c14.than
C14.Renal system
Renal disease and its ultimate consequence - renal failure - represent important issues in the
health debate. Although it is now technically feasible to relieve or reverse renal failure, limits to
what can be done in practice arise from ethical issues surrounding the allocation of healthcare
resources and the organization of organ donation, issues that are under constant debate.
Chronic renal failure is potentially fatal and may condemn a patient to years of dialysis with a substantially reduced quality of life. Successful renal transplantation provides an almost complete solution and now has an extremely good outcome; however, society has not yet fully adjusted to the implications of organ donation. Regular controversies on the persistent vegetative state and ‘brain death’ testify to this.
This chapter first reviews the normal function of the kidney. Subsequently, the consequences of impairment of these functions, i.e. homeostatic imbalances and renal failure, are explained. Finally, the common clinical conditions that cause these abnormalities are discussed.
Physiological principles of the renal system
The kidney is both structurally and function-
ally complex, and plays a central role in home-
ostasis. Thus, many possible forms of renal
malfunction can cause a wide range of clinical
conditions. Manifestations of renal disorder
include fluid, electrolyte and pH imbalances,
haemodynamic imbalance, the accumulation of
drugs, toxins and waste metabolic products,
loss of essential metabolites, and endocrine
abnormalities such as anaemia and bone
disease.
Pathological processes such as infection,
inflammation, auto-immunity, neoplasia and toxins can cause structural damage to the
glomeruli, the tubules or the urinary tract. Systemic or local circulatory insufficiency can also seriously compromise renal function. The most common pathologies are glomerular inflammation, urinary-tract infection and drug-
induced nephrotoxicity. In this section we review the physiological principles of normal renal function, so that abnormalities of the renal system may be better understood.
Anatomy
The gross anatomy of the renal system is shown
in Figure 14.1. It is important to distinguish
between the kidneys, which are structurally
complex, and the urinary tract, the function of
which is essentially the storage and transport of
urine. Three main regions are distinguished
within the kidney: the cortex, the medulla and
the pelvis. The cortex contains the glomeruli
and the proximal and distal tubules, and the
medulla contains the loops of Henle. Glomeruli
in different areas have different-length loops of
Henle to permit differential control over urine
concentration. The loops of the juxtamedullary
nephrons (nearest the medulla) extend almost to
the pelvis, the area into which the formed urine
drains from the collecting ducts. Throughout the
kidney there are interstitial cells, probably
concerned with endocrine functions.
Although kidney disorders are almost always
serious, disorders in the lower urinary tract
are seldom serious in themselves but often
symptomatically troublesome. However, chronic
obstructive problems in the lower urinary tract
may eventually cause damage to the kidneys.
The importance of the kidneys may be judged
from the fact that although they together weigh
just 500 g (less than 1% of body weight) they
receive 25% of the cardiac output. Thus renal
blood flow is about 1.2 L/min. Like many other
organs, the kidneys are modular, each having
about 1 million functional subunits or
nephrons, each of which performs all the major
renal functions and which together provide a
total filtration area of 1 m2. This represents considerable functional over-capacity because
life can continue quite normally with one-half of
a single functioning kidney, i.e. only 25% of
nephrons functioning. Thus when the kidneys
are diseased, serious symptoms do not appear
until there has been over 90% damage; more-
over, such damage is often irreversible, making
treatment difficult.
Summary of renal functions
The kidney is the body’s key organ of overall
homeostatic control and its functions may be
considered in three main groups (Table 14.1).
Elimination of waste is usually the main func-
tion associated with the kidney, but the regula-
tory functions are equally important, and the
kidneys are also involved in several major
endocrine systems.
Elimination
The potentially toxic by-products of metabolism
must be excreted, along with excess nutrients and
any exogenous toxins absorbed from the gut and
their subsequent metabolites. Generally, elimina-
tion is passive, although certain substances are
actively secreted.
Carbohydrate metabolism, the major energy
pathway of the body, produces carbon dioxide
and water. Most carbon dioxide is eliminated
passively by the lungs, but the kidneys have far
more control in secreting it, in small but crucial
amounts, as acid. Although much of the water
produced by metabolism, along with that taken
in the diet, is lost through sweating, respiration
and insensible losses, once again the kidney
exercises selective control to maintain water
balance.
The predominant nitrogenous waste product
is urea from protein metabolism and its level in
the blood provides a useful approximate index of
renal function. Nucleic acid breakdown produces
urate, which is actively secreted, and muscle
metabolism produces creatinine, which is also
used as an index of kidney function. Some
sulphate and phosphate are also released by
protein metabolism. Urea is not as harmful as is
commonly believed, guanidine, amines and
other metabolites (phenols, hydroxyacids, etc.)
being more toxic.
The kidney also has a role in the catabolism of peptides, notably insulin.
Fluid and electrolyte balance
The kidney plays a crucial, active role in main-
taining the correct ionic, osmotic, pH and fluid
balances throughout the body. It detects imbal-
ances, secretes local regulatory hormones, and
actively excretes or retains substances as neces-
sary. One of the drawbacks of its interaction with
so many different systems is that there may occa-
sionally be conflicting demands, which can be
resolved only by compromises. For example,
chloride may be variously regarded as an anion,
an acid or simply an osmotically active particle,
depending on circumstances. Controlling chlor-
ide to preserve electrical neutrality or osmotic
balance may compromise pH balance.
Water balance
The body is normally in positive water balance,
the kidney adjusting for varying intakes and
losses by altering water clearance. Certain irre-
ducible constraints enforce a minimum average
daily intake of about 1 L (Table 14.2). The
kidneys require at least 500 mL of water to
excrete the average daily load of osmotically
active waste products at maximal urinary
concentration, i.e. under maximal ADH stimula-
tion. This is just about balanced by the water
produced from the metabolic oxidation of carbo-
hydrates. Thus the minimum dietary intake
needed is that which will replace insensible
losses in breath, faeces and perspiration
(excluding additional or exertional perspiration).
Fluid compartments
The main fluid compartments of the body are
given in Figure 14.2. The intravascular and
extravascular components of the extracellular
fluid (ECF) are in equilibrium by free diffusion,
except that plasma proteins cannot usually
leave the blood. Although water diffuses across
cell walls passively under osmotic forces,
there are membrane pumps effecting the
flow of most other substances to and from the
intracellular fluid (ICF). However, the activity
of these pumps is largely dependent on
concentration gradients. Thus the kidney, by
controlling ECF composition, influences all
compartments.
There is a complex and subtle interplay
between the maintenance of ECF osmotic pres-
sure, mainly through control of sodium concen-
tration, and the total volume and relative
distribution of fluid between the compartments.
The kidney also controls the plasma potassium
level and thus total body potassium. By selec-
tively varying the secretion of hydrogen ions
and reabsorption or regeneration of bicarbonate
the kidney can significantly alter plasma pH, and
thus body pH.
Endocrine functions
The kidney is involved in three important
systemic hormonal systems.
Blood pressure
Renal involvement in blood pressure control
operates via a number of mechanisms (p.
880). This is partly ‘enlightened self-interest’
because the kidney cannot operate without
an adequate perfusion pressure, but it also
contributes to the systemic blood pressure
control mechanisms.
Calcium • Size-elective but otherwise indiscrimi-
The kidney is vital to calcium and bone metabo- nate ultrafiltration across the glomerular
lism. In addition to being a target organ for
vitamin D and parathormone, the kidney is
responsible for the final stage in the activation of
vitamin D by hydroxylating 25-hydroxychole-
calciferol to 1,25-dihydroxycholecalciferol. An
overview of vitamin D metabolism is given in
Chapter 3, p. 150.
Erythropoiesis
In response to hypoxaemia, the kidney secretes
erythropoietin, which promotes RBC production
in the bone marrow. Without erythropoietin,
erythropoiesis cannot proceed efficiently and Hb
levels stay below 6-8 g/100 mL, producing
anaemia. In certain less common renal diseases,
e.g. polycystic kidney and renal tumour, there is
erythropoietin over-production, with consequent
polycythaemia.
It can now be appreciated why renal failure is
so serious. In acute renal failure (ARF) it is
mainly elimination and fluid/electrolyte regula-
tion that are affected. The patient suffers partic-
ularly from retention of excess water, acid and
potassium. In chronic renal failure, endocrine
malfunction adds other problems, including
hypertension, bone disease and iron-resistant
anaemia.
Mechanisms of elimination
The kidney goes about elimination in a seem-
ingly perverse and inefficient manner. Instead of
selectively excreting unwanted substances it
filters almost everything, and then selectively
reabsorbs what needs to be conserved. About
10% of the total renal blood flow, i.e.
120 mL/min, is filtered at the glomeruli, along
with most low-molecular weight constituents:
this is the glomerular filtration rate (GFR). Some
99% of this 180 L/day is then actively reab-
sorbed, leaving an average daily urine volume of
only about 1.5 L. (This system may be a relic of
the aquatic era of the evolution of life, when the
large amounts of fluid and sodium that were lost
could easily be replaced.)
There are three main phases of elimination
(Figure 14.3):
membrane from plasma into the tubular lumen to produce filtrate.
• Active reabsorption into plasma of useful
substances in bulk, mostly from the proximal
tubule.
• Selective secretion from plasma or reabsorp-
tion into plasma of certain critical substances
in small amounts to maintain the fluid and
electrolyte balances, mainly in the distal tubule and collecting duct.
To understand how certain diseases affect renal function, the factors that affect filtration and
the patterns of reabsorption and secretion
must be briefly reviewed. This simple discus-
sion will not distinguish between the cortical and juxtamedullary nephrons; unless otherwise stated, the former are usually implied.
Filtration
During glomerular ultrafiltration blood cells and
colloidal macromolecules, i.e. plasma proteins,
are retained but smaller molecules (crystalloids)
are carried through the glomerular basement
membrane (GBM) under hydrostatic pressure by
solvent drag (convection). Substances with a
molecular weight ÷5000 Da pass freely. Passage
decreases with increasing molecular size, espe-
cially above about 25 kDa; only 3% of Hb
(64 kDa) would pass if it were free in plasma, and
less than 1% of albumin (minimum size approx.
70 kDa) passes. Anions pass less easily than
cations because the GBM is negatively charged,
but again this effect is only significant for larger
molecules.
Factors affecting glomerular filtration rate
The GFR is the key index of renal function
because if there is no filtration then none of
the regulatory mechanisms that act on the filtrate can operate. Figure 14.3 is a functional diagram of a nephron, which identifies the sites where factors which influence the GFR operate. Table 14.3 summarizes the clinical conditions under which these factors can become altered. This usually happens due to changes in filtra-
tion pressure (especially the systemic arterial pressure). The integrity of the basement membrane is another important factor.
Perfusion. The kidney strives to maintain
systemic arterial blood pressure, but failing that,
filtration pressure at the glomerulus is defended
by intrarenal mechanisms. Probably the most
common cause of ARF is when such mechanisms
are overwhelmed by severe systemic hypoten-
sion, e.g. from haemorrhagic or cardiogenic
shock. Long-term damage to renal arteries, e.g.
arteriosclerosis and/or atherosclerosis from
untreated hypertension, can cause chronic renal failure.
Renal autoregulation maintains renal blood
flow, filtration pressure and GFR over wide vari-
ations in renal perfusion pressure, principally by
alterations in the calibre of afferent and efferent
glomerular arteries. The afferent arterioles are
dilated by intrarenal PGs, while the efferent ones
are constricted by intrarenal angiotensin. In this
way the transmembrane hydrostatic pressure,
and hence GFR, is defended. One input to this
system is tubulo-glomerular feedback. If the GFR is altered, the consequent changes in the solute load of the glomerular filtrate are detected in the distal tubule by the juxtaglomerular apparatus (p. 879), which is involved in intrarenal hormone systems.
Another important intrarenal regulatory
mechanism is the potentially confusingly named
glomerulotubular balance. This is a second line
of defence if GFR is compromised beyond the
ability of the primary compensatory mecha-
nisms to cope. It serves to preserve excretion of
water, sodium and other solutes in the face of
reduced GFR. It thus provides one aspect of renal
reserve, delaying the onset of symptomatic
uraemia if renal function declines chronically.
The operation of these control mechanisms is
illustrated by the adverse effect of ACEIs in
patients with obstructive lesions in both renal
arteries (bilateral renal artery stenosis), or
patients in whom renal perfusion is otherwise
compromised by hypovolaemia (low blood
volume) or cardiac failure. In such cases optimal
renal perfusion is being maintained partly by
raised levels of angiotensin originating from
the renal response to the hypoperfusion.
Angiotensin maintains renal blood flow by
causing intrarenal efferent arteriolar constriction
and also, possibly, by elevating systemic BP.
ACEIs, by blocking this protective mechanism,
may precipitate renal failure by causing a signif-
icant reduction in renal perfusion. Similarly, PG inhibitors, e.g. NSAIDs, can have an adverse
effect on renal haemodynamics, causing renal impairment and fluid retention.
Glomerular basement membrane. The GBM
is a sensitive structure that is exposed to high
flow rates and high concentrations of potential
toxins and mediators. It can be damaged by
numerous pathological processes, and this
underlies many chronic renal diseases. If the
GBM is damaged, its permeability to large parti-
cles, especially smaller colloids such as albumin,
may be increased, causing proteinuria. In more
severe cases there may also be, paradoxically,
retention of water and sodium owing to a degree
of renal impairment (reduced GFR).
