Acute Renal Failure

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To compensate for elevated serum phosphate and in response to decreased absorption from the intestine, calcium levels

decrease

Prerenal azotemia (60% of ARF) is caused by reduced blood flow to the kidney resulting in...

decrease in GFR and urine output

What causes increased instances and mortality with ARF in the elederly

decrease in number of functional nephrons decrease renal blood flow atherosclerosis of renal arteries

What can increased the metabolic rate and catabolism and should be prevented/treated promptly

fever and infection

Treatment of intrarenal ARF

supportive therapy removal of causative agent aggressive mgmt of shock and infection

How often should a weight be obtained for ARF clients

daily

When hyperkalemia, metabolic acidosis, pericarditis, FVE, pulmonary edema occur, what may be needed to maintain homeostasis

dialysis or continuous renal replacement therapy

What can prevent the client from moving and turning without assistance

drowsiness and lethargy

The nurse observes for FVE manifested by

dyspnea, crackles, tachycardia, hypertension and distended neck veins generalized edema in presacral and pretibial areas

CVP will be

elevated

As urine output decrases, clients are at risk for...

hyperkalemia as the kidneys cannot excrete K

As metabolic acidosis develops, normal renal buffering mechanisms fail resulting in....

hyperventilation Kussmaul - more rapid and deep attempting to blow off CO2 and restore normal serum pH

The recovery phases signals

improvement of renal function and energy levels

Serum phosphate levels

increase

If caloric intake is insufficient to prevent the breakdown of body protein, additional nitrogenous waste accumulates causing

increased uremic sx

Most serious complication of ARF

infection

Mgmt of ARF includes

maintaining fluid and lyte balance avoiding fluid excesses supporting pt until renal tissue is repaired and function is restored

myoglobinuria

myoglobin (protein released from muscle with injury) and hgb are liberated causing obstruction, renal toxicity and ischemia trauma, crush injuries, burns can be described as rhabdomyolysis (breakdown of skeletal muscle)

Urine with ARF

oliguria is typically present hematuria may be present SG is low r/t inability to concentrate urine urine sodium is low urinary casts and other cellular debris may be present

Four phases of ARF

onset/initiation oliguric diuresis recovery

Treatment of prerenal azotemia

optimize renal perfusion with fluids or treatment of decreased cardiac output

What may be needed to maintain a patent airway

oral or endotracheal suction

Lab values during the diuretic phase...

plateau and begin to decline

Three types of ARF

prerenal azotemia - hypoperfusion to kidneys intrarenal causes - damage to renal parenchyma or nephron postrenal causes - outflow of urine is obstructed

Other causes of Intrarenal ARF

prolonged renal ischemia from -pigment nephropathy -myoglobinuria/rhabdomyolysis -hemoglobinuria -infectious processes

What may be needed during oliguric phase since a minimum of 400ml/day of urine output is needed

renal replacement therapy

Hyperventilation as compensation for acidosis can lead to...

respiratory fatigue or failure requiring mechanical ventilation

Oliguric period is accompanies by an increase in serum concentrations of ....

wastes - urea, creatinine, organic acids electrolytes - K, Mg, P

S/Sx of hyperkalemia

weakness, diarrhea, dysrhythmias, cardiac arrest

A negative nitrogen balance can cause what sx

weight loss

When should calcium acetate be administered

with meals

can ARF be reversed

yes if identified and treated before fxn is permanently impaired

Insensible loss is estimated at

1 liter

How much of a weight gain is indicative of retention

1/2 to 1 lb/day

Metabolism and the oxidation process produces about ........ mL of fluid per day and may ........(increase/decrease) fluid requirements

200 to 500 mL decrease

What percentage of clients do not recover kidney function and may develop chronic renal failure

5 to 19 %

The recovery phases can take ..........

6 to 12 mos

Average time period for oliguric period

7 to 14 days

Most common cause of Intrarenal ARF

Acute tubular necrosis ATN 12 % of ATN cases are caused by nephrotoxic agents

Labs & urine findings with Postrenal ARF

BUN increased Creat increased Urine output - may be decreased or sudden anuria Urine sodium - often decreased to </= 20 mEq/L Urine osmolality - increased or equal to serum Urine SG - varies

Lab & urine findings with Intrarenal ARF

BUN increased Creat increased Ratio 10:1 Urine output - often decreased Urine sodium - increased to > 40 mEq/L Urine osmolality - approx 350 mOsm similar to serum Urine SG - low normal

The presence of prerenal azotemia is a probable indicator for hospitalization for CAP. Which of the following is an initial laboratory result that would alert a nurse to this condition? -Blood urea nitrogen (BUN)-to-creatinine ratio (BUN:Cr) >20. -BUN of 18 mg/dL. -Serum creatinine of 1.2 mg/dL. -Glomerular filtration rate (GFR) of 100 mL/min.

