Topic: pyelonephritis, renal failure, nephrotic syndrome
Question: Discuss in short the aetiology, clinical features, investigations and management of chronic renal failure.
Click here for Reference Material-This material is informational alone and is not specifically prepared as an answer for any question. Readers may do their own research before finalising diagnoses according to the characteristics unique to each question. Readers should not proceed without cross-referencing with relevant textbooks as well as standard guidelines available.
Brief overview of chronic renal failure:
Aetiology:
– Diabetes mellitus
– Hypertension
– Glomerulonephritis
– Polycyctic kidney disease
– Urinary tract infections
– Vesicoureteral reflux
– Analgesic nephropathy
Clinical Features:
– Fatigue, lethargy
– Anorexia, nausea, vomiting
– Fluid overload – edema, pulmonary edema
– Hypertension
– Anemia
– Metabolic acidosis
– Uremic fetor in breath
– Uremic pericarditis, neuropathy, encephalopathy in advanced disease
Investigations:
– Blood urea and serum creatinine – elevated
– Glomerular filtration rate (GFR) – decreased
– Urinalysis – proteinuria, casts
– Ultrasound – small, contracted kidneys
– Kidney biopsy – to determine underlying pathology
Management:
– Treat underlying cause
– Control blood pressure
– Low protein diet
– Fluid, electrolyte and acid-base balance
– Anemia management with erythropoietin
– Dialysis – hemodialysis or peritoneal dialysis
– Renal transplantation in eligible patients
– Treatment of complications
The goal is to slow progression, manage complications, and replace kidney function via dialysis and transplantation when indicated.