Simple variations in pore size cannot account
for these changes; porosity may be partly related
to a loss of the negative membrane charge,
which normally repels the similarly charged
plasma albumin. Normally some proteins
smaller than about 60-100 kDa are filtered, but
almost all are completely reabsorbed. However,
the reabsorptive capacity is low and soon
exceeded if there is an increase in tubular protein
concentration. The catabolism of filtered protein
within the renal tubules, which is normally
minimal, may be increased in the presence of
proteinuria to compensate.
Glomerular number. In chronic renal failure,
diminishing renal function is believed to result
from a reduced number of fully active nephrons
rather than to a general decline in the function
of all nephrons (the ‘intact nephron hypoth-
esis’). A progressive loss of functional nephrons
is the main reason why the elderly have reduced
renal function - a process that continues
throughout adult life. Normally about half of the
nephrons are lost by the age of 80 years.
Tubular back pressure. Obstruction anywhere
along the urinary tract will inhibit filtration by
increasing the pressure within the tubule, which
reduces the filtration pressure across the GBM.
Such obstruction can occur within the tubules
themselves if they are damaged; in the renal
pelvis (in pyelonephritis and some forms of
nephrotoxicity); or in the lower urinary tract
(owing to the presence of a ureteral stone or
bladder outflow obstruction).
Reabsorption and secretion
Clinically, the important features here are the
consequences of the interlinked exchange mechanisms that the kidney employs.
Overall pattern through nephron
Proximal tubule. The glomerular filtrate
contains essential nutrients as well as waste
matter. Most of the former are returned to
the circulation by reabsorption from the prox-
imal tubule into the peritubular capillaries
(Figures 14.3 and 14.4). There are specific pumps
for most substances, such as sodium, potassium,
bicarbonate, amino acids, glucose, etc. Water
follows osmotically and chloride electro-
chemically. These pumps have a maximum
transport capacity, and if the filtrate concentra-
tion of a substance exceeds the capacity of the
pump the substance appears in the urine. The
plasma concentration of the substance is then
said to exceed its renal threshold. The most
common example of this is glycosuria in
diabetes mellitus.
Most nutrients, and about 70% of the filtered
water and electrolytes, are reabsorbed proxi-
mally. Reabsorption depends largely on uncon-
trolled bulk transport, necessitated by the profligacy of glomerular filtration. Osmotic diuretics act in this region by increasing the
osmotic pressure of the filtrate, which inhibits water reabsorption.
Some substances, especially acids and bases, are actively secreted in the opposite direction, from the peritubular capillaries into the prox-
imal tubule, e.g. uric acid and many toxins and drugs. This increases the clearance of molecules that have escaped filtration.
Loop. The main function of the loop of Henle
is not to reabsorb water and electrolytes but to
generate an osmotic gradient between the renal
cortex (hypotonic) and the medulla (hypertonic)
by a countercurrent mechanism. This enables
the collecting ducts, which pass through this
gradient, to adjust urine concentration under
the influence of ADH. No more than 10-15% of
sodium, chloride and water are reabsorbed here.
The powerful loop diuretics, e.g. furosemide, act
by inhibiting this mechanism, preventing subse-
quent attempts at concentration by the
collecting ducts.
Distal tubule. In the distal tubule, and to a
lesser extent in the collecting ducts, there is the
potential for fine adjustments. Although the
total amounts of solutes reabsorbed are not great
- no more than the final 10% of sodium and
water - this is where the kidney exerts its main control of electrolyte balance. The thiazide diuretics inhibit this mechanism.
Selective control in distal tubule
The distal tubule is crucial to the homeostasis
of several important systems. If body sodium,
blood volume or blood pressure is low, the
distal reabsorption of sodium, with chloride or
bicarbonate and some water, can be increased
by the action of the mineralocorticoid aldo-
sterone. Here, sodium does not carry with it
an iso-osmotic load of water, so the immediate
effect is a net increase in plasma osmotic
pressure.
Aldosterone also inhibits the secretion of
potassium into the urine, in response to body
requirements, reabsorbing it in exchange for
sodium. The aldosterone-antagonist (potassium
sparing) diuretics, e.g. spironolactone, act here.
Potassium secretion is closely linked to that of
acid (hydrogen ions) because the same transport mechanism is used for both. However, acid secre-
tion is under a different, and therefore poten-
tially conflicting, control mechanism. This is
triggered by variations in plasma pH, which
affects the activity of tubular carbonic anhy-
drase, thereby altering acid production and secretion in the tubules (p. 881).
Total body water. If the body is fluid-
depleted or relatively hypertonic, ADH is
secreted. This hormone permits passive diffu-
sion of water from the glomerular filtrate in
the distal tubule and collecting duct back into
the peritubular capillaries. This is possible
because the ducts pass through the hypertonic
region of the renal medulla. Conversely, when
the body is relatively hypotonic or fluid over-
loaded, ADH secretion is inhibited, water is
prevented from leaving the ducts and a dilute
urine is produced. In diabetes insipidus ADH
secretion is deficient, resulting in severe
polyuria.
There will be occasions when conflicting
demands on the kidney mean that one adjust-
ment needs to be compromised to allow another.
Usually the maintenance of osmotic pressure is
paramount, but in severe hypovolaemia the
defence of blood pressure by fluid retention
takes precedence. Three consequences of the
main exchange mechanisms need to be empha-
sized, because they have important implications
for electrolyte imbalance and its management
(Figure 14.5):
1. Sodium is reabsorbed with either chloride or
bicarbonate (to preserve electrical neutrality).
2. Sodium is exchanged for either acid
(hydrogen ions) or potassium in the distal
tubule (cation exchange to preserve electrical neutrality).
3. All acid secreted results in an equivalent
amount of bicarbonate being reabsorbed
(equimolar amounts, generated by carbonic anhydrase).
Potassium and pH balance
The amount of potassium that can be reabsorbed
in the distal tubule, where fine control is exer-
cised, is related to the amount of acid secreted
(Figure 14.5 (2)). To secrete acid in exchange for
sodium, the tubule must forgo the secretion of
potassium because potassium and acid use the
same transport mechanism; at the same time the
tubule must also reabsorb bicarbonate (Figure
14.5 (3)). Thus, as far as the kidney is concerned, potassium moves with alkali (this is easy to
remember if one associates K with KOH). There-
fore, when the body requires alkali, in the form of bicarbonate, it tends to accumulate potassium and when it wants to eliminate excess alkali,
potassium tends also to be lost.
Ordinarily this causes no problems, but the
transport mechanism may become saturated if
the demand is excessive. Competition between
potassium and acid then forces a compromise to
be made so that dyskalaemias (potassium imbal-
ances) are frequently associated with pH imbal-
ances. Thus, for example, if hypokalaemia is not
corrected alkalosis will eventually occur as the
kidney attempts to retain potassium by using
this exchange pump and in doing so it secretes
acid. Conversely, acidosis is often complicated
by hyperkalaemia.
Chloride and pH balance
Because alkali conservation (bicarbonate reab-
sorption) is linked to chloride excretion, in effect chloride moves with acid. However, plasma pH is determined primarily by the carbon dioxide/
carbonic acid/bicarbonate equilibrium (p. 881), the only anion here being bicarbonate. Thus, if bicarbonate is displaced from the plasma by
another anion, such as chloride, the resulting
fall in bicarbonate will cause acidosis.
Similarly, if there is a high tubular load of chlo-
ride then it may be used non-specifically as the
anion to accompany the reabsorption of impor-
tant cations, which compromises bicarbonate
reabsorption and produces a loss of alkali (Figure
14.5 (1)). Hence the tendency to hyperchloraemic
acidosis when chloride intake is abnormally high.
This has important implications for fluid
therapy with 0.9% sodium chloride solution
(physiological saline). Compare its ionic
composition with extracellular fluid, e.g. plasma:
• Physiological saline: Na, 150 mmol/L; Cl,
150 mmol/L (approx.).
• Extracellular fluid: Na, 150 mmol/L; Cl,
100 mmol/L (approx.).
Thus 0.9% NaCl is by no means ‘normal’, and the
term ‘normal saline’ is now outmoded. Although iso-osmotic, it is relatively chloride-rich and Figure 14.6. Note that aldosterone controls
prolonged IV administration, in the standard
3 L/day regimen, eventually produces hyperchlo-
raemic acidosis. Conversely, prolonged diuretic
therapy, by increasing chloride loss, may produce
hypochloraemic alkalosis (in addition to a
hypokalaemic alkalosis). Conversely, a benefit of
simple physiological saline infusion is that it will
correct mild metabolic alkalosis, so that acidic
solutions, e.g. ammonium chloride, are rarely
needed.
Sodium, potassium and pH
In a similar way, sodium imbalance is also likely
to be associated with both pH imbalance and
dyskalaemia (Figure 14.5 (2)). The rationale for
these associations is left to the reader to eluci-
date, applying the same principles as used above.
Homeostasis
Total body water and osmotic pressure
Control
The mechanisms for the control of fluid volumes
and extracellular osmotic pressure are comple-
mentary and interdependent. The volume of
water in the body (total body water, TBW) is
determined by the total amount of osmotically
active substances. Normally, water clearance is
adjusted to maintain a uniform osmolar concen-
tration approximately equivalent to twice the
plasma sodium level. Sodium levels are
controlled by the renal regulation of tubular
reabsorption. The distribution of water between
the intracellular and extracellular compartments
(plasma plus tissue fluid) is also primarily deter-
mined by osmotic forces, the osmotic pressure
within cells normally being about the same as
that of plasma.
Because TBW is usually distributed optimally,
it is only necessary for the body to monitor one
compartment for it to regulate all. Blood volume
is the most ‘accessible’ because this is reflected in
blood pressure. This is monitored in several ways
with feedback to renal control mechanisms
(p. 880).
The inter-relationship between adjustments of
plasma osmolarity and body water is shown in
sodium reabsorption, but does not affect blood
pressure directly. Aldosterone serves only to
change plasma osmotic pressure, because the
sodium reabsorption under aldosterone control
is not accompanied by an iso-osmotic amount of
water. The feedback loop is completed by ADH,
which adjusts water reabsorption as appropriate.
Thus volume imbalance causes changes in electrolyte reabsorption via aldosterone, whereas osmotic imbalance causes changes in water reab-
sorption via ADH. This interdependence of the two systems permits very fine control.
Imbalance
The juxtaglomerular apparatus (JGA) is an area
of specialized tissue strategically located between
the afferent and efferent glomerular arterioles
and beginning of the distal tubule in each
nephron, and in contact with all three (Figure
14.6). The JGA can thus detect changes in pres-
sure in the afferent arteriole (usually propor-
tional to systemic arterial pressure) and
consequent changes in tubular filtrate flow and
concentration. It can then attempt to rectify any
fall in BP by the secretion of renin, which causes
the activation of both systemic (plasma)
angiotensin and local mechanisms involving
intrarenal angiotensin and vasodilatory PG.
In order to see how this system functions,
consider the consequences of haemorrhage or
severe diarrhoea. The iso-osmotic volume loss
(hypovolaemia) causes a fall in BP. In response,
the JGA secretes renin, aldosterone increases
sodium reabsorption, and plasma osmotic pres-
sure rises. This promotes ADH secretion,
increasing tubular water reabsorption and
restoring TBW. Conversely, in hyponatraemia
the osmotic imbalance initially causes reduced
water reabsorption and increased urine volume
(via ADH), tending to normalize osmotic pres-
sure at the expense of TBW, blood volume and
BP. Subsequently the systems once again interact
gradually to restore all parameters.
Thirst is a relatively crude mechanism for
replenishing both electrolyte and fluid loss,
because there is little control over the composi-
tion of intake. This loosely controlled process
requires the kidney to make the appropriate fine
adjustments.
Blood pressure control
The main ways in which the kidney is involved in maintaining BP are briefly summarized here and discussed fully in Chapter 4.
Simple pressure natriuresis
If BP changes, a complex interplay of autoregu-
latory variations in glomerular blood flow
and/or tubular reabsorption makes compen-
satory changes in urine volume. Thus, a fall in
BP will cause an automatic fall in urine volume,
the fluid retained tending to restore BP. Gener-
ally the GFR is maintained constant so as not to
compromise excretory functions; the principal
mechanism for this is a change in tubular
reabsorption.
Renin/angiotensin/aldosterone and the
osmoreceptor/antidiuretic hormone systems
These are discussed above.
Atrial natriuretic factor
Rises in blood volume can be detected by
increased pressure in the atria of the heart,
which secrete a peptide, atrial natriuretic peptide
(ANP) that acts in the kidney to promote water
loss (by preventing reabsorption). ANP seems to
play a role in unloading the heart in heart failure
(see Chapter 4).
Acid-base balance
Acid generated by metabolism, plus dietary
intake, means that the body is in strongly posi-
tive acid balance. This presents three problems:
elimination of the excess, defence of pH in
plasma and throughout body water, and the
ability to adjust for unexpected variations in acid
or alkali input or loss. The vast bulk of the excess
is eliminated by the lungs; blood buffers defend
pH; and the kidney adjusts for variations.
Respiratory compensation index of carbon dioxide accumulation: the prin-
Most of the carbon dioxide produced by the cipal role of this mechanism is the maintenance
aerobic metabolism of carbohydrate is eliminated
routinely by the lungs (about 15 000 mmol of
acid per day; Figure 14.10). Yet despite their
massive capacity, the lungs can only be used
temporarily to adjust for unwanted changes in
acid level. If excess acid is produced, prolonged
fast breathing to eliminate it is exhausting, and
the extra energy used produces yet more carbon
dioxide. Conversly, to compensate for alkalosis
by reducing respiration cannot be achieved
without causing hypoxaemia. Moreover, the net
effect of respiratory adjustments is to produce
absolute increases or falls in blood buffering
capacity. Nevertheless, the lungs provide impor-
tant rapid primary respiratory compensation.
