1 / 57

DIABETIC NEPHROPATHY & CHRONIC RENAL FAILURE / CHONIC KIDNEY DISEASE

DIABETIC NEPHROPATHY & CHRONIC RENAL FAILURE / CHONIC KIDNEY DISEASE. IDDM, 30-40% DN NIDDM, 10-20% DN. Incipient Nephropathy Predictors? Hyperfiltration Microalbuminuria Rising BP Poor glycemic contol. HTN.

mari
Télécharger la présentation

DIABETIC NEPHROPATHY & CHRONIC RENAL FAILURE / CHONIC KIDNEY DISEASE

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. DIABETIC NEPHROPATHY & CHRONIC RENAL FAILURE /CHONIC KIDNEY DISEASE

  2. IDDM, 30-40% DN NIDDM, 10-20% DN Incipient Nephropathy Predictors? Hyperfiltration Microalbuminuria Rising BP Poor glycemic contol HTN 0 2 5 11-23 13-25 15-27 Onset of Rising ESRD Proteinuria S.Cr Onset Of DM Functional changes GFR increase (renal hypertrophy) reversible albuminuria increase kidney size Structural changes increase GBM thickening Mesangial expansion nodular (Kimmelstiel-Wilson) & diffuse forms of intercapillary glomerulosclerosis capsular drop lesion fibrin cap lesion

  3. Morphologic changes • Glomeruli: • increase GBM thickening • Mesangial expansion • nodular (Kimmelstiel-Wilson) & diffuse forms of intercapillary glomerulosclerosis • capsular drop lesion • fibrin cap lesion • Tubulointerstitium,& tubular functional defects • Interstitial scarring • Impaired tubular reabsorption of low MW proteins and albumin • Increased Na reabsorption leading to volume expansion • Hypercalciuria • Impaired excretion of H & K ions • Vascular, hyaline thickening of the arteriolar wall • Glomerular haemodynamic changes • Decreasing Pglom: ACE-I, ARB, low protein diet

  4. Transient microalbuminuria • Hyperglycemia • Hypertension • Congestive heart failure • Urinary tract infection • Excessive physical exercise • Albumin Excretion Rate / AER • Normal < 30 mg/day • Microalbuminuria 30-300 mg/d • Overt proteinuria AER> 300 mg/d

  5. Overt Diabetic Nephropathy • In early DN the albuminuria is secondary to a loss of the anionic charge barrier of the GCW • In established DN, the proteinuria is due to the presence of an increased number of nonselective and large pores • The presence of persistent proteinuria heralds the overt phase of DN • >95% of patients with DN have D Retinopathy • Rate of decline in GFR has been reported as linear in a given patient, but wide differing between patients • ~ 1 ml/min per month, with 50% of patients reaching ESRD ~ 7 years after the onset of proteinuria. • Recent reports suggest that is has slowed down ~10 years

  6. Complication of DM • Microvascular • Retinopathy • Nephropathy • Macrovascular • Peripheral vascular disease • Coronary artery disease • Cerebrovascular disease • Diabetic neuropathy, incl. gastroparesis • Hyperkalemic RTA

  7. Syndrome ‘X’ • Obesity • Decreased glucose tolerance, Insulin resistance & hyperinsulinemia • Hypertension • Hyperlipidemia, esp triglycerides • Increased risk for atheroscerosis

  8. NIDDM • Patients on HD in a dialysis unit ~ 30-50% because of NIDDM & diabetic nephropathy • Many patients with NIDDM will die of other causes (cardiovascular) before reaching ESRD • Natural history less well characterized • Heterogeneous group, with many comorbid conditions, hypertension, obesity • 10-20% incidence of DN, mostly after 10-20 y • Familial predisposition

  9. Management • Control of Diabetes, HbA1c <7 • Control of hypertension, BP<130/80, if proteinuria BP<125/75 • Low salt diet • Control of hyperlipidemia • Weight control • Smoking cessation • Management of other comorbid conditions; cardiovascular, anemia, cerebrovascular, physical inactivity... • ACE-I, ARB, combination

  10. CHRONIC KIDNEY DISEASECKD

  11. usg

  12. , a-dsDNA, GBM-Ab

  13. Progression of CKD • Mechanisms of ongoing renal injury • Deposition IC, Ag, Ab, matrix, collagen, fibroblasts • Intracapillary coagulation • Vascular necrosis • Hypertension & increased Pglom • Metabolic disturbances, e.g. DM, hyperlipidemia • Continuous inflammation • Nephrocalcinosis ; dystrophic & metastatic • Loss of renal mass / nephrons • Ischemia; imbalance between renal energy demands and supply • Results in • Glomerulosclerosis • Tubular atrophy • Interstitial fibrosis

