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Disorders of the Renal System Mildred D. Fennal, PhD, RN, CNS 05/19/16 1 ANATOMY 05/19/16 Paired organs Located in the dorsal part of the abdomen. Length 11cm long Width 5.7 cm wide Ply 2.5cm thick Weight 145 grams (male) 135 grams (female) 2 05/19/16 The left kidney is a fraction longer and narrower than the right. The lower border is at the third lumbar vertebrae The left kidney is a fraction higher than the right kidney. The kidney is covered by a fibrous capsule 3 The outer portion of the kidney is the cortex The middle portion of the kidney is the medulla The inner part of the kidney is the sinus The functional unit of the kidney is the Nephron (appx. I million per kidney). 05/19/16 4 FUNCTIONS OF THE KIDNEY 05/19/16 Regulate water and electrolytes Regulate blood pressure Excretion of waste Regulation of erythropoiesis Metabolism of vitamin D Synthesis of prostagladin 5 REGULATION OF WATER 05/19/16 Responsible for maintenace of volume and concentration of body water via the thirst-neurohypophyseal renal axis 6 REGULATION OF BLOOD PRESSURE 05/19/16 Decrease in the pressure to the afferent arteriole, decrease in glomerula filtration, release of renin, goes to the liver where renin becomes agiotensin I. 7 05/19/16 Angiotensin I goes to the lungs to receive a converter enzyme to become angiotensin II. Agiotensin II is a powerful vasoconstrictor, which stimulates the adrenal cortext to secrete aldosterone. Aldosterone increases reasorption of sodium and water, thereby increasing the blood pressure. 8 ELECTROLYTE REGULATION 05/19/16 Sodium Aldosterone Potassium Calcium Phosphate Magnesium Chloride 9 GLOMERULA FILTRATION 05/19/16 Controlled by pressure (high) in the capillaries in the glomerulus (70mm Hg) elsewhere in the body capillary pressure is 15 – 25 mm hg. 25% of blood from each contraction of the heart filters through the kidneys 10 05/19/16 Re-absorption occurs in the tubules by active re-absorption, passive diffusion and osmosis. Secretion occurs from the tubular cells. It is a chemical activity that occurs in the opposite direction of re-absorption. 11 05/19/16 The kidneys regulate aldosterone and sodium and potassium and sodium. The kidneys are the chief regulators of PH in the body. This occurs through the excretion of H+ (hydrogen ions). CO2 is reabsorbed from the tubules and excreted through the lungs. 12 MECHANISM OF THE KIDNEY Clearance Removal of end products, metabolic waste from the blood and removal from the body via the urine. Countercurrent Mechanism The method of concentrating and diluting the urine. The ability to adjust the osmolality of the urine. 05/19/16 13 EXCRETION 05/19/16 The primary role of renal function is excretion of metabolic waste. There are more than 200 metabolic waste products excreted by the kidneys. 14 CREATININE 05/19/16 A waste product of muscle metabolism 15 UREA 05/19/16 A nitrogen waste product of protein metabolism that is filtered and reabsorbed along the entire nephron. 16 THE FORMATION OF URINE Physiology 05/19/16 Glomerular capillaries and Bowman’s capsule: Filtration of water electrolytes, creatinine, sugars, nitrogenous waste (urea, uric acid) bicarb and amino acid. 17 PROXIMAL TUBULE Sixty to seventy percent of glomerula filtrate reabsorbed. Re-absorption of Na+, Cl-,K+, Mg+, Ca++, HPO4-. Creatinine, AA, sugars, some nitrogenous waste, bicarb and water. Secretion of H+ 05/19/16 18 LOOP OF HENLE 05/19/16 5% of glomerula filtrate reabsorbed In the descending loop. Re-absorption of water and secretion of urea. In the ascending loop Re-absorption chloride, sodium, potassium, magnesium and calcium. 