This can be judged from the fact that, in the
absence of initial pH imbalance, if respiratory rate
were reduced to 25% of normal, blood pH would
soon fall to 7.0. Indeed, this is the pathogenesis of
respiratory acidosis, which occurs when a respira-
tory abnormality impairs elimination of carbon
dioxide.
Renal compensation
It is the kidney that makes the long-term adjust-
ment for abnormal changes in pH (assuming it is
not itself the primary cause of the problem) by
appropriate changes in acid secretion and
complementary bicarbonate regeneration. The
kidneys normally secrete only a small, but
crucial, amount of acid: on average about
100 mmol per day. However, this can be varied
considerably to compensate for dietary or meta-
bolic imbalance or respiratory impairment. This
secondary renal compensation is delayed and
slow, but can work indefinitely. A consequence
is that in renal failure, metabolic acidosis is a
major problem.
Control of this important process is essentially
autonomous and passive. Carbonic anhydrase in
the tubular cells is simply responding to the law
of mass action: as the plasma level of carbon
dioxide rises, more is hydrolysed and conse-
quently more acid is secreted and bicarbonate
regenerated. There is no central or humoral
control but the proper functioning of the tubules
is of course essential. Respiratory function on the
other hand is very tightly controlled by
medullary receptors sensitive to pH. However,
pH is used by the respiratory centre merely as an
of blood oxygen level.
Plasma pH
Plasma pH is determined by the ratio of bicar-
bonate to total carbon dioxide (free carbon dioxide plus carbonic acid):
[bicarbonate]
pH ___________________ (14.1)
[carbon dioxide]
This ratio is determined by the equilibrium
position of the hydration of carbon dioxide,
which is catalysed by carbonic anhydrase in
kidney tubules and all body cells:
carbonic
anhydrase
CO2 H2O H2CO3 HCO3 H
Although other ions, e.g. phosphate and
ammonium, are involved, this hydration is
essentially the process that occurs in the tubules
as acid is secreted and bicarbonate reabsorbed or,
more correctly, regenerated. Further, both fat
metabolism and the anaerobic metabolism of
carbohydrate produce ketoacids (acetoacetate,
lactate, etc.) and protein metabolism results in
the production of sulphate and phosphate.
These non-volatile acids must also be eliminated
by the kidney.
Maintaining pH homeostasis
To maintain blood pH at 7.4 ± 0.05, the mecha-
nisms described above work in concert, as
follows:
• Small natural changes (most commonly falls)
are initially countered by the blood buffer
system.
• If this is insufficient, the respiratory centre
responds rapidly by altering respiratory rate
to increase the retention or elimination of
carbon dioxide, thereby adjusting the bicar-
bonate/acid ratio and returning pH to
normal. This happens whether or not the
initial cause was actually a change in carbon
dioxide level.
• Finally, renal compensation will slowly
restore the absolute as well as the relative
levels of acid and bicarbonate.
Clinical features and investigation of renal disease
The clinical features of renal dysfunction are
either changes in urine flow and composition, or
systemic features secondary to failure of renal
mechanisms. The spectrum of clinical features in
renal failure in particular are considered in detail
when this topic is covered below (p. 897).
Symptoms
Patients readily associate symptoms arising in the lower urinary tract as renal in origin. However, as a consequence of the imbalances caused by renal malfunction, symptoms may arise in any body system and may at first be obscure and seem
unrelated to the renal system.
Urinary symptoms
Some of the common urinary symptoms and
their possible clinical implications are summa-
rized in Table 14.4. While micturition abnormal-
ities usually result from the lower urinary tract,
persistent abnormalities of urine volume imply a
more serious aetiology. Oliguria is defined as less
than 500 mL of urine per day. This is because it
is the minimum volume required to carry the
average daily osmotic load of waste matter at
maximal urine concentration; any less implies a
degree of malfunction. However, the precise
value for an individual will vary somewhat
depending on diet, body size and fluid intake.
Systemic features
Volaemic and osmotic imbalance
Fluid and electrolyte imbalance commonly result from renal impairment. Fluid imbalance generally has haemodynamic consequences with cardiovascular features such as changes in BP, oedema, shortness of breath, etc. Osmotic imbal-
ance usually results in neurological features, e.g. drowsiness, convulsions, because of changes in the intracranial pressure; (see below).
‘Uraemia’
This term, implying high levels of blood urea, is
a traditional synonym for renal failure; another
is azotaemia (high levels of nitrogenous prod-
ucts). Sometimes the former term is used more
specifically for the clinical picture and the latter
for the biochemical picture. These contribute to
the general malaise, lethargy, pruritus, cramps,
peripheral tingling, nausea, vomiting and
anorexia of which patients frequently complain.
However, the clinical consequences of renal
failure extend far beyond the immediate effects
of high blood levels of urea or other nitrogenous
metabolic waste products. In addition, pH imbal-
ance and abnormalities of sodium, potassium
and other substances cause specific symptoms
that will be discussed in the appropriate sections
below.
Signs, examination and investigation
Urine
Much information on kidney function can be
inferred by looking for evidence of the conse-
quences of suspected malfunction. This is gener-
ally easier, less invasive and often more sensitive
and investigation of renal disease 883
measure of its efficiency. However, direct measure-
ment of this rate is difficult and so the concept of
clearance is utilized. Clearance is defined as a
hypothetical volume of blood from which a
substance would be completely removed by filtra-
tion in 1 min. It is calculated by measuring the
blood or plasma concentration of the substance,
urine flow rate (usually measured over 24 h to
minimize collection errors) and the urine concen-
tration of the substance. The clearance is given by:
Urine concentration Urine
flow rate
than examination of the kidneys directly. Useful
qualitative and semi-quantitative information is
given by microscopic or chemical examination
of the urine. Simple biochemical urine tests,
valuable for preliminary screening, can nowa-
days be done using dipsticks, and should be part
of a routine clinical examination (Table 14.5).
Renal function
More accurate measurements are required for the
diagnosis, staging and monitoring of serious
disease, or when drug dosage adjustment is
required.
Filtration and clearance
Because the principal function of the kidney is
filtration, the rate at which this occurs is a crucial
Clearance
Plasma concentration
We know that approximately 120 mL of
filtrate is normally produced each minute. If
a substance were completely filtered at the
glomerulus and subsequently neither reabsorbed
from the tubules nor secreted into them, then
the equivalent of 120 mL of blood would be
completely cleared of the substance each minute
and its clearance would be 120 mL/min. Inulin
fulfils these criteria, but it is usually more conve-
nient to exploit creatinine, a natural body
constituent, which very closely does so.
Creatinine clearance is thus the usual index of
GFR. (Creatinine is actually secreted to a small
extent in the tubules, so its clearance gives a
slightly high estimate of GFR; fortuitously
however, current laboratory measurement
slightly overestimates plasma creatinine, tending to cancel this out.)
Creatinine clearance measurement involves a
tedious and error-prone 24 h urine collection.
Hence, a single serum creatinine measurement
will often suffice because the serum creatinine
level depends on the balance between produc-
tion (which is dependent on muscle mass,
gender and age and is normally constant for an
individual) and renal output (which is directly
proportional to filtration rate). Creatinine clear-
ance can be calculated from the serum creatinine
level alone by correcting for age, sex and weight
using tables or a simple formula:
Creatinine (140 Age) Weight
applicable to those under 18, obese, oedematous,
pregnant or with severly reduced muscle mass
(e.g. undernourished or cachexic). Creatinine
levels can also be affected by external factors
(Table 14.6) and there are also ethnic variations.
Other formulae have been devised to allow for
ethnicity or diet, avoiding using weight as a
parameter, e.g. the ‘modification of diet in renal
disease’ (MDRD) formulae, which gives a direct
estimate of GFR.
Unfortunately, serum creatinine does not start
to rise significantly until there is serious renal
impairment, so early renal disease is easily
missed if this method is relied upon. This is
because early renal damage is often compensated
by hypertrophy and hyperfiltration of remaining
clearance
K
Serum creatinine
nephrons, which maintains clearance. Further-
more, the serum creatinine level is inversely
related to GFR, and the effect of this reciprocal
where age is in years, weight is ideal body weight
in kg, serum creatinine in micromol/L and the
correction factor K is 1.04 for females and 1.23
for males. This is the Cockroft and Gault
formula. Creatinine clerance normally falls with
age as nephrons are lost, and it is lower in
females because of lower muscle mass. Thus, for
example, a normal value for a 75-year-old female
would be about 50 mL/min, whereas for a 25-
year-old male it would be 100-120 mL/min.
Because of the population sample from which
the formula was originally derived, it is not
relationship, illustrated in Figure 14.7, is that
quite large early falls in GFR will cause relatively
small absolute rises in creatinine. For example,
when the GFR has fallen to 50% of normal
(60 mL/min), creatinine level doubles to only
about 200 micromol/L, not far outside the
normal range. Subsequently it starts to rise
sharply, e.g. fourfold normal when GFR falls to
25% and 10-fold normal when GFR fall to 10%.
Thus serum creatinine cannot be relied upon
to detect moderate renal impairment. Its main
value in renal disease lies in monitoring the decline in renal function of a known sufferer
from chronic kidney disease, following a single
initial full creatinine clearance measurement to
establish the relationship to serum creatinine in
that particular patient. Progression can best be
followed by plotting the reciprocal of creatinine
clearance: the slope of the resulting straight line
indicates the rate of decline of renal function.
Any change in this slope requires investigation.
Furthermore, an extrapolation can be made to
indicate the time when GFR will fall below
10 mL/min, and thus to predict when a patient will probably require some form of renal replace-
ment therapy (Figure 14.7).
Blood urea measurements suffer from similar
but more diverse limitations. Blood urea levels
are affected acutely by dietary variations in
protein intake, by skeletal muscle damage and by
catabolic states, e.g. fever or starvation. It is
therefore less reliable than creatinine in
reflecting GFR. Nevertheless, blood urea is a
traditional general index and first approxima-
tion of renal function and malfunction (the
routine ‘urea and electrolytes’ or ‘U and E’s’).
Other markers that are cleared without reab-
sorption or secretion (e.g. Iohexol, cystatin C)
are being investigated but are not yet in routine
use. Radioisotope clearance may also be used,
and investigation of renal disease 885
e.g. labelled EDTA. If precision is required, inulin
clearance can be determined by serial measure-
ment of the fall in plasma concentration at
timed intervals following a bolus injection; this
pharmacokinetic method avoids urine collection
errors.
Tubular function
Urine concentrating ability can be tested by
subjecting the patient to water deprivation.
Inability to conserve water, manifested clinically
as polyuria, may be an early sign of chronic renal
disease. ADH can be used to establish whether it
is of pituitary origin, e.g. diabetes insipidus, or is
nephrogenic, e.g. tubular disease, nephrogenic
diabetes insipidus. Giving an acid or base load
can be used to test the kidney’s ability to secrete
or conserve acid, i.e. its urine acidifying ability.
General secretory function is tested with a
substance that is completely cleared in one pass through the nephron owing to maximal tubular secretion, e.g. para-amino hippuric acid (PAH). The secretion of specific metabolites can if neces-
sary be tested by giving known loadings. This might be helpful, e.g. in distinguishing diabetes mellitus from renal glycosuria, a rare condition of reduced glucose threshold.
Blood chemistry
The above tests can give precise measures of
discrete renal functions, but in practice it is the
consequences of impaired function that are clin-
ically important. The best indices are thus the
plasma levels of the metabolites and toxins
normally cleared renally. In addition to urea and
creatinine, routine measurement of plasma
sodium, potassium, bicarbonate, calcium, phos-
phate and pH is vital in estimating and moni-
toring renal function, although of course the
plasma levels of these substances may be altered
by other factors and disorders.
Imaging
Ultrasound will show the size and position of
the kidneys and bladder; this technique has
replaced plain abdominal X-ray and IV contrast
radiography (urography) as the first-line investi-
gation because it is cheaper and less invasive.
Enlargement of both kidneys suggests polycystic
disease, while unilateral enlargement implies
obstruction. Shrunken kidneys imply, non-
specifically, advanced chronic renal disease.
Calcified deposits (stones) in the kidney or
ureters will also be visible. Doppler ultrasound
can be used to visualize arterial supply and
intrarenal blood flow; this is less invasive than
the alternative, angiography, although the latter
gives much more reliable and complete infor-
mation. CT and MRI scanning are also used to
examine intrarenal structures.
An IV excretory urogram (IVU; formerly intra-
venous pyelogram or IVP) uses an X-ray
contrast medium to produce a series of images
which will show any inequality of perfusion
between the kidneys, the rate and extent of
renal filling, internal renal structural abnormal-
ities, e.g. cysts, and the patency and complete-
ness of voiding of the lower urinary tract.
However, patients may react badly to iodine-
containing contrast media. Isotope urography
yields similar information and is potentially less
toxic, although less readily available. In ante-
grade urography a needle is introduced into the
renal pelvis (nephrostomy) and contrast
medium injected, giving a picture of the whole
urinary outflow pathway.
The lower urinary tract can be visualized by
retrograde urography to investigate possible
obstruction; the contrast medium is adminis-
tered via a urethral catheter. There is a significant
risk of introducing infection, but the technique
may still be used if the patient cannot tolerate IV
contrast media. The lower urinary tract may also
be investigated with a fibre-optic cystoscope,
which also permits biopsy samples to be taken.
However, biopsies of the renal mass must be
taken percutaneously. They are particularly
useful in the differential diagnosis of nephritis
and in assessing transplant rejection.
