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Diabetes and Kidney. Normal Kidney. Diabetic Kidney. Diabetic nephropathy. Commonest cause of Renal failure 50 % of dialysis patients have DM 30 % of patients with type 1 & 2 develop renal failure. This number will increase as the diabetic population is increasing.
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Normal Kidney Diabetic Kidney
Diabetic nephropathy • Commonest cause of Renal failure • 50 % of dialysis patients have DM • 30 % of patients with type 1 & 2 develop renal failure This number will increase as the diabetic population is increasing
Risk factors for developing Diabetic Nephropathy • Poor control of blood glucose, • Long duration of Diabetes, • Presence of other diabetic complication, • Ethnicity (Asian, Pima Indians), • Pre-existing High BP, • Family h/o of Diabetic Nephropathy, • Family h/o Hypertension.
Diabetic Nephropathy • Clinical syndrome consisting of • Protein in urine • High BP • Decline in renal function • If > 25 years elapse - unlikely to develop nephropathy.
Microalbuminuria • Called micro… because it is not detectable by normal urine dip stick • Urinary albumin (30 - 300 mg/day) • Becomes irreversible when reaches 300 • Detected by newer generation dipstix (micral)
Screening for microalbuminuria • Whom to screen • Type 1 DM, from 5 years from diagnosis, • Annually from diagnosis • Abnormal tests • Exclude recent vigourous exercise, fever, heart failure, urine infection, Prostatitis and menstruation, • Confirm observation twice, • Look for hypertension
Hypertension • BP of < 130 / 80 is ideal • Prevents progression of Renal Failure • myocardial hypertrophy • ACE I / ARBs - drugs of choice Use with caution if S.Creatinine > 3 mg • Choice depends on comorbid conditions too • b blocker in CAD
Diet • Calories - 35 K cal / kg • Proteins of high quality - 0.8 gm / kg • Salt - 4 - 5 gm / day • Potassium - 50 - 60 meq/day • Lipids 30 % of calorie intake.
Fluid management Many diabetics have nephrotic state and severe edema and need rigorous salt & fluid restriction • Severe edema - 600 - 800 ml / day • Mild to moderate - equal to UOP • No edema - UOP + insensible losses
Ca - PO4 metabolism • To be tackled early to prevent secondary hyperparathyroidism • AIM • Ca ~ 10, PO4 < 5.5 , Ca X PO4 < 55 • Ca supplementation 1 - 1.5 gm / day • CaCO3 - 40 % elemental Ca • Ca acetate 20 % • Ca with meals will act as PO4 binder • To be given empty stomach for Ca suppl. • Vit D3 0.25 – 1 mg /day • If PO4 very high, to be reduced first
Anaemia • May occur when GFR < 50 % & almost always present when GFR < 30 % • Correct deficiencies • Iron, Folic acid, Vit B12, Pyridoxine • Erythropoietin 75 - 150 iu/kg SC • With Iron supplements • Expensive therapy Rs. 8 - 10, 000 / month • Hb % maintained at 11 - 12 • > 13 in pts with CAD
Others • Lipid lowering - diet, statins • Low dose aspirin • Avoid nephrotoxic drugs & contrast procedures • Prevent & treat infections energetically • Hepatitis B immunization • Early immunization ideal • if Cr. > 3 double & more frequent dosing
Options of Renal Replacement Therapies • Dialysis • Hemodialysis • Peritoneal dialysis • Continuous Ambulatory Peritoneal Dialysis • Continuous Cyclic Peritoneal Dialysis • Renal Transplantation • Simultaneous Pancreas KidneyTransplantation
Renal replacement therapy • Hemodialysis (HD) - Rs. 12 - 15000 / mo • Peritoneal dialysis (PD) - Rs. 20000 / mo • Renal Transplantation - 3 - 3.5 Lakhs for first year • Not funded by the Government • Not covered by insurance Very expensive Hence the real need to prevent diabetic ESRD
Conclusion Pathogenesis and progression of Renal Disease in Diabetics is multifactorial and intervention should be multi-pronged • Glycemic control • Hypertension control • Treat dyslipdemia • Others • Diet, Smoking cessation, Exercise etc.