19 DISTAL TUBULE 05/19/16 5% of glomerula filtrate reabsorbed Re-absorption of Na+ (controlled by aldosterone), Cl-, and Ca++ and phosphate (controlled by parathyroid hormone). Magnesium and bicard. Secretion of K+ (controlled by aldosterone) H+ and NH3 20 COLLECTING DUCT 05/19/16 19 % of glomerula filtrate is reabsorbed. Re-absorption of water (controlled by aldosterone) Reabsorption and secretion of urea, Na+, ClFormation of urine 125ml of filtrate will yield 1cc of urine. 21 Assessment of the Renal System 05/19/16 Physical Assessment 24 hour urine Clean catch/Midstream Specific Gravity Creatinine clearance Osmolality Serum Creatinine Blood, urea, nitrogen (BUN) 22 05/19/16 KUB CT Scan MRI Renal Angiography IVP Cystoscopic exam Biopsy 23 Urinary/Renal Calculi 05/19/16 Definition: Urolithiasis, or the development of urinary stones. Masses of of crystals composed of substances that are normally excreted in the urine 24 Etiology 05/19/16 May occur from dehydration, immobility, excess dietary intake of calcium, oxalate or protein, gout, hyperparathyroidism, and repeated urinary tract infections. 25 Incidence 05/19/16 Males are more affected than females (four time more affected) Affects 720,000 people in the United states each year. Most common cause of urinary tract obstruction. 26 05/19/16 75 – 80% of stone are composed of calcium 15% are composed of magnesium ammonium phosphate and are called sturvite stones. 5 – 10 % are made from uric acid or cystine. 27 Pathophysiology 05/19/16 The development of these stones involve the precipitation of a salt around a mucoprotein to from a crystalline structure. High ingestion of minerals plus elevated salt in the urine allows stone to form and progressively enlarge. The acidity or alkalinity of the urine will also contribute to the development of stone. 28 Signs and Symptoms 05/19/16 Renal Calculi in the Calyces and the pelvis of the kidney may have few symptoms other than dull, aching flank pain. Bladder calculi may produce dull suprapubic pain with exercise or after voiding. Gross hematuria may be present. 29 05/19/16 Uretheral stones produce a severe intermittent pain in the flank and upper outer abdominal quadrant on the affected side. This is known as Renal Colic. Decrease Urinary output UTI Nausea, vomiting, pallor, cool clammy skin. 30 Medical Management 05/19/16 Urinalysis Urine Calcium Uric Acid KUB Flat plate of the abdomen IVP Renal ultrasound CT/MRI 31 05/19/16 Narcotic Analgesic (morphine or demerol) Indomethacin, atropine, ditropan, banthine, and a thiazide diuretic. 2 ½ - 3 liters of fluid per day For calcium stones, limit substances that contain vitamin D and calcium. Administer an Alkaline Ash Diet 32 For uric acid stone limit foods high in purines (sardines, organ meats). Surgery: Stones larger than 5mm. Stones in the bladder Stones in the renal pelvis (percutaneous nephrostomy) Lithotripsy 05/19/16 33 Nursing Management 05/19/16 Assessment Relieve the pain Assist with procedures Distraction techniques Strict I&O Straining all urine Management of fluid volume 34 Teaching Nursing diagnosis Acute Pain At risk for complications of immobility Ineffective coping At risk for injury Anxiety Risk for Fluid volume excess 05/19/16 35 Tumors of the Bladder 05/19/16 Definition: Squamous cell carcinoma of the bladder. Papillomas (70%), Incidence: 50,000 people per year in the United States. Fifth most common malignancy Occur most often in the fifth decade. Affect men more than women 36 Etiology 05/19/16 Cigarette smoke Chemicals and dyes used in plastics, rubber, cable industries, leather finishers, spray paints, hair dressing, petroleum products. Frequent urinary calculi 37 Pathophysiology 05/19/16 A cell that mutates begin to form a papillary transitional cell carcinoma. 70% of bladder cancers are papillomas. 