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Management of Patients With Renal Disorders

Management of Patients With Renal Disorders . Renal Disorders. Fluid and electrolyte imbalances Most accurate indicator of fluid loss or gain in an acutely ill patient is weight. Causes of Acute Renal Failure. Hypovolemia Hypotension Reduced cardiac output and heart failure

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Management of Patients With Renal Disorders

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  1. Management of Patients With Renal Disorders

  2. Renal Disorders • Fluid and electrolyte imbalances • Most accurate indicator of fluid loss or gain in an acutely ill patient is weight

  3. Causes of Acute Renal Failure • Hypovolemia • Hypotension • Reduced cardiac output and heart failure • Obstruction of the kidney or lower urinary tract • Obstruction of renal arteries or veins

  4. Acute Renal Failure: Is a sudden and almost complete loss of kidney function ( decreased GFR) Mnifestations: • Oliguria • Anuria • normal urine volume. Categories of ARF: • Prerenal: as a result of impaired blood flow to the kidney • Interrenal: as a result of actual parenchymal damage to the glomeruli and kidney tubule. • Post renal: as a result of obstruction somewhere distal to the kidney, such as Ureterovesical reflux.

  5. Phases of ARF: • Initial period: begins with initial insult • The oliguria period( less than 400ml/day): Characterized by increase serum urea, creatinine, K, uric acid, organic acids, and magnesium. The uremic symptoms first appears which is life-threatening such as Hyperkalemia. • The diuresis period: gradually increasing urine output, lab values stop rising and start to decrease • The recovery period: signals the improvement of renal function and may take 3-12 months, lab results return to the normal levels

  6. Clinical manifestations: • Oliguria, anuria (less than 50 ml/day), or normal urine output are not as common. • Increased serum creatinine, and BUN level • Pt may appear critically ill and lethargic, with nausea, vomiting, and diarrhea. • Skin and mucous membrane are dry from dehydration and the breath may have the odor of the urine (uremic fetor) • Drowsiness, headache, muscle twitching, and seizures

  7. Assessment and diagnostic findings: • Changes in the urine • Changes in the kidney contour ( ultrasound) • Increase BUN and creatinine levels • Hyperkalemia, hypocalcemia, hyperphosphoremia • Anemia • Metabolic acidosis

  8. Medical management: • Manage fluid and electrolyte imbalance • Diuretics may be given • Adequate blood flow to the kidney ( by low doses of dopamine 1-3 microgram/kg) • Dialysis may be initiated to prevent serious complications of ARF • Treat Hyperkalemia: • administer Kayexalate ( orally or by retention edema) • intravenouse glucose and insulin or calcium gluconate • sodium bicharbonate to elevate plasma PH which cause potassium to move into the cell. • Finally decrease the dietary intake of potassium • Correction of Acidosis and elevated phosphorus level ( by aluminum hydroxide---- phosphate binding agent) • Nutritional therapy

  9. Nursing Management • Monitor fluid and electrolyte balance • Reduce metabolic rate • Promote pulmonary function • Prevent infection • Provide skin care • Provide support

  10. Chronic renal failure: • Or ESRD is a progressive irreversible deterioration in renal function in which the body’s ability to maintain metabolic and fluid and electrolyte balance fails, resulting in uremia or azotemia ( retention of urea and other nitrogenous wastes in the blood) • May caused by systemic disease such as DM, hypertension, chronic glomerulonephritis… etc

  11. Causes of Chronic Renal Failure • Diabetes mellitus • Hypertension • Chronic glomerulonephritis, • Pyelonephritis or other infections • Obstruction of urinary tract • Hereditary lesions • Vascular disorders • Medications or toxic agents