Blood urea nitrogen (BUN)-to-creatinine ratio (BUN:Cr) >20.

Assessing a client in oliguric anurix stage of ARF. Resp rate 28/min, client reports nausea, dull headache, palpitation, general mailaise. Which is priority action? -Admin an analgesic -Check latest electrolyte levels -Admin an antiemetic -Check oxygen level

Check latest electrolyte levels. Symptoms indicate hyperkalemia

Increased urine output in diuretic phase signals that

GFR has started to recover

A patient undergoing a CT scan with contrast has a baseline creatinine level of 3 mg/dL, identifying this patient as at a high risk for developing kidney failure. What is the most effective intervention to reduce the risk of developing radiocontrast-induced nephropathy (CIN)?

Hydrating with saline intravenously before the test

Symptomatic hyperkalemia is treated with

IV dextrose, insulin and calcium replacement (to shift K back into the cells)

Azotemia can cause what sx

N/V

Which period of acute renal failure is accompanied by an increase in the serum concentration of substances usually excreted by the kidneys?

Oliguria

The nursing student is assigned to care for a client with a diagnosis of acute kidney injury (AKI), diuretic phase. The nursing instructor asks the student about the primary goal of the treatment plan for this client. Which goal, if stated by the nursing student, would indicate an adequate understanding of the treatment plan for this client? Prevent fluid overload. Prevent loss of electrolytes. Promote the excretion of wastes. Reduce the urine specific gravity.

Prevent loss of electrolytes.

What is typically ordered with Kayexalate

Sorbitol to draw water to the bowel, inducing diarrhea and excretion of K

ECG findings with hyperkalemia

Tall, tented or peaked T waves absent P waves widened QRS bradydysrhythmia

Cause of Postrenal ARF

Urinary tract obstructions: calculi tumors BPH strictures blood clots

What is ARF

abrupt loss of kidney function and GFR over a period of hours to days

Intrarenal ARF is the result of

actual parenchymal damage to the glomeruli or kidney tubules this is damage to the kidney itself

infectious processes

acute pyelonephritis acute glomerulonephritis

What nebulized med can lower K by 0.5 to 1.5 mEq/L

albuterol sulfate (Ventolin HFA)

Reduced erythropoietin production, uremic GI lesions, reduced RBC lifespan and blood loss cause....

anemia

Common drugs with renal excretions that require dosage adjustments with ARF

antibiotics (esp aminoglycosides) digoxin ACE inhibitors maganesium containing agents

Minimum daily urine output needed to excrete body's waste products through the kidneys

approx 400ml amt lower indicated a decreased GFR

What foods are high in K

bananas, citrus, tomatoes, melons potatoes green, leafy vegetables

Deposits of uremic toxins in tissues can cause the skin to

become excoriated and itch

What is done to reduce exertion and decreased the metabolic rate

bedrest during the most acute stage

To decrease absorption of phosphate from intestinal tract, what is given

calcium acetate (PhosLo) or aluminum hydroxide gel (short term only)

Which of the following medications are usually administered to control seizures, which may occur as azotemia worsens?

Diazepam (Valium) Phenytoin (Dilantin) Lorazepam (Ativan)

Fluid restrictions become important to prevent....

fluid overload and pulmonary edema

The client should retain a Kayexalate enema for....

30 to 45 minutes rectal cath with balloon may be needed to facilitate retention

Mortality rate

as high as 60%

What is essential with care of invasive lines and catheters

asepsis

Prerenal azotemia occurs where in relation to the kidneys

before the kidneys something is causing hypoperfusion to the kidneys

pigment nephropathy

breakdown of blood cells containing pigments that occlude kidney structure

What increases with glomerular damage and is more sensitive of an indicator of renal function

creatinine used to monitor kidney function and disease progression

What foods are high in Phosphorus

dairy products beans, nuts, legumes carbonated beverages

During the diuretic phase, clients are at risk for

dehydration which can further damage the kidney

What may be prescribed to initiate diuresis and maintain renal perfusion

diuretics

The skin with ARF may be dry or susceptible to breakdown as a result of...

