Internal Medicine

Acute and Chronic Renal Failure

Kidney Function Decline

Other Topics

Welcome to renal disorders, student! We're beginning with acute and chronic renal failure - conditions representing the spectrum from sudden kidney injury to progressive, irreversible loss of kidney function. I'll guide you through the mechanisms, diagnosis, and management of both acute kidney injury (AKI) and chronic kidney disease (CKD). Understanding renal failure is crucial as it affects millions worldwide and has profound implications for fluid balance, electrolyte homeostasis, and waste elimination. Let's explore the vital functions of the kidneys and what happens when they fail!

🩺 Definitions and Epidemiology

Renal failure encompasses both acute and chronic conditions with distinct timelines, causes, and clinical implications. Accurate classification is essential for appropriate management.

Acute Kidney Injury (AKI)

  • Rapid decline in kidney function (hours to days)
  • Often reversible with prompt treatment
  • Defined by KDIGO criteria (creatinine/urine output)
  • Hospital-acquired in 50% of cases
  • Mortality: 15-60% depending on severity

Chronic Kidney Disease (CKD)

  • Progressive, irreversible kidney damage (>3 months)
  • Staged 1-5 based on GFR and albuminuria
  • Affects 10-15% of adult population
  • Leading causes: Diabetes, hypertension
  • Progression to ESRD in subset of patients
AKI Stage Serum Creatinine Urine Output Clinical Implications
Stage 1 1.5-1.9x baseline OR ≥0.3 mg/dL increase <0.5 mL/kg/hr for 6-12 hours Mild injury, usually reversible
Stage 2 2.0-2.9x baseline <0.5 mL/kg/hr for ≥12 hours Moderate injury, increased mortality
Stage 3 3.0x baseline OR ≥4.0 mg/dL OR initiation of RRT <0.3 mL/kg/hr for ≥24 hours OR anuria for ≥12 hours Severe injury, high mortality, often requires RRT
Clinical Pearl: Remember that a small rise in creatinine (0.3 mg/dL) represents significant kidney injury - about 50% of nephron mass must be lost before creatinine rises above normal range.

🔄 Pathophysiology and Etiology

AKI and CKD have distinct but sometimes overlapping pathophysiological mechanisms. Understanding the cause guides specific management approaches.

Prerenal AKI (55%)

  • Reduced renal perfusion
  • Volume depletion (dehydration, bleeding)
  • Heart failure, cirrhosis
  • Renal artery stenosis
  • NSAIDs, ACE inhibitors

Intrinsic Renal AKI (40%)

  • Direct kidney damage
  • Acute tubular necrosis (ischemic, toxic)
  • Glomerulonephritis
  • Interstitial nephritis
  • Vascular diseases

Postrenal AKI (5%)

  • Urinary tract obstruction
  • Prostatic hypertrophy
  • Stones, tumors, strictures
  • Neurogenic bladder
  • Retroperitoneal fibrosis

CKD Etiologies

Cause Percentage Key Features Prevention Strategies
Diabetes 40-45% Diabetic nephropathy, albuminuria Glycemic control, BP control, SGLT2 inhibitors
Hypertension 25-30% Hypertensive nephrosclerosis BP control, RAAS blockade
Glomerulonephritis 10-15% Immune-mediated, various patterns Early detection, immunosuppression
Polycystic Kidney Disease 5-10% Genetic, bilateral cysts Family screening, BP control
Other 10-15% Interstitial, vascular, obstructive Cause-specific prevention
Tutor Tip: Think of AKI causes using the "VITAMIN CDE" mnemonic: Vascular, Infectious, Toxic, Autoimmune, Metabolic, Inflammatory/Ischemic, Neoplastic, Congenital, Degenerative, Endocrine.

👨‍⚕️ Clinical Presentation

Renal failure presentations range from asymptomatic biochemical abnormalities to life-threatening complications. Recognition of patterns aids in diagnosis and urgency of intervention.

