure-6
Definition
Causes
Volume depletion
Haemorrhage
Renal loss
GI loss
Vasodilatation
Sepsis
Anaphylaxis
Antihypertensive drugs
Drugs that cause vasodilatation
Pathophysiology
The main two important mechanisms taking place are tubal cell injury and
disturbances in blood flow.
Reduced GFR will lead to intra renal vasoconstriction which results in reduced
glomerular and plasma filtration and reduced O2 delivery to the functionally
important tubules in medulla.
Ischemia
Endothelial dysfunction
Vasoconstriction
Vasoconstriction
Reversible Irreversible
tubuloglomerular
feed back
Oliguria
Initiation period
Begins with the initial insult and ends when oliguria develops.
Period of oliguria
Some patients can have a decrease in renal function with increase in nitrogen
retention.they excrete normal amounts of urine (2lt/Day).This is the non oliguric
form of renal failure seen in nephrotoxic ,antibiotics and in burns.
Period of diuresis
Increased output patient may go to dehydration and uremic symptoms can be seen.
Period of recovery
Clinical manifestations
Diagnosis
Renal imaging - ultrasound - assess renal size and exclude obstruction; renal
size generally small in chronic renal failure but normal or large renal size
may be seen in polycystic kidney disease, diabetes mellitus, asymmetrical
renal vascular disease, myeloma, amyloidosis, systemic sclerosis; other
investigations such as IVU, DTPA scan should be considered
chest X-ray
Administration of medications
Lifestyle and home remedies
Avoid products with added salt. Lower the amount of sodium eat each day
by avoiding products with added salt, including many convenience foods,
such as frozen dinners, canned soups and fast foods. Other foods with added
salt include salty snack foods, canned vegetables, and processed meats and
cheeses.
Prevent infection
Anemia
Bone disease and high phosphorus (hyperphosphatemia)
Heart disease
High potassium (hyperkalemia)
Fluid buildup