Fluid and electrolyte imbalance
Only a general outline of the principles of this complex topic are given here. The References and further reading section lists some excellent specialist texts.
Volume and osmotic imbalance
Because control of total body water and plasma
osmolarity are closely linked there are often
coexisting imbalances. There is seldom a simple
loss or excess of either water or sodium, but if so
the result would be a mixed disorder, e.g.
primary (pure) water depletion would cause
hypovolaemia with hypernatraemia. Moreover, a
patient’s observed biochemical status may be
due to the primary problem, to inadequate or
incomplete compensation, or to treatment. For
example, water and sodium loss from excessive
sweating, over-compensated by drinking hypo-
tonic fluid (e.g. pure water) will at some stage
cause both hypervolaemia and hyponatraemia.
Aetiology
Some of the possible combinations of volume
and osmotic imbalance and their possible
primary causes are summarized in Table 14.7.
Water imbalance
Water depletion occurs either through excessive
losses or deficient intake. As water depletion
causes severe thirst, it will usually only become
serious when thirst cannot be satisfied. The
degree of associated hypernatraemia will depend on salt intake and the effectiveness of renal
compensation by fluid retention. The main causes of water excess are renal, although excess fluid intake may produce a hypervolaemic, hypo-osmolar state.
Sodium and osmotic imbalance
Sodium imbalance is rarely the direct result of
either excess or deficient sodium intake. More
usually it reflects either compensated primary
water imbalance or a renal sodium handling
defect.
Plasma sodium concentration gives a valuable
index of the relative excess or deficit of sodium
and water and thus of the underlying cause of
any fluid or electrolyte imbalance. However, the
plasma sodium level must always be interpreted
in association with the haemodynamic status and
haematological parameters. Thus hypovolaemia
from isotonic fluid loss (e.g. from burns) would
not cause a sodium imbalance, but would raise
packed cell volume, whereas predominant water
depletion (e.g. from vomiting) would lead to
hypernatraemia. Net sodium loss, e.g. dehydra-
tion and inappropriate (hypotonic) replacement,
would result in hyponatraemia.
Generally, sodium imbalance implies an
osmotic imbalance. However, in some circum-
stances other osmotically active substances can
first appear in the plasma in abnormal amounts
and the sodium level will then be adjusted accordingly. For example, in diabetic hyper-
glycaemia or severe uraemia, sodium will effec-
tively be displaced from the plasma by glucose
or urea, giving a secondary or appropriate
hyponatraemia. Thus, abnormal plasma sodium
measurements may reflect neither abnormal
sodium balance nor true plasma osmolarity.
Further complications can arise in hyperlipid-
aemia or hyperproteinaemia when the aqueous
fraction of plasma is reduced. This is not taken
into account by the usual sodium measurement
techniques, and so the sodium level will appear
low even though it is actually in isotonic
concentration in the plasma water; this is termed
‘pseudohyponatraemia’.
Pathophysiology
The consequences of fluid or osmotic imbalance are far-reaching, which is why the body defends normal balances so strongly. In general, fluid
imbalance has haemodynamic consequences while osmotic imbalance causes neurological complications (Figure 14.8).
Volume imbalance
Even small changes in the intravascular (blood)
volume can affect BP, cardiac performance and
tissue perfusion. In contrast, the intracellular
and the extracellular (extravascular tissue) spaces
can tolerate quite large changes. The tissues most
affected will be those under least external pres- sure opposing fluid redistribution. These include
soft tissues and areas where hydrostatic forces
increase diffusion from the capillaries into the
tissues, e.g. in dependent areas such as the ankles.
This is one mechanism of oedema formation.
Usually, oedema is without ill effect, except in
the lungs, where pulmonary oedema is always
dangerous.
Isotonic changes in total body water will
usually be restricted to the ECF, i.e. plasma and
tissue fluid, because sodium movement into cells
across cell membranes is restricted. Changes in
free water, e.g. excess of hypotonic fluid, or water
with a solute such as glucose which is normally
diffusible across cell membranes, will be distrib-
uted throughout all body fluid compartments.
Thus in either case, but especially in the latter, the
haemodynamic consequences will be buffered,
delayed and less severe: even if the water is
initially in the plasma (e.g. over-infusion, renal
retention) most of it will diffuse out into the
extravascular space. Moreover, most intravascular
water will be accommodated by the capacitance
vessels, i.e. the veins, so the effect on BP and
cardiac loading will be reduced (Chapter 4).
Nevertheless, hypervolaemia is a common cause
of cardiovascular problems, e.g. decompensated
heart failure.
Osmotic imbalance
If there is an acute osmotic imbalance between
the extracelular and intracellular compartments,
water will diffuse passively under osmotic forces.
Plasma and tissue fluid that is hypertonic rela-
tive to ICF will draw water from all body cells,
causing intracellular dehydration. Conversely,
hypotonic ECF will overload cells with water.
Small changes in the intracellular volume of
most tissues are of little consequence, but the
brain is an exception. Because the brain is
contained within the rigid skull, small changes
in volume will alter intracranial pressure, and
quite small alterations in this pressure can have
serious neurological effects, potentially resulting
in coma or death.
These effects only occur after acute changes;
compensatory mechanisms eventually tend to
correct the imbalance. Aldosterone and ADH will
restore extracellular osmotic pressure by
adjusting sodium clearance, and brain cells
and investigation of renal disease 889
threatened with dehydration can manufacture
osmotically active substances intracellularly to retain water.
If plasma oncotic (colloid osmotic) pressure is
reduced owing to hypoproteinaemia, there will
be a disproportionate loss of water to the tissues.
Although the absolute osmotic differences are
relatively small the resultant oedema can some-
times be gross, as in nephrotic syndrome
(p. 939).
Clinical features
The combination of signs and symptoms
presented by a patient will depend on the primary
cause, the main volaemic (haemodynamic)
or osmotic (neurological) consequences and
secondary effects or compensations. The acute
effects before compensation are summarized in
Table 14.8.
Management
Degree and speed of intervention
The first step is to ascertain the cause of osmotic
imbalance. If the situation is not critical, i.e.
there are no severe neurological problems or
pulmonary oedema, correction of the cause will
often be sufficient. If there is no underlying renal
disease the body is able to reverse most imbal-
ances eventually. Otherwise, minimal interven-
tion with the very simplest of corrections may
suffice. More specific measures usually need be
taken only when there is renal impairment.
Great care is needed, even with simple correc-
tion. All interventions, whether by the oral or
the parenteral route, initially alter only the
volume or concentration of the plasma. Equili-
bration between intravascular and extracellular
fluid occurs quite rapidly, but several hours are
needed for equilibration between the extracel-
lular and intracellular compartments. Thus, too
rapid a correction will cause a disproportionate,
potentially dangerous initial change in plasma
osmolarity or blood volume and result in an
overshoot, e.g. hyponatraemia treated too vigor-
ously with hypertonic saline may cause an
equally harmful hypernatraemia.
Conversely, if therapy is too delayed,
compensation will have already been initiated - particularly in the brain - and correction may
then have an opposite effect. For example, if
plasma is hypertonic for too long, brain cells will also become hypertonic. At that stage, rapid
attempts at correction with hypotonic fluids may then cause CNS over-hydration and raised intracranial pressure.
Fluid dose estimation and monitoring
Various formulae are available for calculating
fluid and electrolyte deficits and the amounts
needed for correction from electrolyte measure-
ments. However, these can only be used for
initial guidance. Subsequently, it is far more
important to observe the effect of initial therapy
and make appropriate adjustments according to
the patient’s physical signs and haemodynamic
and biochemical status.
The main measures used in monitoring water balance and general hydration, which must be considered together, are:
• Sodium concentration.
• Blood pressure (or preferably CVP). • Packed cell volume.
Secondary considerations include:
• Urine volume.
• Possibility of pH imbalance.
Specific therapy
Dehydration and hypovolaemia. Mild volume
deficit, especially of gastrointestinal origin, may
be corrected with glucose-electrolyte oral rehydra-
tion salt solutions if the patient is able to drink.
Severe volume depletion with circulatory insuffi-
ciency requires IV therapy, and physiological
saline is usually satisfactory. Restoration of urine
output is the best index of success. Physiological
saline infusion should not be continued unneces-
sarily because it can lead to hyperchloraemic
acidosis (p. 878).
Hypernatraemia. If neurological involvement
is threatened, the logical treatment would be a
sodium-reduced fluid. Sodium chloride 0.45% or
weaker solutions are available, but dextrose 5% is
probably better. This is isotonic on injection but
yields pure water once the dextrose is metabo-
lized. Dextrose 4% plus sodium chloride 0.18%
(‘dextrose saline’) is similar but provides some
sodium. Nevertheless, sodium chloride 0.9% is
often adequate if renal function is unimpaired.
Because the aim is a gradual reduction of
osmotic pressure, the small diluting effect
produced is temporarily beneficial until the
kidneys can make the necessary compensation.
Hypervolaemia. If mild, this can be treated by simple water restriction. In severe cases with pulmonary oedema or threatened cardiac failure, a diuretic is needed.
Hyponatraemia. Mild hyponatraemia can be
treated orally with sodium chloride, but more
aggressive action is needed if cerebral oedema
develops. Temporarily, a poorly diffusing
osmotic diuretic such as mannitol may be
infused to elevate plasma osmotic pressure.
Corticosteroids such as dexamethasone are also
advocated but neither the mechanism nor the
benefit is clear. Such cases may be treated - very
cautiously - with hypertonic sodium chloride,
with a concentration of up to 5% being used.
Inappropriate secretion of ADH can be treated with demeclocycline. The treatment of diabetes insipidus is not considered here.
Potassium imbalance
Pathophysiology
Distribution of body potassium
Most body potassium (K ) is either within the
cells or in bone (Figure 14.9). Extracellular fluid
K , as measured in the plasma, represents only a
very small proportion of total body load. Yet it is
that which has the greatest physiological impor-
tance, being involved in maintaining the
membrane potential of all cells. Changes in
plasma K of more than 2 mmol/L can have
serious effects on nerve and muscle function,
especially in the heart. The terms hypokalaemia
and investigation of renal disease 891
and hyperkalaemia refer specifically to plasma level abnormalities, and say little about total
body potassium balance.
Bone potassium is exchanged very slowly and
so plays little part in acute changes. The ICF acts
as a reservoir and buffers plasma potassium so
that considerable variations in total body potas-
sium can occur before the plasma level changes:
up to 200 mmol can be lost from the cells with no
appreciable change in plasma K . Despite plasma
level being a poor index of potassium status it is
the only easily accessible direct measure avail-
able. Any related pH imbalance must also be
taken into account when interpreting plasma K
levels.
Homeostasis
Extracellular K is in equilibrium with the
ICF, an unequal distribution across the cell
membrane being maintained by the sodium
(Na -K exchange) pump. Cellular uptake of K
is promoted by an alkaline plasma (pH 7.4),
aldosterone, adrenaline (epinephrine) via beta-
receptors, and insulin.
A rise in plasma K causes insulin release,
which promotes the uptake of glucose and K by
cells. Whether this is a co-transport mechanism
or simply the supply of extra energy for the
pump itself is not known, but it provides a
useful therapeutic strategy in hyperkalaemia.
Conversely, acidic conditions, lack of insulin,
beta-blockers and the absence of aldosterone,
inhibit K uptake and may cause hyperkalaemia.
These factors have a special significance in
renal tubular cells where they control not only
the intracellular/extracellular distribution but
also total body potassium. When the filtrate
reaches the distal tubule almost all potassium
has been reabsorbed. If plasma K is too high,
aldosterone causes the distal tubule cells to
remove K from the plasma and secrete it into
the tubular fluid (urine), in exchange for Na .
Further, as has been shown (p. 878), because this same transport mechanism mediates acid
secretion, secondary acid-base imbalances can
arise.
Aetiology
Gross abnormalities in total body potassium,
which may or may not be reflected in plasma
level changes, must be recognized in addition to
clinically significant hypokalaemia or hyper-
kalaemia. Because K is not metabolized, total
body imbalance arises from abnormalities in
either intake or loss (Table 14.9). Acute changes
will affect the plasma level, but more protracted
changes will at first be compensated by the intra-
cellular pool. Acute plasma potassium imbal-
ances may also arise from disturbed intracellular/
extracellular distribution, with no net change in
total body K .
Hypokalaemia
Normally the body is in positive potassium balance. Daily renal, faecal and sweat losses rarely exceed 40 mmol, and a healthy diet
provides 50-100 mmol. However, a diet which is deficient in fresh fruit and vegetables can cause potassium deficiency.
Most diuretics cause some potassium loss,
partly by presenting more filtered sodium to the
distal tubule. The kidney tries to compensate for
the enforced natriuresis by reabsorbing more
Na , and in doing so exchanges it for K .
Although neither diet nor diuretics alone usually
cause clinically significant hypokalaemia, the
combination may be serious, especially in the
elderly.
Alkalosis affects the plasma potassium level in
two ways. It directly promotes cellular uptake of
K and it causes the kidney to conserve acid by
reabsorbing it distally in preference to K . This
increases K loss and can exacerbate the
hypokalaemia.
Aldosteronism (excess mineralocorticoid
activity) can present in various ways, e.g.
Cushing’s disease, Conn’s syndrome, cortico-
steroid therapy, heart failure or hypopro-
teinaemia (e.g. from hepatic disease or nephrotic
syndrome). In the last two conditions, reduced
BP and/or circulating fluid volume activate the
RAAS, causing excess aldosterone secretion with
Na retention and K loss.