Common Symptoms and Signs

AKI Presentation

  • Oliguria/anuria (though non-oliguric AKI common)
  • Fluid overload (edema, pulmonary congestion)
  • Uremic symptoms (nausea, confusion, pericarditis)
  • Electrolyte disturbances (hyperkalemia, acidosis)
  • Often superimposed on acute illness

CKD Presentation

  • Often asymptomatic until advanced stages
  • Fatigue, decreased appetite
  • Nocturia, polyuria (early), oliguria (late)
  • Hypertension, anemia
  • Bone pain, pruritus (advanced CKD)

Uremic Syndrome Manifestations

System Manifestations Mechanism Management
Neurological Encephalopathy, seizures, peripheral neuropathy Toxin accumulation, electrolyte imbalances Dialysis, seizure prophylaxis
Cardiovascular Hypertension, pericarditis, heart failure Volume overload, uremic toxins Volume control, dialysis, medications
Gastrointestinal Nausea, vomiting, anorexia, GI bleeding Uremic toxins, platelet dysfunction Antiemetics, dialysis, PPIs
Hematological Anemia, bleeding tendency EPO deficiency, platelet dysfunction ESA, iron, transfusions, DDAVP
Metabolic Acidosis, hyperkalemia, bone disease Reduced excretion, vitamin D metabolism Bicarbonate, binders, vitamin D
Renal Emergencies: Severe hyperkalemia (>6.5 mEq/L with ECG changes), pulmonary edema, uremic pericarditis, severe metabolic acidosis (pH <7.2), and anuria with rising creatinine require immediate intervention and often dialysis.

🔍 Diagnostic Approach

Renal failure evaluation involves laboratory tests, imaging, and sometimes kidney biopsy to determine cause, severity, and chronicity.

Diagnostic Workup

Test Category Key Tests Interpretation Clinical Utility
Renal Function Creatinine, BUN, eGFR, Cystatin C Trend more important than single value Quantify degree of impairment
Urinalysis Dipstick, microscopy, culture RBC casts (GN), WBC casts (interstitial), granular casts (ATN) Differentiate intrinsic causes
Electrolytes K+, Na+, HCO3-, Ca2+, PO4- Hyperkalemia, acidosis common Guide acute management
Imaging Renal US, CT, MRI Size, obstruction, vascularity Small kidneys suggest chronicity
Serology ANA, ANCA, anti-GBM, complements Positive in autoimmune causes Identify specific glomerular diseases
Biopsy Percutaneous kidney biopsy Definitive diagnosis For unexplained AKI, glomerular disease

Differentiating AKI from CKD

AKI Clues

  • Recent creatinine rise
  • Normal kidney size on ultrasound
  • No chronic findings (anemia, bone disease)
  • Reversible causes present
  • Urine sodium >20 mEq/L (intrinsic)

CKD Clues

  • Known duration >3 months
  • Small, echogenic kidneys on ultrasound
  • Anemia, hyperparathyroidism
  • Chronic symptoms present
  • Urine sodium <20 mEq/L (adapted)
Important: Always check for urinary obstruction with renal ultrasound early in AKI evaluation - it's a reversible cause that requires prompt intervention.

💊 Management Strategies

Management involves treating the underlying cause, managing complications, and preventing further kidney damage. Approaches differ for AKI and CKD.