  12. Clinical manifestations: • Neurologic: Weakness, fatigue, confusion, inability to concentrate, tremors, seizures, behavior changes • Integumentary: gray-bronze color skin, dry, pruritis, ecchymosis, thin brittle nails • Cardiovascular: hypertension, pitting edema, periorbital edema, pericardial friction rub, engorged neck veins, pericarditis, pericardial effusion, hyperkalemia, hyperlipidemia • Pulmonary: signs of pulmonary edema • Gastrointestinal: Ammonia odor to breath, mouth ulceration and bleeding, anorexia, constipation or diarrhea • Hematology: anemia • Musculoskeletal: muscle cramps, loss of muscle strength, bone pain, bone fracture

  13. Assessment and diagnostic findings • GFR: by obtaining a 24 hr urine collection for creatinine clearance. • Na and water retention • Acidosis • Anemia • Ca and Ph imbalance • Complications: • Hyperkalemia • Hypertension • anemia, Bone disease

  14. Medical management: • Antacids: To treat hyperphosphatemia and hypocalcemia (Aluminum-based antiacide bind with phosphorus in the GI tract) • antihypertensive cardiovascular agents • Antiseizure agents • Erythropoietin • Nutritional therapy • Dialysis

  15. Glomerular Diseases • An inflammation of the glomerular capillaries • Acute nephritic syndrome • Chronic glomerulonephritis • Nephrotic syndrome

  16. Acute Glomerulonephritis: • Is inflammation of the glomerular capillaries. • Is primarily disease of children older than 2 yrs, but can appear at nearly any age • Pathophysiology: Throat infection with hemolytic sterptococcal, acute viral infection (upper RTI, mumps, hepatitis B), and antigens outside the body such as medications, foreign serum

  17. Clinical manifestation: 1. Hematuria (primary feature), 2. Cola-colored appearance of the urine (RBC’s, protein plugs) 3. Proteinuria, BUN and serum creatinine levels may rises as urine output drops 4. The patient may be anemic, edema and hypertension, headache, malaise, and flank pain Elderly pt. may c/o circulatory overload with dyspnea, engorged neck veins, cardiomegaly and pulmonary edema.

  18. Sequence of Events inAcute Glomerulonephritis

  19. Assessment and diagnostic findings: • Kidneys become large, swollen, and congested • Kidney biopsy • Elevated serum IgA • Complications: • Hypertensive Encephalopathy, • heart failure, • ESRF • pulmonary edema

  20. Medical management • Antibiotic, • Corticosteroids and immunosuppressant medication, • Dietary protein is restricted when renal impairment developed • Sodium restriction (in hypertensive Pt, edema, and heart failure) • Loop diuretics • Antihypertensive medication may given. Nursing Management: • Give enough CHO to reduce catabolism of protein • I&O • education for safe and effective self-care at home

  21. Chronic Glomerulonephritis • Causes include repeated episodes of acute glomerular nephritis, hypertensive nephrosclerosis, hyperlipidemia, and other causes of glomerular damage. • Symptoms vary; may be asymptomatic for years, as glomerular damage increases, before signs and symptoms develop of renal insufficiency/failure. • Abnormal laboratory tests include urine with fixed specific gravity, casts, and proteinuria; and electrolyte imbalances and hypoalbuminemia. • Medical management is determined by symptoms.

  22. Nursing Management Chronic Glomerulonephritis • Assessment • Potential fluid and electrolyte imbalances • Cardiac status • Neurologic status • Emotional support • Teaching self-care

  23. Renal Failure • Results when the kidneys cannot remove wastes or perform regulatory functions • A systemic disorder that results from many different causes • Acute renal failure is a reversible syndrome that results in decreased GFR and oliguria • Chronic renal failure (ESRD) is a progressive, irreversible deterioration of renal function that results in azotemia

  24. Nursing Process: The Care of the Patient with Renal Failure—Assessment • Fluid status • Nutritional status • Patient knowledge • Activity tolerance • Self-esteem • Potential complications

  25. Nursing Process: The Care of the Patient with Renal Failure—Diagnoses • Excess fluid volume • Imbalanced nutrition • Deficient knowledge • Risk for situational low self-esteem

  26. Collaborative Problems/Potential Complications • Hyperkalemia • Pericarditis • Pericardial effusion • Pericardial tamponade • Hypertension • Anemia • Bone disease and metastatic calcifications

  27. Nursing Process: The Care of the Patient with Renal Failure—Planning • Goals may include maintaining of IBW without excess fluid, maintenance of adequate nutritional intake, increased knowledge, participation of activity within tolerance improved self-esteem, and absence of complications.