  14. Compensatory renal changes in CKD • Hypertrophy of residual nephrons • Increased RBF per nephron, but decreased total RBF • Increased Single Nephron GFR / SNGFR • Increased osmotic / solute load • Hyperfiltration • Increased intraglomerular pressure / Pglom

  15. ## NEPHRONS Pcap +flow Glomerular Protein Glomerular injury flux hyperfiltration Glomerulosclerosis ## NEPHRONS

  16. Pattern of excretory adaptation • Increased filtered load; Cr, BUN • Decreased tubular reabsorption; Na, H2O • Increased tubular secretion; K+, H+, Cr • Limitation of nephron adaptation • Magnitude • Time, ~response to intake / load, production • Abrupt changes in intake / production may not be tolerated • Trade off, expense to other systems • E.g. to preserve P balance PTH increases

  17. Volume Urine, Uosm, U(Na,K,H)

  18. Multiple mechanisms of chronic hypoxia in the kidney. • Mechanisms of hypoxia in the kidney of chronic kidney disease include loss of peritubular capillaries (A), • Decreased oxygen diffusion from peritubular capillaries to tubular and interstitial cells as a result of fibrosis of the kidney (B), • Stagnation of peritubular capillary blood flow induced by sclerosis of "parent" glomeruli (C), • Decreased peritubular capillary blood flow as a result of imbalance of vasoactive substances (D), • Inappropriate energy usage as a result of uncoupling of mitochondrial respiration induced by oxidative stress (E), • Increased metabolic demands of tubular cells (F), and • Decreased oxygen delivery as a result of anemia (G).

  19. Treatment modalities that target chronic hypoxia in the kidney • Improvement of anemia by EPO • Preservation of peritubular capillary blood flow by blockade of the renin-angiotensin system • Protection of the vascular endothelium  • VEGF    • Dextran sulfate • Antioxidants to improve the efficiency of cellular respiration • HIF-based therapy    (hypoxia inducible factor) • Prolyl hydroxylase inhibitors     • Gene transfer of constitutively active HIF

  20. Intact nephron hypothesis • Using experimental animals; urine from each kidney was collected seperately Before After End K1 K2 K1 K2 K2 GFR 50 50 55 14 24 NH3 excr 49 51 66 25 40 NH3 excr/100mlGFR 100 100 120 121 167 K2 was partially K1 removed removed • Conclusion • Normal renal tissue undergoes hypertrophy to compensate for loss of • functioning nephrons • -Normal tubules adapt, increase in function as other tubules are lost • -Diseased nephrons / tubules adapt in the same way ~ • increase NH3 excr / 100mlGFR • -Even diseased nephrons can increase their GFR

  21. The Uremic Syndrome • Nervous system • Impaired concentration, perceptual thinking, • Peripheral neuropathy; primarily sensory, paresthesias, restless leg syndrome • Autonomic neuropathy; impaired baroreceptor function, orthostatic hypotension, impaired sweating • Uremic ancephalopathy • Hematology system • Anemia is invariably present when renal function fall <30% • Decreased RBC survival, response to EPO, • Deficiencies of Fe, B12, folate, aluminium overload • Blood loss • Hyper PTH • Inflammation – malnutrition • Bone marrow fibrosis • Inadequate dialysis • Bleeding diathesis: easy bruising, slow clotting • Prolonged BT & abnormal platelet function • PF3 concentration are generally low, impaired aggregability • Reduced von Willebrand’s factor HMW multimers • Uremic toxins & PTH • Immune function • Impaired Ab response to viral Ag (not to bacterial) • Decreased T-cells • Cutaneous anergy

  22. Cardiovascular system • Cardiovascular disease is the leading cause of death in patients with CKD stage 4-5 • Accelerated Atherosclerosis / CAD • Hypertension, ~ 80% of all uremic patients • Pericarditis • Metabolic abnormalities • Lipids; increase in tot. triglycerides, Lp(a), LDL, decrease HDL • Carbohydrate metabolism; insulin resistance, decreased need for OAD / insulin in DM • High prolactin; galactorrhea • Men : testosteron is low, FSH / LH normal or high • Women: pg E2 & progesterone are low, FSH /LH normal or slightly elevated • Abnormalities of thyroid gland function test, normal TSH

More Related