edema

Kayexalate works by

exchanging sodium ions for potassium ions in the intestinal tract

What may increase the fluid requirement

fever increases insensible loss by about 13% for each degree of C elevation

A small percentage develop nonoliguric renal failure, usually associated with...

nephrotoxic agents burns, traumatic injury, halogenated anesthetic agents

hemoglobinuria

transfusion reaction, hemolytic anemia (hgb released from hemolysis becomes concentrated in tubules)

What is done to prevent atelectasis and resp tract infection

turn, cough and deep breathe frequently

What skin care should be provided with ARF

turning frequently bathing with cool water keeping skin clean and well moisturized fingernails kept trimmed

Fluid replacement in renal dse may be based on...

urine output any GI losses insensible losses

Lab & urine findings with prerenal azotemia

BUN increased Creat normal or slightly increased Ration > 20:1 urine output - decreased urine sodium - decreased urine osmolality - increased to 500 mOsm urine SG - increased MAP < 60 mmHg

Hyperkalemia is treated with

sodium polystyrene (Kayexalate) PO, NG, retention enema

As ARF resolves, chemistry tests are used to determine the amts of .........

sodium, potassium and water for replacement

What factors contribute to an older client's failure to consume adequate fluid

suppression of thirst decreased mobility to access fluids confusion

The nurse tests the urine of a client with acute kidney injury (AKI) with a multitest reagent strip. The strip tests highly positive for proteinuria. The nurse plans care, knowing that this result is consistent with which type of AKI?

With intrinsic failure, there is a fixed specific gravity and the urine tests positive for proteinuria. In prerenal failure, the specific gravity is high and there is very little or no proteinuria. In postrenal failure, there is a fixed specific gravity and little or no proteinuria

What are some nephrotoxic agents

aminoglycosides (gent, tobra, vanc, neomycin) contrast, heavy metals (cisplatin or bismuth) solvents & chemicals, NSAIDS, ACE inhibitors (interfere with normal autoregulatory mechanisms and may cause hypoperfusion and eventual ischemia) amphotericin B cyclosporine

Postrenal ARF is a result of

an obstruction that develops anywhere from the collecting ducts of kidney to urethra pressure rises in kidney tubules and hydronephrosis (stretching of the renal pelvis) occurs, compressing normal renal tissue and resulting in a decreased GFR

BUN increases steadily at a rate dependent on....

the degree of protein catabolism renal perfusion fluid & protein intake N/V, lethary, headache, muscle twitching, seizures may occur

Diuretic phase is marked by

gradual increase in urine output output may be normal or large amts of dilute urine

How is the caloric need met with ARF

high carb meals (protein sparing effect)

After the diuretic phase, what diet is used

high carb with sufficient protein to promote nitrogen balance

If prerenal azotemia is caused by hypovolemia secondary to hypoproteinuria, what may be prescribed

infusion of albumin

Initiation begins with .......... and ends when ..........

initial insult oliguria occurs

What worsens hyperkalemia

protein catabolism and acidosis

Accurate intake and output are an essential part of the nursing management for ARF. A part of fluid assessment is estimating insensible fluid loss. The nurse knows that a patient with a temperature of 100.6°F would have a maximum insensible fluid loss of __________ mL/day. 800 875 950 1,008

1008mL Normal insensible loss is 500 to 800 mL/day. Fever increases this loss by 13%/degree of Celsius temperature elevation. An increase of 2 degrees (from 37 to 39) would result in a minimum increase in fluid loss of 630 mL (500 mL × 26%) and a maximum loss of 1.008 mL (800 mL × 26%).

What is restricted from diet for ARF

proteins potassium caffeine phosphorus

Treatment of postrenal ARF

relieving the obstruction (prostatectomy, nephrostomy tubes, indwelling caths)

If there is residual damage to the glomerular basement membrane after the recovery phase....

residual renal impairment may result

Fluids administered (IV or PO) must replace both

sensible and insensible losses

Acidosis may require tx with

sodium bicarbonate if serum bicarbonate concentration is < 15 mmmol/L or arterial pH is < 7.2 OR dialysis

Causes of prerenal azotemia

volume-depletion states (dehydration, hemorrhage, GI losses decreased CO (MI, heart failure, dysrhythmias, cardiogenic shock) vasodilated states (sepsis, anaphylaxis, antihypertensives or other meds that cause vasodilation)


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