AKI Management Principles

Intervention Indication Approach Monitoring
Volume Resuscitation Prerenal AKI, hypovolemia Crystalloids, assess response Urine output, clinical volume status
Remove Nephrotoxins Drug-induced AKI Stop offending agents (NSAIDs, contrast, antibiotics) Creatinine trend
Relieve Obstruction Postrenal AKI Catheter, nephrostomy, stenting Post-obstructive diuresis
Electrolyte Management Hyperkalemia, acidosis Kayexalate, bicarbonate, glucose/insulin Serial electrolytes, ECG
Renal Replacement Therapy Refractory complications Hemodialysis, CRRT, SLED Clinical status, electrolytes

CKD Management by Stage

Early CKD (Stages 1-3)

  • Treat underlying cause (DM, HTN)
  • RAAS blockade (ACEi/ARB)
  • SGLT2 inhibitors (cardiorenal protection)
  • BP target <130/80 mmHg
  • Regular monitoring

Advanced CKD (Stages 4-5)

  • Manage complications (anemia, bone disease)
  • Dietary modifications (protein, potassium)
  • Prepare for renal replacement therapy
  • Vaccinations (Hep B, pneumococcal)
  • Nephrology referral
Treatment Principle: For AKI, the goal is to prevent further injury and support recovery. For CKD, the goals are to slow progression and manage complications.

⚠️ Complications and Their Management

Renal failure affects virtually every organ system. Prompt recognition and management of complications is crucial for patient outcomes.

Electrolyte Emergencies

  • Hyperkalemia: Calcium gluconate (cardioprotection), insulin/dextrose, albuterol, kayexalate, dialysis
  • Metabolic Acidosis: Sodium bicarbonate (if pH <7.2), dialysis
  • Hyperphosphatemia: Phosphate binders, dietary restriction
  • Hypocalcemia: Calcium supplements, activated vitamin D

Other Complications

  • Volume Overload: Diuretics, ultrafiltration, salt/fluid restriction
  • Uremic Bleeding: DDAVP, conjugated estrogens, dialysis
  • Anemia: ESA therapy, iron supplementation
  • Renal Osteodystrophy: Vitamin D, phosphate binders, calcimimetics
Clinical Insight: Contrast-induced nephropathy can be prevented with volume expansion (isotonic saline or bicarbonate), using lowest possible contrast dose, and avoiding nephrotoxins around the time of procedure.

🌱 Prevention and Prognosis

Preventing renal failure and its progression requires risk factor modification, early detection, and appropriate management of underlying conditions.

AKI Prevention

  • Avoid nephrotoxins when possible
  • Volume expansion before contrast
  • Monitor high-risk patients (sepsis, heart failure)
  • Early recognition and intervention
  • Medication dose adjustment for renal function

CKD Progression Prevention

  • Optimal BP control
  • Glycemic control in diabetes
  • RAAS blockade in proteinuric disease
  • SGLT2 inhibitors for cardiorenal protection
  • Regular monitoring and early referral

Prognostic Factors

  • Cause of kidney disease
  • Degree of proteinuria
  • BP control
  • Rate of GFR decline
  • Comorbid conditions
Pro Tip: The KDIGO heat map combines GFR and albuminuria categories to predict prognosis and guide frequency of monitoring in CKD patients.

🧠 Key Takeaways

  • AKI is acute, often reversible; CKD is chronic, progressive
  • AKI causes: prerenal (55%), intrinsic (40%), postrenal (5%)
  • CKD leading causes: diabetes, hypertension, glomerulonephritis
  • Diagnosis involves labs, imaging, urinalysis, sometimes biopsy
  • Management focuses on cause treatment and complication management
  • Complications affect multiple systems and require specific interventions
  • Prevention through risk factor modification is crucial
  • Early nephrology referral improves outcomes in advanced disease

🧭 Conclusion

We've thoroughly explored acute and chronic renal failure, student—from the rapid onset of AKI to the insidious progression of CKD. Remember that kidney function affects virtually every aspect of physiology, and renal failure management requires a comprehensive approach addressing multiple systems. I encourage you to master the evaluation of renal failure and understand the principles of preventing both AKI and CKD progression. Excellent work starting the renal disorders section! Next, we'll examine glomerulonephritis and its various immunological mechanisms.

In renal failure management, prevention is paramount - once significant nephron mass is lost, the decline may be inevitable, but the rate can be modified.