  28. Excess Fluid Volume • Assess for signs and symptoms of fluid volume excess, and keep accurate I&O and daily weights • Limit fluid to prescribe amounts • Identify sources of fluid • Explain to patient and family the rationale for the restriction • Assist patient to cope with the fluid restriction • Provide or encourage frequent oral hygiene

  29. Imbalanced Nutrition • Assess nutritional status; weight changes and lab data • Assess patient nutritional patterns and history; note food preferences • Provide food preferences within restrictions • Encourage high-quality nutritional foods while maintaining nutritional restrictions • Assess and modify intake related to factors that contribute to altered nutritional intake, eg, stomatitis or anorexia • Adjust medication times related to meals

  30. Risk for Situational Low Self Esteem • Assess patient and family responses to illness and treatment • Assess relationships and coping patterns • Encourage open discussion about changes and concerns • Explore alternate ways of sexual expression • Discuss role of giving and receiving love, warmth, and affection

  31. Dialysis: Is the process used to remove fluid and uremic waste products from the body when the kidneys are unable to do so. Indications: • Acute dialysis: is indicated when there is a high and rising level of serum potassium, fluid overload, impeding pulmonary edema, increased acidosis, pericarditis, and sever confusion. May also used to remove toxin from the blood. • Chronic or maintenance dialysis: is indicated in ESRD, in the presence of uremic signs and symptoms affecting all the body systems ( nausea, vomiting, sever anorexia, increasing lethargy, mental confusion). Hyperkalemia, fluid overload not responsive to diuretics and fluid restriction.

  32. Hemodialysis The objective of Hemodialysis are • to extract toxic nitrogenous substances from the blood • and to remove excess water. Indicated for: • the patient who are acutely ill and require short-term dialysis (day to weak) • and for patient with ESRD who require long-term or permanent therapy. A dialyzer or artificial kidney serves as a synthetic, semipermeable membrane.

  33. Hemodialysis System

  34. Principles of Hemodialysis: • Diffusion principle: dialysate ( is a solution made up of all the important electrolytes in their ideal Extracellular concentrate. • Osmosis principle: • Ultrafiltration principle

  35. Preprocedure: • A predialysis assessment include: patient’s history and clinical findings, response to previous dialysis treatment, and laboratory results • Evaluates fluid balance before dialysis treatment so that corrective measures may be initiated at the beginning of the procedure: blood pressure, pulse, Wt, intake and output, tissue turgor, dry Wt or ideal WT

  36. Procedure:.. • Check the equipment • Access to the circulation is gained by inserting two large gauge needles to a graft or fistula • Blood being to flow through the tubing, assisted by the blood pump • A clamped saline bag always is attached to the circuit, just before the blood pump to use it if hypotension occurred • Heparin infusion can be attached to the circuit

  37. Cont… • Blood flows into the compartment of the dialyzer, where exchange of fluid and waste products takes place • Blood leaving the dialyzer passes through an air detector that shuts down the blood pump if any air is detected • After the located time finished, dialysis is terminated by clamping off blood from the patient, opening the saline line, and rinsing the circuit to return the patient’s blood • The nurse should monitor, support, assessing, and educating the patients.

  38. Vascular Access: • Subclavian, internal Juglar, and femoral catheter (venous catheter) • Arteriovenous Fistula: created surgically, provide long-term access for hemodialysis, the fistula takes 4-6 weeks to mature before it is ready for use, the patient instructed to perform exercise to increase the size of these vessels, venipunctures is contraindicated in the arm with fistula, assess for the thrill.