38 Signs and Symptoms 05/19/16 Painless hematuria UTI Colicky pain 39 Medical Management 05/19/16 Urinalysis IVP CT Cystoscopy Chemo therapy (Thiotepa) Radiation Surgery 40 Nursing Management 05/19/16 Post operative care Comfort measures Psychological support Administration of drugs 41 Nursing Diagnosis 05/19/16 Altered pattern of urination Risk for impaired skin integrity Risk for infection Body image disturbance Risk for ineffective coping Knowledge deficit 42 RENAL FAILURE 05/19/16 Pre-renal: physiologic states that lead to diminished perfusion to the kidney without renal tubular damage. Intra-renal: cortical involvement of vascular, infectious, or immunologic processes. Post renal: associated with obstruction of the collecting system. 43 ACUTE RENAL FAILURE 05/19/16 Definition: A syndrome of varying etiologies, sub-classified into prerenal, intra-renal and post renal conditions, resulting in an acute deterioration of renal function. Less than 400 cc of urine in 24 hours. 44 ETIOLOGY 05/19/16 Caused by numerous clinical conditions, i.e. pre-renal azotemia, precipitated by fluid volume loss, extracellular sequestration (third spacing), inadequate cardiac output, or vasoconstriction of the renal blood vessels. 45 INTRARENAL FAILURE 05/19/16 Acute tubular necrosis Infection Cortical necrosis Systemic Lupus Goodpasture’s syndrome Endocarditis Abruptio placenta Malignant hypertension 46 05/19/16 Antibiotics Carbon tetrachloride Heavy metals Pesticides and fungicides X-Ray contrast media 47 05/19/16 Massive injury Transfusion reaction Septic or cardiogenic shock Major trauma and crushing injuries Post surgical hypotension Postpartum hemorrhage of pregnancy. 48 POST RENAL FAILURE 05/19/16 Urethral obstruction Prostatic hypertrophy Bladder cancer Renal calculi Abdominal tumor 49 INCIDENCE 05/19/16 5% of all hospitalized patients 30% of all critically ill patients High in the elderly and in patients taking nephrotoxic drugs 10,000 people per year in the United states. Mortality 90% 50 PATHOPHYSIOLOGY 05/19/16 Physiologic states leading to diminished perfusion of the kidney, decrease glomerular filtration and/or obstruction. 51 MEDICAL MANAGEMENT 05/19/16 Blood work especially BUN and Creatinine Daily weights Intake and output Radiologic exam (KUB) Ultrasound IVP CT 52 05/19/16 Renal angiography Renal scan Renal biopsy Dialysis (peritoneal or hemo) 53 NURSING MANAGEMENT 05/19/16 Management of fluid volume Monitor for infection Skin integrity Nutrition balance Management of anxiety Drug administration 54 NURSING DIAGNOSIS 05/19/16 Fluid volume excess Risk for infection Altered role performance Ineffective coping Altered nutrition Knowledge deficit 55 CHRONIC RENAL FAILURE 05/19/16 Definition: A slowly progressive renal disorder culminating in endstage renal disease. 56 ETIOLOGY 05/19/16 Progressive deterioration of glomerula filtration, tubular secretion and tubular reabsorption. Related to: Diabetic nephropathy, hypertension, glomerulonephritis, and cystic kidney disease The degree of decline in function is correlated with nephron lost. 57 INCIDENCE 05/19/16 Occurs more often in older adults More frequent in Native-Americans and African-Americans (hypertension 40% of cases) 58 PATHOPHYSIOLOGY 05/19/16 Destruction of Nephrons Scaring of tissue Inability to filter Uremia 59 MEDICAL MANAGEMENT 05/19/16 Prevention of further deterioration Correction of fluid balance Diuretics Anti-hypertensive agents Kayexalate Folic acid and iron Dialysis Renal transplant 60 NURSING MANAGEMENT 05/19/16 Management of fluid restriction Management of nutrition status Management of skin integrity Monitoring for infection Monitoring for heart failure Management of dialysis 61 RENAL DIALYSIS 05/19/16 Definition: removes waste products from the body when the kidneys can no longer filter. Acute dialysis used when there is a sudden onset of failure with rising levels of potassium, pulmonary edema, increasing acidosis and fluid volume overload. 