pyuria, hematuria and white cell casts. What type of AKI?
acute interstitial nephritis
dysmorphic red blood cells and red blood cell casts with hematuria. What dx?
acute glomerulonephritis
What are the 3 criteria needed to dx AKI?
one of the three following criteria must be met:
What are the 3 associated findings commonly seen with poststreptococcal glomerulonephritis?
hematuria
HTN
periorbital edema
What are 3 associated findings with minimal change disease?
proteinuria
edema
hypoalbuminemia
medications that are nephrotoxic, such as aminoglycosides, amphotericin B, vancomycin, and contrast are likely to cause what type of AKI? What are some trademark findings?
Acute tubular necrosis (ATN)
ATN:
-muddy brown granular casts
-the fractional excretion of sodium (FENa) is generally elevated > 2%
What can the fractional excretion of sodium (FENa) tell you?
This represents how much filtered sodium is excreted in the urine. In prerenal AKI, this number is often low because the tubule is functioning and reabsorbing as much sodium as possible in the face of hypovolemia.
In ATN, the tubule is damaged and thus unable to reabsorb as much sodium and FENa is generally elevated > 2%
hyaline casts are commonly seen with ______ injury, which is often caused by _______
prerenal kidney injury
hypovolemia
Evaluation of ______ is the most important initial step in evaluating a patient with abnormal kidney function
serum creatinine
fever, rash and peripheral eosinophilia. What type of AKI?
interstitial nephritis
What is the most serious complication of Autosomal dominant polycystic kidney disease (ADPKD)?
cerebral aneurysm
Autosomal dominant polycystic kidney disease (ADPKD) can also have cyst forming of what 2 other organs?
liver and pancreas
What is another name for arginine vasopressin resistance?
nephrogenic DI
What is a known complication of chronic lithium toxicity?
arginine vasopressin resistance
aka nephrogenic DI
What is the formula to calculate anion gap? What is considered elevated?
sodium - (bicarb + chloride)
> 11 mEq/L
What very not good side effect happens when you correct hypernatremia too fast?
cerebral edema
What very not good side effect happens when you correct hyponatremia too fast?
osmotic demyelination syndrome
What is Alport syndrome?
genetic condition that leads to hearing loss, poor visual acuity and hematuria
usually presents in kiddos
______ is a direct complication of nephrotic syndrome
DVT secondary to hypercoagulable state
ASA overdose. What acid-base disturbance is most likely?
mixed respiratory alkalosis with metabolic acidosis
What is a common cause of hypomagnesemia?
malnutrition
Pt’s who miss dialysis, what is the bodies response mechanism to correct acid base disorder?
body with increase respiratory rate to decrease carbon dioxide and increase serum pH
pts who miss dialysis are likely to have a metabolic acidosis problem because there kidneys do not function well
What can cause a false negative for proteinuria on a urine dip stick?
dilute urine
Urine microscopy of a patient reveals elevated creatinine with muddy brown cellular casts. What dx?
acute tubular necrosis