  39. Hemodialysis Catheter

  40. 3. Synthetic graft: • An arteriovenous graft can be created by subcutaneously interposing a biological, semibiologic, or synthetic graft material between an artery and vein • The graft is created when the patient’s vessels are not suitable for a fistula ( DM) • Graft usualy placed in the forearm, upper arm, or upper thigh • Complication such as thrombosis, infection, aneurysm formation and stenosis at the site of anastomosis are more frequent than fistula

  41. Internal Arteriovenous Fistula and Graft

  42. Complication of Hemodialysis: • Atherosclerotic cardiovascular disease an, Angina and fatigue • Disturbance of lipid metabolism (hypertriglyceridemia) • Stroke • Peripheral vascular insufficiency • Gastric ulcer • Disturbed calcium metabolism that lead to bone pain and fractures

  43. Cont… • Sleep problem • Fluid overload, malnutrition, infection, neuropathy and pruritis • Hypotension, nausea, vomiting, Dysrhythmias, chest pain • Painful muscle cramping • Air embolism • Dialysis disequilibrium result from cerebral fluid shift ( headache, nausea, vomiting, restlessness, decrease level of consciousness and seizures

  44. Long term management for Hemodialysis: • Pharmacologic therapy:the dosage of medications need to adjust for patient undergoing hemodialysis and monitored closely to ensure that blood and tissue levels of these medications are maintained without toxic accumulation. Example are antihypertensive medication which should not be taking at the day of dialysis to prevent hypotension. II.Nutritional and fluid therapy: • To minimize uremic symptoms and fluid and electrolyte imbalances. • To maintain good nutrition status through adequate protein calories, vitamin, and minerals intake

  45. Cont….. 3.To enable patient to eat a palatable and enjoyable diet. • Protein intake should be restricted to about 1 g/kg ideal body wt/day, High biologic quality protein ( contain essential amino acids) should be taken ( eggs, milk, meat, poultry, and fish) • Sodium is usually restricted to 2-3 g/day • Fluids are restricted to amount equal to the urine output plus 500ml to keep interdialytic wt gain under 1.5 kg. • Potassium restriction ( Average 1.5 to 2.5 g/day).

  46. Nursing Management of the Hospitalized Patient on Dialysis • Protect vascular access; assess site for patency and signs of potential infection, and do not use it for blood pressure or blood draws • Monitor fluid balance indicators and monitor IV therapy carefully; keep accurate I&O and IV administration pump records • Assess for signs and symptoms of uremia and electrolyte imbalance; regularly check lab data • Monitor cardiac and respiratory status carefully • Monitor blood pressure;antihypertensive agents must be held on dialysis days to avoid hypotension

  47. Cont…….. • Monitor all medications and medication dosages carefully; avoid medications containing potassium and magnesium • Address pain and discomfort • Implement stringent infection control measures • Monitor dietary sodium, potassium, protein, and fluid; address individual nutritional needs • Provide skin care: prevent pruritus; keep skin clean and well moisturized; trim nails and avoid scratching

  48. Nursing Management: I.Meeting psychosocial needs: Give the patient and their Families the opportunity to express feelings of anger and concern over the limitations that disease and treatment impose. • Treatment of depression with antidepressant agents • Referring the pt and family to clinical nurse specialists, and psychologist • Assess noncompliant pt for the impact of renal failure and it’s treatment on the pt and family and the coping strategies that may use • Helps pt to identify safe, effective coping strategies to cope with ever-present problems and fears

  49. Cont… II. Teaching patient self care: III. Teaching patient about Hemodialysis IV. Continuing care. The five E’s:Bridges to Renal rehabilitation: • Encouragement, • Education, • Exercise, • Employment, and • Evaluation

  50. Peritoneal Dialysis: • The goals are to remove toxic substances and metabolic wastes and to reestablish normal fluid and electrolyte balance. • May be treatment of choice for: • Patient with renal failure who are unable or unwilling to undergo hemodialysis or renal transplantation. • An initial treatment for renal failure while patient is being evaluated for a hemodialysis program, or when access to the blood stream is not possible

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