1 / 28

Renal diseases

Renal diseases. HLTAP502A Analyse Health Information. Urolithiasis. Urinary stones, they vary in size from microscopic crystals to calculi that are several centimetres in diameter.

alyn
Télécharger la présentation

Renal diseases

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Renal diseases HLTAP502A Analyse Health Information

  2. Urolithiasis • Urinary stones, they vary in size from microscopic crystals to calculi that are several centimetres in diameter. • They can be found in the pelvis of the kidney (the largest being a staghorn), the ureter and the urinary bladder.

  3. The formation of stones relates to factors that: • Increase the supersaturation of urine with calculus forming salts eg • Over-excretion of salt (oxalate) • Urine acidity • Low urine volume • Preformed nuclei eg • Uric acid crystallites

  4. Types of stones • 75% - 80% are composed of calcium (mainly calcium oxalate – found in rhubarb, spinach, cocoa, nuts, pepper, tea) • 5%-10% uric acid crystals – uric acid is a by-product of protein metabolism. It crystallises in acidic environments. • 2% are cystine – due to an inherited defect in the renal tubules which impairs the reabsorption of the amino acids cystine. • The rest are struvite (magnesium ammonium phosphate). Struvite stones are a result of UTI. These stones need to be treated as infected foreign bodies.

  5. Causes of hypercalcaemia • Hyperparathyroidism • Renal tubular acidosis • Cancer – multiple myeloma, bony metastases • Excessive intake of vitamin D

  6. Medications known to cause stones • Antacids • Diamox • Vitamin D • Laxatives • Aspirin

  7. Signs and symptoms • Commonly cause pain, bleeding, obstruction and secondary infections. • Renal colic – typically excruciating and intermittent • Originating in the flank, radiating across the abdomen • Also into the genital region and inner thigh • Calculi in the bladder may cause suprapubic pain

  8. Signs and symptoms (cont) • GI symptoms such as nausea, vomiting and abdominal distention • Chills, fever • Haematuria • Pyuria • Frequency of urination

  9. Diagnosis • History – family, medical, dietary • X-Rays – plain, IVP, urogram, MRI, CT • Ultrasound • Blood chemistries • 24-hour urine collection – calcium, creatinine, uric acid, pH • Analysis of stones to assess for underlying disorder

  10. Medical treatment • Uteroscopy • Chemolysis • Nephrostomy • Electrohydraulic lithrotripsy • Surgical removal

  11. Extracorporeal shock wave lithotripsy • Extracorporeal shock wave lithotripsy (ESWL) is a procedure used to shatter simple stones in the kidney or upper urinary tract. • Ultrasonic waves are passed through the body until they strike the dense stones. • Pulses of sonic waves pulverize the stones, which are then more easily passed through the ureter and out of the body in the urine.

  12. Extracorporeal shock wave lithotripsy

  13. Percutaneous nephrolithotomy • The surgeon makes a tiny incision in the back and creates a tunnel directly into the kidney. • Using an instrument called a nephroscope, the surgeon locates and removes the stone. • For large stones, some type of energy probe (ultrasonic or electrohydraulic) may be needed to break the stone into small pieces. • Generally, patients stay in the hospital for several days and may have a small tube called a nephrostomy tube left in the kidney during the healing process. • One advantage of percutaneous nephrolithotomy over ESWL is that the surgeon removes the stone fragments instead of relying on their natural passage from the kidney

  14. Percutaneous nephrolithotomy

  15. Nursing interventions • Assessments – vitals, pain, urine • Relieve pain • Medication • Positioning • Apply heat • FBC – input/output • Urine observations • Straining • Testing – blood, UTI • Volume • Treat other symptoms – fever, N/V, abdominal distension

  16. Acute renal failure

  17. Causes • Decreased blood flow – shock, burns, dehydration • Over exposure to metals, solvents, radiographic contrast, some antibiotics • Myoglobinuria • Direct injury to the kidney • Infections – pyelonephritis, septicaemia • Urinary tract obstruction – tumours, stones • Disorders of the blood – transfusion reactions

  18. Clinical Manifestations • Decreased urinary output • Oliguria – less than 100mls per day • Anuria – no urine passed • Hypertension • Oedema • Anorexia • Metallic taste in mouth • Persistent hiccoughs • Changes in mental status or mood • Nausea, vomiting • Bleeding – bruising, GIT, urinary • Pain – flank • Halitosis

  19. Phases of ARF • Initial period – ends when oliguria develops • Period of oliguria – show uraemic symptoms • Period of diuresis • Period of recovery – may take 3-12 months

  20. Treatment • Treat the cause • Maintain fluid balance • Restore and maintain chemical balance • Dietary • Restrict sodium, potassium, proteins • Increase carbohydrates • Diuretics may be used to initiate diuresis • Prevent complications • Dialysis – peritoneal, haemodialysis

  21. Complications of ARF • End stage renal failure • Cardiovascular – CCF, pericarditis • Pulmonary system – APO • Nervous system – generalised seizures, coma • Chronic renal failure • GIT – blood loss, stress ulcers, gastritis • Hypertension • Electrolyte imbalances – hyperkalaemia, hyponatraemia

  22. Peritoneal dialysis

  23. Continuous ambulatory peritoneal dialysis (CAPD) • The patient has a permanent access port in the abdomen. • Dialysis fluid (1.5-3litres) is drained into the peritoneal cavity and left there for 4-5 hours • The dialysate with wastes is then drained from the peritoneal cavity, and more fluid added. • This is repeated about 4-5 times a day

  24. Haemodialysis

  25. Vascular access • There are three basic kinds of vascular accesses for haemodialysis: • an arteriovenous (AV) fistula, • an AV graft, and • a venous catheter. • The AV fistula is considered the best long-term vascular access for haemodialysis because it provides adequate blood flow for dialysis, lasts a long time, and has a complication rate lower than the other access types. • The fistula takes 6-8 weeks to mature

  26. Arteriovenous fistula

  27. Care of access site • Check access site before each treatment. • Be careful of trauma to access. • Don't take blood pressure on arm with access. • Patient not to wear jewellery or tight clothes over access site. • Patient not to sleep with access arm under head or body. • Patient not to lift heavy objects or put pressure on access arm. • Patient to check the pulse in access every day.

  28. Kidney transplant

More Related