Gastrointestinal secretions contain relatively
high levels of K , and laxative abuse is sometimes
a hidden cause of hypokalaemia. Liquorice,
which is sometimes used as a laxative, has an aldosterone-like action.
Hyperkalaemia
Potassium excess (hyperkalaemia) is less
common than hypokalaemia, but harder to
treat. Renal failure is probably the most common
cause of hyperkalaemia, and this is one of the
main problems in managing renal patients.
Dietary causes are rare, but over-zealous use of
potassium salts, e.g. potassium citrate mixture in
the self-treatment of cystitis, can be responsible.
Over-use of potassium supplements is only a
remote possibility, given patients’ well-known
lack of enthusiasm for the common slow-release
forms. More subtly, potassium-retaining diuretics,
e.g. amiloride and spironolactone, can lead to
excessive inhibition of K secretion, especially in
combination with the ACEIs. This situation can
be exacerbated in the elderly, who usually have
impaired renal function.
Clinical features
Dyskalaemias disturb the transmembrane ionic balance and the membrane potential, so muscle and nerve cells are particularly susceptible.
Hypokalaemia, depending on its duration and
severity, can cause numbness, weakness, paral-
ysis, low cardiac output, tachyarrhythmias and
heart failure. The myocardial toxicity of digoxin
is also enhanced. In the longer term, renal
damage can occur, while inhibition of gastro-
intestinal activity can lead to bowel obstruction.
Renal attempts at compensation with potassium
conservation and acid loss leads to meta-
bolic alkalosis, as occurs with long-term diuretic
overuse. Chronic severe hypokalaemia can
impair renal concentrating ability, leading to
ADH-resistant polyuria and polydipsia.
Hyperkalaemia, although more dangerous, causes fewer symptoms and indeed may be silent until cardiac arrest occurs. A characteristic ECG change of a spiked T-wave may be observed. Acidosis is a further complication.
Management
Correction of abnormal plasma levels is the
immediate therapeutic target in potassium
and investigation of renal disease 893
imbalance. Oral therapy is adequate for mild
imbalances but severe dyskalaemia (÷3 or
6 mmol/L) needs urgent attention, mainly to
protect the heart. However, the total body excess
or deficit will be many times larger than the
simple correction of plasma level would imply.
For example, a plasma level of 2.5 mmol/L
requires 2 mmol/L to restore a normal level of
4.5 mmol/L. For an average plasma water
volume of 3 L this requires 3 2 6 mmol of K
(less than half a standard oral potassium tablet).
But most of the administered potassium will be
distributed extravascularly, diffusing rapidly into
the tissue fluid (9 L) and then more slowly, over
24 h, into the cells (30 L). The plasma will retain
less than one-fifteenth of the administered dose.
However, because of the time this takes to occur,
attempts at rapid correction with the calculated
total body deficit (in this case, 6 15
90 mmol) would cause acute hyperkalaemia. Conversely, too rapid a reduction in raised plasma K by dialysis will cause hypokalaemia. Gradual adjustment with frequent monitoring of plasma level is important.
Hypokalaemia
Generally speaking, it is easier to get potassium
into a deficient body than it is to extract an
excess.
Mild hypokalaemia. Dietary correction is preferred. The routine prescription of potassium supplements with diuretics is no longer thought necessary and should preferably only follow plasma level measurement of K .
Most potassium salts have an unpalatable, saline taste. Effervescent formulations disguise the taste, but they usually contain bicarbonate, which is often contra-indicated because of the associated alkalosis. Liquid preparations of the chloride are perhaps underused. Very large oral slow-release forms are perhaps the least complied with of all medication, and there is
the additional possibility of gastrointestinal irritation, ulceration or obstruction.
Fixed-dose combination preparations, e.g.
diuretic and potassium, used to be popular but
need particular care. In addition to the usual
problems of preformulated combinations
(inflexibility of individual component dosage,
possible confusion over adverse effects, etc.),
these preparations seem particularly likely to
cause severe gastrointestinal lesions. They have
now been superseded by potassium-sparing
diuretics.
Severe hypokalaemia. This needs parenteral
potassium usually by IV infusion. Because of the
time needed for equilibration it must not be
injected too rapidly or in too high a concentra-
tion. Acceptable maxima are a 40 mmol/L solu-
tion given at no more than 20 mmol/h, with an
80 mmol daily maximum.
Hyperkalaemia
Mild hyperkalaemia. It is possible to reduce
plasma potassium level slowly by binding it in the gut lumen with a cationic ion exchange resin such as polystyrene sulphonate, used as the calcium or sodium salt. This is unpalatable and it can be given rectally, but neither route is very efficient at potassium removal.
Severe hyperkalaemia. The immediate need is
to correct the plasma level: the overall body excess
is less urgent. Calcium (10 mL of 10% calcium
gluconate) is injected to provide a temporary
physiological antidote to the cardiotoxic effect.
This is followed, in the absence of renal impair-
ment, by infusion of up to 200 mmol of sodium
bicarbonate (depending on the degree of acidosis),
insulin (20 units) and glucose (50 g). This stimu-
lates potassium uptake into all body cells,
reducing the plasma level, but of course does not
correct the total body excess. In non-diabetic
patients the insulin may not be needed because
the glucose will stimulate its release. Beta-
adrenergic agonists may also be used, e.g. nebu-
lized or injected salbutamol. The effect may be
additive to that of insulin and glucose.
Measures to reduce body potassium level then
follow. An ion exchange resin treatment is
started, but dialysis may be necessary if plasma
levels cannot be controlled satisfactorily. Other-
wise, renal compensation is given time to work.
Acid-base imbalance
This potentially confusing topic will be dealt
with here in a simplified way, to enable imbal-
ances and therapy to be understood in principle.
One common problem with the terminology can
be readily clarified. Any pH imbalance resulting
from respiratory disorder is termed ‘respiratory’
(either acidosis or alkalosis); all other forms are
‘metabolic’, whether or not they are caused by a
apparently genuine metabolic defect. Thus the
ingestion of battery acid is as ‘metabolic’ as
lactic acidosis, although ‘non-respiratory’ is a
preferable term.
Aetiology
Acid-base imbalance may be conveniently visu-
alized by considering the normal and possible
abnormal routes for the intake, production and
output of acid and bicarbonate in relation to the
equation that controls pH (Figure 14.10). Over-
activity or under-activity of any of these path-
ways can cause pH imbalance (Table 14.10).
Because the body is normally in positive acid
balance, acidosis is more common than alkalosis.
Respiratory acidosis is usually predictable
because of associated cardiorespiratory disease;
respiratory alkalosis is rare. Among the vast
number of possible non-respiratory distur-
bances, gastrointestinal causes are common and
acidosis is also a major problem in renal failure.
The accumulation in the blood of lactate,
ketoacids or acidic drug metabolites is another
major cause. Biguanide-induced lactic acidosis is
now rare.
Investigation and diagnosis
The first priority is to identify and correct the
underlying cause. Initially this involves measure-
ment of blood CO2, H2CO 3 and pH, and a
simplified guide is given in Figure 14.11. The
precise biochemical picture will depend on the
nature and degree of compensation. Complex
mixed disorders are possible, e.g. metabolic and
respiratory acidosis in a poorly controlled
diabetic with COPD.
Anion gap
Normally total plasma cations (mainly Na and
K ) exceed the measured anions (mainly Cl and
HCO3 ) by about 15 mmol/L. The difference,
called the anion gap, is made up by phosphate, sulphate, protein and other organic acids:
Anion gap ([Na ] [K ]) - ([Cl ] [HCO3 ])
In acidosis caused by the accumulation of
endogenous or exogenous toxic organic acids
(e.g. lactate, salicylate), these anions displace
bicarbonate and the anion gap is increased.
Conversely, in acidosis from simple acid accu-
mulation (e.g. renal failure) or bicarbonate loss
(e.g. diarrhoea), the bicarbonate is replaced by
chloride so the gap is normal. Lactic acidosis is
sometimes further subdivided into type A caused
by tissue hypoxia and type B caused by abnormal
production of acids, e.g. in uncontrolled diabetes
mellitus.
Clinical features
The effects of pH imbalance are profound but non-
specific, and diagnosis is usually made biochemi-
cally. Most systems in the body are affected (Table
14.11) but the main clinical problems are cardio-
vascular. Acidosis reduces cardiac contractility, an
effect potentiated by beta-blockers, and dilates
arteries and constricts veins; all have adverse
haemodynamic effects. Oxygen dissociation from
Hb is increased, which may improve tissue
oxygenation but impairs pulmonary oxygen
uptake.
The CNS is depressed by acidosis, but nerve and
muscle excitability are increased by alkalosis,
leading to seizures and tetany. In non-respiratory
disorders the respiratory rate is altered to
compensate for this. Urinary acid secretion is
changed appropriately, with consequences for
potassium balance.
The distribution and clearance of acidic and
basic drugs is affected. This is the basis of forced
diuresis for treating poisoning. Alkali loading
causes an alkaline urine which encourages the
clearance of acids such as salicylate. Conversely,
acid will encourage the clearance of bases, e.g.
many psychotropic agents, such as amphetamine.
Management
Unless the severity of the imbalance is causing
cardiovascular or CNS problems or the cause is
irreversible, e.g. chronic renal failure, the best
general strategy is simply to remove the cause and
allow the body to carry out normal correction at
its own pace.
Acidosis
Chronic moderate acidosis can be treated orally
with sodium bicarbonate. In acute severe meta-
bolic acidosis specific correction is avoided if the
patient can be expected to recover sponta-
neously. The use of bicarbonate infusion is easily
misjudged, causing an equally serious ‘alkaline
overshoot’.
Various strengths of bicarbonate injection are available. The preferred 1.26% preparation is isotonic (300 mmol/L) and provides about one-
sixth of a mmol/mL of bicarbonate. For urgent cases more concentrated solutions are available as boluses, but these must be injected very slowly. An 8.4% solution provides 1 mmol/mL, which facilitates dose calculation but is very
hypertonic (six times physiological). Interme-
diate strengths are also available. Lactate is no longer used because it acts indirectly and some acidotic patients may not be able to metabolize it to its active form (bicarbonate).
The total dose needed is usually 100-200 mmol of bicarbonate. An estimate in mmol can be made empirically from the patient’s body weight (kg) and the measured plasma bicarbonate:
Bicarbonate dose 1⁄3 Body weight
(Normal plasma HCO3 Measured HCO3 ).
However, as with K imbalance, frequent moni-
toring and adjustment are better guides.
In respiratory acidosis the cause must be
treated directly, if necessary by ventilation.
Simple bicarbonate correction is inappropriate.
Alkalosis
Metabolic alkalosis can usually be treated with simple infusions of 0.9% sodium chloride (p.
878). Sometimes, however, direct infusion of
acid is required. Hydrochloric acid has been used, but the hydrochlorides of ammonium, lysine or arginine are preferred. Ammonium chloride may be given orally.
Respiratory alkalosis is very rare and is almost
invariably a temporary self-correcting condition
(e.g. during childbirth). Rebreathing from a bag,
which limits carbon dioxide loss, may speed
recovery.
Renal failure
Renal failure denotes a global loss of renal func-
tion, but it occurs to different degrees. The body
can maintain normal homeostasis with renal
function reduced to about half the normal GFR,
particularly if the decline is slow, and even then
symptoms may not be seriously troublesome.
Different sources vary in their definitions of
degrees of renal failure, and there are also
different systems depending on whether acute or
chronic failure is being discused. A generic
grading, based on reduced GFR, assuming a
normal GFR of 120 mL/min in a healthy young
male, would be:
• Renal impairment: 100-60 mL/min
• Mild renal failure: 60-30 mL/min
• Moderate to severe renal failure:
30-10 mL/min
• End-stage renal failure: ÷10 mL/min.
Like heart failure, renal failure is not a specific disease but a complex syndrome with many
possible causes but a fairly uniform clinical presentation. In ARF the impairment of regula-
tory and excretory functions predominates: in the chronic form (chronic renal failure, CRF)
there is also an endocrine abnormality.
ARF most commonly occurs secondary to
generalized circulatory failure. The condition
develops rapidly and has a high mortality but is
reversible if treatment is provided early enough:
if the patient survives there may be no perma-
nent sequelae. CRF by contrast has an insidious
onset and is usually caused by direct damage to
the renal tissue. The large natural renal reserve
and the slow progression of CRF mean that
considerable irreversible damage has usually
occurred by the time the patient reports symp-
toms. There is then an inexorable decline
towards end-stage renal failure, which is fatal
without renal replacement therapy, i.e. dialysis
or transplantation. However, the rate of decline
varies with the underlying cause, and can be
slowed by treatment.
Classification and aetiology
The many factors which can impair renal func-
tion may be divided into three groups, depending on whether the primary fault is in
renal perfusion, the kidney tissue itself or
urinary outflow (Table 14.12).
Pre-renal failure
The kidney relies on a continuous supply of
blood at sufficient pressure to maintain the
glomerular filtration, and endeavours to main-
tain systemic or intrarenal perfusion pressure by
numerous homeostatic feedback mechanisms.
However, severe hypovolaemia and/or hypoten-
sion, owing usually to fluid depletion, cardiac
failure or other shock states, overwhelmingly
compromise this, and ARF commonly follows.
Intrinsic renal failure
The kidney is especially prone to immunological
or toxic damage. This is probably because in its
excretory role the kidney accumulates high
concentrations of the products of the immune
system (e.g. immune complexes) and of metabo-
lism, and its high blood flow exposes the renal
tissues to potential toxins to a far greater extent
than most organs. Nephrotoxicity is a common
cause of renal failure, and a medication history is
essential in investigating any unexplained renal
impairment.