62 05/19/16 Chronic dialysis or maintenance dialysis is used when the failure is irreversible and/or in end stage renal disease. 63 PERITONEAL DIALYSIS 05/19/16 Continuous peritoneal dialysis (CAPD) Continuous cyclic peritoneal dialysis (CCPD) 64 COMPLICATIONS OF PERITONEAL DIALYSIS 05/19/16 Peritonitis Bleeding Abdominal hernias Pulmonary edema Congestive heart failure Perforation of bowel 65 HEMODIALYSIS 05/19/16 The most commonly used form of dialysis. 120,000 patients on dialysis in the United States 66 COMPLICATIONS OF HEMODIALYSIS 05/19/16 Hypotension Muscle cramping Air embolis Chest pain Dialysis disequilibrium 67 Urinary Incontinence 05/19/16 Definition: Involuntary loss of urine 68 Etiology 05/19/16 Injury, fistulas, infection, age, dehydration, urinary retention, fecal impaction, urinary tract infection 69 Incidence 05/19/16 More common in women than men. After age 35, more than 10 percent of women experience some degree of incontinence, with men there is a 2-7 % increase after age 35. The prevalance in individuals over sixty five range from 30% for seniors who experience independent living to 50-70% for seniors who are institutionalized 70 Types of Incontinence 05/19/16 True or total incontinence Stress incontinence Urgency Incontinence Paradoxical Incontinence 71 Pathophysiology True Incontinence 05/19/16 Constant leakage, usually produced by injury to the urethral sphincter 72 05/19/16 May be caused by a vesicovaginal fistula in the female, occurring secondary to pregnancy, surgical radiation or neurological disease. 73 05/19/16 Urinary tract fistulas result in urine leaving the body in un-natural ways such as through he vagina. Fistulas are abnormal openings between two organs and the skin that allow passage of secretions and other substances. 74 05/19/16 Stress Incontinence is a sudden increase in intra abdominal pressure as with sneezing severe coughing, laughing, or straining. Usually occurs from pelvic relaxation, loss of tissue tone and aging 75 05/19/16 Urgency: the pathology may be calculi, diverticuli, foreign bodies, tumors, CNS disorders such as stroke, dementia and multiple sclerosis. 76 05/19/16 Paradoxal incontinence occurs when the bladder is flaccid and there is intermittent loss of urine. Usually caused by urinary retention. May be a sign of benign prostate hypertrophy 77 Medical Management 05/19/16 Kegal Exercises Triamenic Sudafed Estrogen replacement Marshall-Marchetti-Krantz procedure Catherterization 78 Nursing Management Acknowledge of the patients embarrassment Patient Teaching Weight reduction Avoid constipation Kegel exercises Bladder training programs Encourage the use of velcro enclosures vs. zippers and buttons 05/19/16 79 05/19/16 Protection of the skin Post operative care when surgery is the treatment 80 Urinary Retention 05/19/16 Definition: Retention of urine after it has been produced by the Kidneys. The inability of the bladder to empty 81 Etiology 05/19/16 Obstruction that is either mechanical or functional 82 Incidence 05/19/16 After surgery Certain medications Anxiety Neurological diseases Prolong use of urinary cathether 83 Pathophysiology 05/19/16 In acute urinary retention there is no permanent damage to the bladder. With chronic urinary retention, the detrusor muscle becomes hyperactive, causing frequency, urgency, and nocturia, which leads to muscle hypertrophy. 84 05/19/16 The thicken bladder wall is more rigid and less easy to stretch normally. 85 Signs and Symptoms 05/19/16 Absence of voided urine Distended bladder 86 Medical Management 05/19/16 Catheter Dilatation of urethra Supra-pubic catheters 87 Nursing Management 05/19/16 Encourage activity as soon as possible after surgery Encourage relaxation Run water Monitor for bladder distention Catheterization Comfort measures after dilation 88