The glomeruli and the tubules and interstitial
tissues may be affected independently by
different causes, although some conditions affect
both, e.g. ischaemia following circulatory failure.
Intrinsic damage is usually a chronic process but
toxic or ischaemic nephropathy can be acute.
Post-renal failure
Obstruction anywhere from the renal pelvis to the urethra is a less common and often reversible cause of renal failure. Back pressure is raised in the tubules and this reduces the glomerular filtration pressure and hence the GFR. The obstruction is usually within the urinary tract, but external pressure from an abdominal mass may also be responsible.
Post-renal failure is usually chronic. Occasion-
ally, acute forms may cause anuria. A common cause of this in elderly men is prostatic hypertrophy obstructing bladder outflow.
Acute tubular nephropathy (ATN)
This term describes acute reversible tubular
damage and is sometimes called, somewhat inac-
curately, ‘acute tubular necrosis’. It can be an
important consequence of acute pre-renal failure
following circulatory insufficiency that is not
rapidly reversed. Thus ARF and ATN frequently coexist and, confusingly, the terms are some-
times used synonymously. ATN may also be the result of renovascular, glomerular or tubular disease or toxic damage.
What difference is there, for the kidney,
between renal ischaemia resulting from renovas-
cular obstruction, nominally ‘intrinsic ATN’, and
general systemic circulatory collapse (pre-renal)?
The conventional distinction, made on clinical
grounds, is that pre-renal failure is rapidly corrected by restoration of circulation whereas once ATN has supervened recovery is usually much slower.
The precise pathology of ATN is complex
and incompletely understood. An important
component is intense intrarenal vasoconstric-
tion, which inhibits filtration because of the
reduced afferent glomerular artery pressure. The nephrotoxicity of PG inhibitors, e.g. NSAIDs, is
due to a similar effect. The vasoconstriction may
simply be a response to injury, or it may be a
maladaptive attempt to maintain renal perfusion
pressure. In either case the subsequent ischaemic
damage is counterproductive. Moreover, it may be
perpetuated even after perfusion has been
restored, owing to glomerular damage or tubular
obstruction with inflammatory or necrotic debris.
Pathophysiology
The loss of renal function has multiple complex
and serious consequences. One useful distinc-
tion, which helps to account for the clinical
pictures found in different types and stages of
renal failure, is between glomerular and tubular
dysfunction. Although both structures may be
damaged, the trauma is often predominantly to
one or other, e.g. glomerulonephritis primarily
causes glomerular damage whereas aminoglycoside
nephrotoxicity is mainly tubular. In pre-renal
failure both types occur at different stages.
Glomerular dysfunction
The principal causes of this are pre-renally
impaired perfusion, intrinsic glomerular inflam-
mation and post-renal obstruction. As the main
function of the glomeruli is filtration, there is a
fall in GFR with retention of those substances
usually cleared by filtration, including water
(Table 14.13).
The consequent reduced volume of filtrate and
slower tubular flow permits increased proximal
tubular reabsorption, which reinforces these
effects. Furthermore, the reduced amounts of
sodium delivered to the tubules means that less
is available for the distal exchange mechanism
involved in acid and potassium secretion.
In some types of glomerular damage, despite a reduced GFR, there may be an apparently para-
doxical increased protein loss (proteinuria; discussed below).
Tubular dysfunction
The main function of the tubules is the selective
reabsorption of water, electrolytes and other useful substances. Thus, the main consequence
of tubular failure is the voiding of large volumes
of dilute urine (polyuria) of low specific gravity,
along with electrolytes and nutrients (Table
14.14).
If the loop of Henle fails to generate an
adequate intrarenal concentration gradient in the
medulla, urine cannot be concentrated and
passive reabsorption is compromised by the
consequently increased tubular flow rate. Because
of the proximal tubular failure there is a vast
increase in potassium loss, which completely
swamps the limited potassium retention that
would be caused by the impaired distal
sodium-potassium-acid exchange pump. On the
other hand, the failure in distal acid secretion is
significant and acidosis results.
Summary
Predominant glomerular damage results in reduced urine volume, retention of water, acid and electrolyte, and possibly protein loss. This is the syndrome of oliguric renal failure. Tubular damage leads to acidosis, urine of low specific gravity and, if the GFR is adequate, to polyuria with fluid and electrolyte depletion.
Acute renal failure
Aetiology and prognosis
Although most of the conditions listed in Table
14.12 can cause ARF, pre-renal causes such as
hypovolaemia or shock are by far the most
common (75% of cases). Less common are
intrinsic causes such as nephrotoxicity and acute
glomerulonephritis (20%). ARF as a result of
post-renal obstruction is uncommon (5%).
ARF is a serious medical emergency that can
develop very rapidly and has a high mortality. It
may be defined as a sudden fall in GFR to below
about 15 mL/min. Without treatment, survival is
less than 10%, which shows the crucial role of
correct renal function. With treatment in a
specialist unit, mortality can be reduced to below
50% but oliguric forms have a poorer prognosis.
These outcomes reflect the seriousness of the
conditions that precipitate ARF and the rapidly
progressive nature of the subsequent multi-
organ failure caused, rather than inadequacy of
management. With the increased availability of
renal dialysis, the outlook for ARF has improved,
and death now rarely results from biochemical derangement.
Course
Whatever the primary cause, untreated ARF
usually follows a fairly well-defined and
predictable course (Figure 14.12). Onset is
frequently associated with oliguria, which
continues for up to a month if the patient
survives. Urine flow then recovers and the patient
may become polyuric (up to 5 L per day) for
5-10 days. During the final recovery phase,
which may last several months, urine flow and
renal function gradually return to normal.
A simplified explanation of these phases is as follows:
• The early oliguric phase is caused by poor
glomerular perfusion or tubular obstruction.
Both result in a predominant pattern of
glomerular dysfunction with reduced renal
clearance and fluid and electrolyte retention. Any tubular impairment is masked by the
reduced glomerular filtrate.
• In the polyuric (‘diuretic’) phase the
glomeruli have recovered somewhat and are
again producing filtrate, although the GFR
remains low. However, tubular dysfunction
persists, causing failure to concentrate and
loss of fluid and electrolytes. The initial
diuresis may be partly due to the accumulated
fluid and osmolar load, but this could not
alone account for the prolonged pattern
sometimes seen.
• In the recovery phase the tubule cells slowly
regenerate.
After recovery there is usually no overt residual
renal damage. Although sensitive measures of
clearance will almost certainly detect some
degree of permanent impairment, this is well within the renal reserve. The effect of a single episode of ARF resembles a small acceleration of renal ageing, with additional nephrons having been lost prematurely.
In pre-renal ARF, ischaemia rapidly produces
ATN. Intrinsic toxic tubular damage has the
same effect. ATN is a serious complication
which usually accounts for the oliguric phase,
but may be avoided if the circulation is
promptly restored or the offending toxin,
usually a drug, is withdrawn (Figure 14.12).
Similarly, early and aggressive immunosuppres-
sion can minimize the seriousness of some types
of acute glomerulonephritis.
Clinical features
In the more serious oliguric phase the clinical
problems are mainly of fluid and electrolyte over-
load and accumulation of metabolic by-products.
Secondary or indirect complications such as
infection, pericarditis and bleeding may also
occur. Other symptoms will depend on the initial
cause and the stage at which treatment is started.
For example, even though hypovolaemia may
have caused pre-renal failure it could be masked
by subsequent fluid retention. Table 14.15
summarizes most possible features, which are
unlikely to occur simultaneously, along with a
brief outline of their conservative management.
In the polyuric phase, dehydration and elec-
trolyte depletion are possible, but are rare nowa-
days. Modern treatment has reduced the frequency with which ARF occurs, and may prevent it entirely.
Management
There is no specific remedy for ARF. Management is aimed at eliminating the cause and keeping the patient alive until the kidney function recovers naturally. Thus the aims are to:
• Discover and reverse or remove cause.
• Correct fluid and electrolyte imbalances.
• Minimize renal complications, i.e. ATN.
• Support the patient through the acute oliguric
phase.
• Avoid fluid and electrolyte depletion in the
later phases.
• Avoid nephrotoxic drugs
Many of these aims are met by renal dialysis, but conservative management may be adequate and is discussed first.
Discovering the cause
The cause of ARF, particularly if pre-renal, will
usually be evident from clinical examination,
but a medication history should always be
sought. Nephrotoxicity is an increasing cause of
renal dmage, especially among the elderly. Table
14.16 summarizes the common drugs respon-
sible, with an indiction of how they damage the kidney. Intrinsic renal damage may be more obscure as may some indirect forms of obstruc-
tion. A plain abdominal X-ray and an ultra-
sound scan are usually carried out if there is anuria. If the failure is advanced, supportive and symptomatic treatment are more important than immediate definitive diagnosis.
It is essential to ascertain if the episode is unique
or is possibly an acute exacerbation of a steadily
deteriorating chronic renal failure, so-called
‘acute-on-chronic’ failure. The patient’s history
and general clinical status should establish this
quite easily.
Restoration of function
In pre-renal failure, the first priority is prompt
fluid or blood replenishment and restoration of
the cardiovascular function, with monitoring of
CVP; this can prevent ATN from developing. If
sudden anuria suggests urinary tract obstruction
(e.g. cardiovascular function seems unimpaired)
the patient can be catheterized, which also
enables accurate assessment of urine output. A
number of techniques formerly used have been
invalidated by recent evidence: these include
osmotic or high-dose loop diuretics, bolus fluid
challenge and low-dose dopamine infusion.
Fluid and electrolytes
A careful balance must be struck between the
repletion of any volume deficit which might
have first caused the failure, and the prevention
of accumulation from subsequent oliguria. The
patient’s fluid balance and haemodynamic status
must be evaluated precisely before resorting to
diuretics, which might cause further volume
depletion and exacerbate the condition. Simi-
larly, diuretics are inappropriate in obstruction,
e.g. in prostatic hypertrophy, and surgery or
cautious catheterization are more appropriate.
During the oliguric phase, sodium and fluid are
restricted and fluid balance is monitored closely
Renal failure 903
by weighing and meticulous charting of intake/output.
The choice between crystalloid or colloidal
fluid replenishment (‘plasma expansion’) is still
debated. The theoretical advantage of the latter,
e.g. albumin, dextran, hydroxyethyl starch or
gelatin, is in preventing water loss from the
intravascular compartment to the tissue fluid
and cells. Crystalloid solutions risk causing
pulmonary oedema and ascites with a reduced
gain in restoring circulation. However, the
advantages of colloids have not been borne out
by careful trials and they are now not generally
recommended except where specifically indi-
cated by the nature of the loss that originally
precipitated the ARF, e.g. haemorrhage.
Hyperkalaemia is managed as usual (p. 894). Acidosis may be cautiously treated with sodium bicarbonate, taking care to avoid fluid and sodium overload.
Dialysis
If oliguria persists or ATN has supervened, or if
plasma urea, creatinine or potassium are rising
rapidly, patients are dialysed for short periods as
required. This solves most of the problems and
has the advantage of allowing a near-normal
diet. Continuous arteriovenous haemofiltration
is the preferred technique (p. 920), espeially in
haemodynamically unstable patients, and
minimises fluid restriction. Haemodialysis or
peritoneal dialysis (PD) may also be used. Dial-
ysis facilitates parenteral nutrition if it is needed.
General measures and support
Some protein restriction may be needed if
gastrointestinal or cutaneous uraemic symptoms
are severe (Table 14.15). However, over-zealous
protein restriction is avoided as it can retard
recovery, especially as patients may be hyper-
catabolic, with increased protein breakdown and
weight loss. If protein is restricted, caloric intake
must be maintained by increasing carbohydrate
and fat intake. Parenteral feeding may be needed
in the early stages. Daily fluid intake is restricted
to the daily urine output plus 500 mL to replace
insensible losses (Table 14.2).
Infection is common. All drug therapy,
including antibiotics, must be carefully evalu-
ated to avoid toxic accumulation of renally
cleared drugs or their sodium salts. Specialist
clinical pharmacists have an important role here.
Recovery
After the critical phase has passed, patients are
soon discharged. They will need to be
instructed about maintaining an adequate fluid
and electrolyte intake and keeping a fluid
balance chart.
For most patients the first episode of ARF will be their last. Survivors make an apparently complete recovery, but a few will develop CRF, the first attack representing an acute-on-chronic decompensation against a background of progressive renal disease.
Chronic renal failure (chronic kidney disease)
CRF presents a very different picture from ARF. It
usually has different causes, is insidious in onset,
follows a slowly progressive course and is irre-
versible. In addition to azotaemia and fluid and
electrolyte problems there are serious endocrine
abnormalities. On the other hand, there is
usually time to consider the best management
options before the patient reaches end-stage
renal disease (ESRD) and the range of treatments
available can provide the vast majority of
patients with a reasonable quality of life.
Aetiology
It is difficult to quantify the relative frequencies
of different causes of CRF. Patients usually
present very late, with kidneys so shrunken and
fibrosed that retrospective diagnosis is impos-
sible. Table 14.17 gives one estimate of the distri-
bution of probable causes among Europeans, but
it is approximate, and there are geographical,
ethnic and racial variations. For example, hyper-
tensive nephropathy is more common among
Afro-Caribbeans, and diabetic nephropathy
more common among South Asians, and this
accounts partly for higher ESRF rates among
these populations. In developing countries, as
usual infectious causes are far more prominent.
Generally CRF is due to intrinsic renal disease,
often glomerular in origin. Diabetes (the preva-
lence of which is rising) is an increasing problem, as is iatrogenic disease, especially among the elderly, and the various multisystem disorders as advances in treatment prolong survival. Hypertension is now usually recognized earlier and treated better than previously. Renal neoplasms are uncommon.
Few preventative measures can generally be
recommended because the uncertain aetiologies
of the more common causes, such as glomeru-
lonephritis and pyelonephritis. Nevertheless,
there is no excuse for the lack of vigilance that
permits most iatrogenic renal disease to occur,
especially in the elderly. Further, in diabetes,
improved control and the use of ACEIs slow the
rate of progression of CRF and reduce the preva-
lence of end-stage diabetic nephropathy. Fortu-
nately, the management of advanced renal
failure is relatively uniform, regardless of the
aetiology.
Epidemiology
Because of national and regional differences in
diagnosing, reporting and treating ESRD, figures
for incidence and prevalence are elusive or
highly variable. Most available data derive from
analyses of patients considered for renal replace-
ment therapy and so are skewed by treatment
policies. For the UK, the approximate most
recently available data are given in Table 14.18.
The significance of some of this information will become clearer when discussing renal replacement therapy.
There are national and racial differences in
incidence, doubtless reflecting both environ-
mental and genetic differences. While in the UK
the annual incidence is 100 per million popula-
tion (pmp), in Europe it is 135 pmp and in the
US 335 pmp. The US figure is made up of an inci-
dence among whites of 256 pmp and among
blacks of 980 pmp. In Australia figures are overall
much lower but show a similar racial disparity
(94 pmp vs 420 pmp).
Course
The slow decline in the number of functional
nephrons, GFR and renal reserve may take
decades to pass from normal to end-stage,
although the progression tends to accelerate as
end-stage is approached. Several staging systems
have been used to to chart this progress, and a
recent one is given in Table 14.19. Patients often
first present with a history of several months of
vague ill health, with tiredness, pruritus, sickness
and loss of appetite and weight. Hypertension is
often found and patients may have been
ignoring moderate urinary symptoms, usually polyuria, for some time. Another common presentation is ARF following abnormal stress on the already impaired kidneys (acute-on-chronic renal failure).
Following diagnosis, declining function is monitored by regular serum creatinine measure-
ment, which correlates inversely with GFR (Figure 14.7). Careful management during this stage can minimize complications and may delay the onset of the end-stage decline. The
patient then has time to review and discuss with the physician the ultimate treatment options,
and to prepare psychologically.
Whatever form of renal replacement therapy patients undergo, there is a reduced life
expectancy. The greatest mortality is from CVD, mainly IHD and heart failure. Following transplantation there may be complications resulting from long-term immunosuppression, e.g. infection and neoplasia.
Pathology
In CRF there is usually a complete and perma-
nent failure of increasing numbers of nephrons.
This contrasts with ARF where there is usually a
uniform reversible partial impairment of all
nephrons. Consequently, in CRF the residual
intact nephrons come under increased loading.
Changes in intrarenal haemodynamics cause
compensatory glomerular hypertension and
temporary increases in filtration rates (hyper-
filtration). However, these are maladaptive,
Renal failure 907
eventually causing or accelerating glomerular
sclerosis and tubular atrophy, and the kidneys
gradually shrink. One important exception is
polycystic disease, where gross enlargement
occurs, although functional tissue is similarly
reduced.
Renal reserve consists of there being far more
nephrons than are needed to sustain life, but
numerous adaptations and compensations
operate when the number is so reduced as to
threaten renal function. Adaptation to maintain
water, acid, sodium and potassium levels is good,
so serious hypervolaemia, acidosis and changes
in plasma electrolyte levels may be prevented
until the GFR falls below 5-10 mL/min, which
determines the onset of the end-stage. However,
both urate and phosphate will accumulate before
then. Urea and creatinine levels also rise, in
inverse proportion to the fall in GFR, because
there are no compensation mechanisms for
these molecules. This results in various
symptoms.
Before end-stage, the patients’ reduced renal
reserve makes them prone to decompensation if
additional demands are made on the kidneys.
These extra demands can produce an exacerba-
tion or an acute-on-chronic crisis that may be
the first indication of severe renal disease: they
include infection, surgery, fluid depletion (e.g.
severe diarrhoea or vomiting), trauma, certain
drugs (e.g. tetracyclines) and excess potassium
(e.g. potassium-retaining diuretics, foods with
high potassium content).
Pathophysiology and clinical features
A summary of the main clinical problems of CRF is given in Table 14.20, with their presumed
pathogenesis and the measures taken to retard progression or limit symptoms. When ESRD is reached, many of these features are mitigated or reversed by renal replacement therapy.
Fluid and electrolyte imbalance
Urine concentrating ability is often diminished in the early stages, causing dilute polyuria and the risk of dehydration and electrolyte deple-
tion, as in the polyuric phase of ARF. This is
partly the result of an osmotic diuresis induced by raised urea levels in the tubular filtrate of the remaining intact nephrons.
In the later stages urine volume falls and the
consequent retention of sodium and water is the
main cause of the hypertension usually found
in CRF patients. Other potential complications
of hypervolaemia are oedema, including
pulmonary oedema, and heart failure. At the
onset of end-stage failure the patient may
become anuric.
Uraemia
The major biochemical problems do not result from the accumulation of urea itself but of various electrolytes and miscellaneous other mainly nitrogenous toxins. Nevertheless, urea can cause troublesome gastrointestinal symp-
toms and may be responsible for the capillary fragility and purpura (bruising) seen in renal
patients. Uraemia also damages platelets, increasing the bleeding tendency.
Although urate levels are raised, clinical gout
is rare. Various other ‘middle molecules’
(500-5000 Da, nitrogenous and otherwise) may
contribute to the variety of non-specific symp-
toms. Continuous ambulatory peritoneal dialysis
(p. 920) is particularly efficient at clearing these
substances, leading to an improvement in
well-being.
Potassium and acid
These are not retained in dangerous amounts
until end-stage. Before that, renal patients seem
to tolerate mild hyperkalaemia and acidosis, or
adapt to them. However, along with water reten-
tion these are the most serious acute problems at end-stage.
Metabolic features
There are several inter-related changes in lipid
and carbohydrate metabolism (Table 14.20). The
kidneys normally catabolize several hormones,
including about one-third of all natural insulin,
and this mechanism is diminished. Conversely,
glucose tolerance is reduced, so the effects are
unpredictable, especially in diabetics. Dyslipid-
aemia results in a raised, atherogenic lipid
profile.
Cardiovascular disease
Hypertension is almost universal and there is an
increased incidence of IHD and heart failure.
Numerous factors contribute. Hypertension
results from fluid retention and possibly
renin/angiotensin abnormalities. Dyslipidaemia
and hypertension accelerate atherosclerosis,
which is a common feature. Heart failure is
multifactorial, involving hypervolaemia, hyper-
tension, ischaemia and anaemia. Cardiomy-
opathy is part of a generalized myopathy caused
by calcium and phosphate imbalance, with
ectopic calcification (p. 910) in the heart as well
as the coronary arteries. Pericarditis sometimes
occurs. CVD accounts for almost half of all
deaths in renal failure patients.
Anaemia
The major cause of anaemia in renal patients
is marrow hypoplasia due to reduced or
absent erythropoietin (see also Chapter 11). The
iron-resistant, initially normocytic, normo-
chromic picture resembles that seen in many
chronic diseases (though for a different reason).
Hb levels rarely exceed about 8 g/dL (normal
12-18 g/dL). Iron and folate deficiencies are
often superimposed owing to anorexia, dietary
restrictions, a bleeding tendency, and losses from
haemodialysis and frequent blood testing. There
are also gut losses due to stress ulceration. Thus
later iron deficiency may cause a microcytic,
hypochromic picture. Renal anaemia signifi-
cantly reduces the quality of life of renal
patients, producing poor exercise tolerance and
increasing the risks of cardiac failure and
exposure to multiple transfusions.
Renal bone disease
The syndrome of renal osteodystrophy involves
complications secondary to vitamin D failure,
with consequent disturbed calcium and phos-
phate metabolism. Together they form perhaps
the most serious group of chronic clinical prob-
lems because of their prevalence, their wide-
spread, multisystem secondary effects and the
difficulty of treatment.
The pathophysiology of osteodystrophy in-
cludes impaired bone mineralization (osteo-
malacia or ‘renal rickets’), bone demineralization (osteitis fibrosa) and extraskeletal deposition of calcium phosphate, especially in blood vessels, joints and muscle (metastatic or ectopic calcifi-
cation). Figure 14.13 shows a simplified account of the pathogenesis of these features in relation to normal calcium homeostasis.
The clinical consequences are fractures, bone pain, deformity, arthritis, (cardio)myopathy and arteriosclerosis with regional ischaemia (espe-
cially in coronary vessels). In addition, abnormal calcium and/or phosphate levels may contribute to pruritus, anaemia, anorexia, muscle cramps, tetany and peripheral neuropathy.
Other features
The immune system is compromised. Impaired
metabolism and/or urinary clearance of melanin
and other pigments often gives a characteristic brown skin pigmentation. Abnormal plasma
constituents may affect erythrocytes and coagu-
lation factors, causing haemolysis and a haemor-
rhagic tendency that results in bruising, nose
bleeds, gastrointestinal bleeding, etc. Some of
these problems are ascribed to the retention of
‘middle molecules’. Gastrointestinal stress
ulceration is common.
Lethargy, fatigue and general malaise occur more in patients who are poorly managed or
who are less compliant with their treatment
regimens or fail to comprehend them.
Drug-related problems
The way in which renal impairment affects drug use is dealt with separately (p. 914).
Management
The general management strategy and conserva-
tive treatment of the patient before ESRD are
considered first. Renal replacement therapy is considered on pp. 916-929.
Aims and strategy
The aims in managing CRF are:
• Early detection.
• Identification and removal of cause.
• Retard deterioration in renal function.
• Identification and management of complica-
tions.
• Preparation of the patient for renal replace-
ment therapy.
Early detection of CRF is unusual, and often a
primary cause cannot be identified because the
disease is advanced by the time it is detected.
However, certain groups of patients with partic-
ular susceptibility need special monitoring. This
includes patients with hypertension, diabetes, a
chance finding of proteinuria or a family history
of renal disease.
Once CRF has been diagnosed, potential
aggravating factors such as untreated hyperten-
sion, urinary tract obstruction and the use of
nephrotoxic drugs must first be eliminated.
‘Acute-on-chronic’ exacerbations in patients not
yet at end-stage, resulting from infection, fluid
depletion or overload, etc., must be treated
promptly. Complications such as anaemia,
hyperphosphataemia and secondary hyperten-
sion must be minimized; as well as their direct
problems, they contribute to progression of
renal decline. Precise dietary recommendations
remain controversial, but appropriate dietary
control may also slow the progression of the
renal damage.
Regular measurements of serum creatinine
provide a reliable index of the decline in func-
tion and enable the onset of end-stage to be
predicted. The rate of decline varies greatly
between patients but is generally constant for a
given patient. Patients must be encouraged to
come to terms psychologically with the fact that
they have an irreversible illness that eventually
will require artificial support or surgical inter-
vention. How this idea is introduced will depend
on the clinician’s assessment of the patient’s
resilience. The family should also be involved
and encouraged to be supportive.
As patients approach end-stage they will, unless unsuitable, be tissue typed and entered on the transplantation register. Their home may be assessed for the suitability of home dialysis, and a SC arterio-venous fistula may be fashioned in preparation for haemodialysis.
The situation does not remain static once end-
stage has been reached: the treatment mode
needs regular re-assessment. Patients may need
Renal failure 911
to switch between different forms of dialysis, in and out of hospital, according to circumstances. Should a transplant prove unsuccessful, they
must return to dialysis.
Fluid and electrolytes
Daily fluid intake is restricted to urine output
plus 300-500 mL. Such restriction can be
extremely unpleasant in the later stages because
thirst is so troublesome. When there is severe
oliguria or complete anuria, a restriction of total
fluid intake to 500 mL including drinks, sauces,
fruit, cleaning teeth and liquid medication may
be almost impossible to maintain. However,
the swift symptomatic penalties of incipient
heart failure or pulmonary oedema are salutary
correctives.
Salt intake is restricted, with low-salt foods and
no added salt. High-potassium foods, such as
fresh fruit and vegetables, chocolate, etc. (the
very ones that non-renal patients on diuretics
are encouraged to seek) are avoided. As this
becomes less effective, gastrointestinal ion
exchange resins may be added to reduce potas-
sium absorption. Uncontrolled hyperkalaemia is
one of the prime indications for starting dialysis.
Acidosis can be managed with oral sodium
bicarbonate, but calcium carbonate is needed
when sodium restriction is critical; the calcium may also benefit bone disease. The usual care is needed if bicarbonate infusion is used to treat acidosis (p. 897), and persistent severe acidosis is another indication for dialysis.
Diet
Adequate nutrition with high-quality protein in reduced amounts (40-50 g/day) will prevent a negative nitrogen balance and protein malnutri-
tion, and may also slow the disease progression. However, high-protein diets are thought to encourage hyperfiltration, thus accelerating renal decline. Very low-protein diets in the early stages have their advocates.
When the GFR falls below about 50 mL/min
protein must be restricted to minimize uraemic
complications. Low protein diets have the bene-
ficial side-effect of reducing phosphate, potas-
sium and acid intake, and this might account in
part for their apparent effect in some trials of
reducing degeneration of renal function.
It is important, whatever course is adopted
with regard to protein, that patients have an
adeqauate caloric intake, because the nausea and
anorexia symptomatic of renal disease tend to
lead to poor nutrition. Adequate caloric intake is
provided by increasing carbohydrate and unsat-
urated vegetable fats or oils, using dietary
supplements. The lower the protein content of
the diet, the more important that it should be of
high biological value, so essential amino acid
(EAA) supplements may be needed. A further
way of minimizing nitrogen catabolism while
maintaining protein synthesis is to include
ketoacid analogues of EAAs in the diet, as these
can be transaminated and thus provide EAAs
without additional nitrogen intake.
Vitamin supplementation should not be
needed, but many patients, even before dialysis,
are given water-soluble multivitamins and iron
to compensate for possibly poor nutrition and
the loss of blood in frequent blood tests. Dietary
compliance, including with electrolytes and
especially with fluid, tends to be poor and the
involvement of a renal dietician is highly
recommended. The summation of the different
restrictions can be difficult for a patient to
comprehend, and malnutrition, anxiety or guilt
may occur. Dietary restriction may be partially
relaxed once the patient has started on dialysis.
Hypertension and other cardiovascular problems
Control of BP is a key factor in reducing the
progression of CRF. Careful attention to fluid
and sodium intake may at first be sufficient to
control the hypertension that most patients
suffer. ACEIs are the drugs of choice because
they have the additional benefit of retarding
the progression of CRF, possibly by causing
intrarenal vasodilatation and thus reducing
glomerular hypertension. Of course, the poten-
tial nephrotoxicity of ACEIs in the presence of
renovascular disease must not be forgotten.
ACEIs may be supplemented with diuretics while
the patient is still producing urine. A non-DHP
CCB, e.g. diltiazem, is the preferred additional
drug if BP is not adequately controlled with
ACEIs. Thereafter, any of the usual antihyperten-
sives may be added. ACEIs are particularly
beneficial in minimising type 1 diabetic
nephropathy, but in type 2 diabetes ARAs are the drugs of choice.
Diuretics are needed for pulmonary oedema
and heart failure, and temporary dialysis may be
necessary if these are unsuccessful. If dietary
modification fails, hyperlipidaemia may require
HMG CoA reductase inhibitors (statins). The
clearance of statins is less affected by renal
impairment than other lipid-lowering agents.
Anaemia
Any iron or haematinic vitamin deficiency must
first be treated in the usual way (Chapter 11) but
this never restores the normal Hb level. Before
the availability of epoetin the use of multiple
transfusions was the only recourse in the
anaemia of CRF. This could depress erythro-
poiesis and also cause iron overload. Moreover
the wide range of antibodies that the patient
raises against the pooled blood received in this
way throughout his or her illness could sensitize
them against a future transplant, although this
was minimized by using washed packed RBCs.
The advent of genetically engineered erythro-
poiesis-stimulation agents (ESAs) has solved this.
Epoetin and darbepoetin are recombinant forms of
human erythropoietin, the natural red cell
growth factor secreted by the normal kidney and
acting on the bone marrow. The improved Hb
levels that can now be consistently achieved
significantly improve the quality of life of CRF
patients.
Epoetin as biosynthesised occurs in two different levels of glycosylation, as alfa and beta forms, but these are clinically equivalent. Darbe-
poetin is even more glycosylated and this confers a significantly longer half-life. Numerous other ESAs are under development.
Indications and use. ESA therapy is mainly
used in renal patients. Initially reserved for those
on haemodialysis, its indications have broad-
ened as the cost has reduced. PD patients, and
now increasingly pre-dialysis CRF patients, are
offered it if their Hb is sufficiently low and not
managed by haematinics. ESAs are also used for
anaemia following chemotherapy-induced bone
marrow depression and to facilitate the collec-
tion of autologous transfusion blood prior to
surgery. Care must be taken to follow the precise
dosage guidelines, which vary according to indi- cation and also specify titration and mainte-
nance protocols. Epoetin is usually injected 3
times weeky; the longer half-life of darbepoetin
permits once-weekly dosing. For stabilized
patients less frequent dosing of both agents
appears to be adequate and is quite common.
The target Hb level for each patient needs
careful assessment, but a Hb no greater than
13 g/dL is usually aimed for, and about 12 g/dL
if the patient has any CVD. ESA therapy must
be matched by appropriate iron intake, and
iron supplementation is usually required. This is
usually given intravenously to accommodate the
increased iron requirement generated by the
epoetin, especially in haemodialysis patients.
Moreover, careful optimization of iron status can
reduce the demand for epoetin, thus conferring
considerable economies.
Adverse effects and cautions. The main
potential problem is potentiation of hyperten-
sion, possibly causing encephalopathy with
convulsions. Also, thromboses may obstruct
vascular catheters used for haemodialysis
access. The reason for the conservative Hb targets
is that if complete normalization of the Hb
level were attempted, cardiovascular complica-
tions could arise owing to the resulting
polycythaemia (excessive RBC count) causing
increased blood viscosity, blood volume and
blood pressure. A rare adverse effect of epoetin
alfa is an immunologically-mediated pure red
cell aplasia, which if it occurs precludes furthur
use of any erythropoietin derivative, This effect
seems to be associated with SC use and so IV
administration only is currently recommended.
Renal bone disease
Osteodystrophy is difficult to manage because it
changes during the course of the illness and thus
requires different treatments at different times.
Renal bone disease is one of the complications
that is least improved by dialysis. The related
metastatic calcification of the aorta and coro-
nary arteries contribute significantly to CVD in
renal patients.
For hypocalcaemia in the absence of hyper-
phosphataemia, raising the plasma calcium level
will improve osteomalacia (Figure 14.13).
Initially, calcium supplements may be used,
calcium carbonate being the most suitable as it
Renal failure 913
will also counteract acidosis and complex some
phosphate in the gut. Later, vitamin D analogues
calcitriol or alfacalcidol are needed, neither of
which rely on renal hydroxylation for activation
(as does natural vitamin D, colecalciferol). They
tend to elevate the plasma calcium level, so close
monitoring of this is essential, otherwise this
could exacerbate metastatic calcification.
Hyperphosphataemia is treated initially with
phosphate restriction, but this is extremely diffi-
cult to achieve because phosphate occurs widely
in foods, e.g. dairy products, many fish, eggs,
liver, many vegetables, chocolate, nuts. Eventu-
ally, oral phosphate binders are required, to
prevent dietary phosphate and any phosphate in
gastrointestinal secretions being absorbed.
Formerly, aluminium hydroxide was the standard
therapy: this forms insoluble aluminium phos-
phate in the gut, which is lost in the faeces.
Aluminium hydroxide is given in dry capsule
form, e.g. ‘Alu-Cap’, the more usual antacid
mixture being unsuitable for fluid-restricted
patients. However, significant aluminium absorp-
tion occurs in renal patients who clear it ineffi-
ciently, and long-term use is associated with
dementia and anaemia; it will actually also cause
a form of osteodystrophy. This was exacerbated
in certain areas by exposure to aluminium in
dialysis fluids derived from the local water
supply.
Current practice favours calcium carbonate
tablets with the incidental benefits mentioned
above, though large doses are needed. Magne-
sium and lanthanum salts have also been used,
and do not produce hypercalcaemia as may
calcium carbonate. Close monitoring of plasma
phosphate and calcium are vital because doses
are easily misjudged and dietary mismanage-
ment by the patient may undo the most careful
adjustment. The newer ion-exchange resin
sevelamer offers advantages in reducing arterial
calcification but is expensive so currently is used
only in combination with oral calcium.
If secondary hyperparathyroidism is trouble-
some and refractory to medical management,
then partial or total parathyroidectomy may be indicated. Calcimimetics, e.g. cinacalcet, are currently being tested; these stimulate the calcium sensor on the parathyroid, thereby reducing PTH secretion.
Other problems
Some of the miscellaneous problems such as
neuropathy, gastrointestinal upset, pruritus, etc.
may resolve if the above methods are successful,
particularly protein restriction and calcium and
phosphate control. Others may need to await
dialysis, which almost invariably produces a
notable improvement in general well-being.
Drug use in renal impairment
There are several important questions to be
asked when considering drug therapy in patients
with renal impairment. This applies to all drugs,
whether used for the renal disease itself or for a
co-morbidity.
• Is the drug nephrotoxic? • Is the drug essential?
• What is degree of renal impairment?
• What proportion of drug is cleared by kidney?
• Does drug have narrow therapeutic index?
• Is the drug’s action or toxicity altered in renal
impairment?
If a drug is potentially nephrotoxic, it should be
avoided if possible because these toxic effects,
even if only mild or rare, are likely to be of more
significance in the presence of renal impairment.
Is an alternative drug of comparable clinical
action but more favourable pharmacokinetic
profile available? If not, then the initial drug will
need to be used with care and following appro-
priate dosage adjustment. The degree of renal
impairment, measured quantitatively, will indi-
cate whether and to what extent the dose will
need to be reduced. This calculation will have to
be further refined by consideration of what
proportion of the drug dose is normally cleared
by the kidney; many drugs have more than one
route of clearance.
Another important point is the drug’s thera-
peutic index. If this is narrow, even small reduc-
tions in clearance, giving small rises in serum
level, could cause toxicity. We also need to know
if rapid achievement of therapeutic serum level
is important, because attainment of steady state
may be delayed in renal impairment. These
factors will be discussed briefly; see also References and further reading.
Nephrotoxicity
Adverse drug effects on the kidney are well docu-
mented by the BNF, in both Appendix 3 and
individual monographs. A summary was given in Table 14.16.
Renal clearance
In order to judge whether or not a drug will be
renally cleared, some general pharmacokinetic
principles need to be reviewed (see Chapter 1)
In renal impairment we are primarily
concerned with drugs that are water soluble i.e.
polar or hydrophilic, which are normally
predominately cleared by the kidney, e.g 98%
for gentamicin. We are less concerned about
hydrophobic drugs (i.e. lipid-like, non-polar or
fat-soluble), which rely on hepatic metabolism
for clearance, e.g. theophylline, phenytoin or
warfarin. Exceptions are when the hepatic
metabolite is renally cleared, clinically active or
more toxic that the original drug; in such cases
accumulation in renal impairment may be
important, e.g codeine metabolised to morphine.
Other drugs are cleared partially by both
routes, e.g. digoxin (15% hepatic, 85% renal). It
is only the renal component that is altered in
renal impairment; usually the other route is
unaffected, and this must be taken into
account in dosage adjustment.
The change that occurs to the renal compo-
nent of clearance means that the drug is cleared
more slowly. The same dose will be retained
longer, i.e. the half-life will increase, and thus
with regular dosing the plasma level will be
higher. These changes will be in proportion to
the fall in GFR or creatinine clearance. Consider,
for example, a patient who has a creatinine clear-
ance of 60 mL/min, taking a drug that is cleared
100% renally. Assuming the normal creatinine
clearance is 120 mL/min, the dosage reduction to
give normal plasma levels should be 50%. But if
the drug is only half cleared by the kidney, the
dose reduction would need to be only half that, i.e. 25%.
Therapeutic index
Even if a drug does accumulate to a limited
degree, this may be of little consequence if the
therapeutic effect, and especially the toxic effect,
are not closely related to the plasma level. Thus
some accumulation of most penicillins is usually
of little consequence and can be tolerated, so
dosage adjustment of oral penicillins is very
rarely necessary, even though most are cleared
mainly be the kidney.
Loading dose
Because in renal impairment half-lives are
increased, it will take longer for a drug to achieve
its steady state plasma level. Steady state
following the regular dosing of any drug occurs
after about five half-lives, whatever the dose or
renal function. In some cases it may not be accept-
able to wait this long in a renally impaired patient,
e.g. with antibiotics or digoxin, especially if the
dose has been reduced because of the impair-
ment. In such cases, a loading dose may be given
to achieve therapeutic concentrations quickly.
Calculation of a loading dose is not dependent on
clearance (only on dose and volume of fluid in
the body) so the normal loading dose is given, or
possible higher if there is severe oedema, even if
subsequent dosage is to be reduced.
Drug handling
When the renal function is impaired there is
more to consider than reduced clearance. A number of consequences follow from the meta-
bolic and biochemical abnormalities secondary to the renal impairment, which could effect drug action or handling.
Oedema and volume of distribution
In renal impairment, fluid retention with
oedema is usual, which would tend to increase
the volume of distribution of hydrophilic drugs.
Renal failure 915
Counteracting that however is the fact that the kidney will not be clearing hydrophilic drugs so efficiently. Thus the net effect of these two opposing trends is difficult to predict and means that careful observation and/or therapeutic drug monitoring may be necessary.
Uraemia and drug binding
Some of the metabolites that accumulate in
uraemia, including urea, may displace a drug
from its plasma protein binding sites, raising the
plasma level, e.g. phenytoin, diazepam and theo-
phylline. By analogy with a drug interaction, this
is only likely to be of significance if the urea level
is high and the protein binding of the drug is
normally high ( 90%). Moreover, the rise in free
plasma level will increase the clearance of the
displaced drug (especially if it is usually cleared
hepatically), reducing adverse consequences.
Furthermore, renal patients tend to have
hypoproteinaemia owing to proteinuria, poor
diet and chronic illness, further reducing
binding.
Reduced drug metabolism
Normally, insulin is partially metabolised in the
kidney; thus, renal impairment could alter the
control of diabetes. To avoid hypoglycaemia,
insulin dose may need to be reduced. We have
already noted that metabolic activation of
vitamin D is reduced in renal impairment.
Pharmacodynamic changes
In addition to these pharmacokinetic effects,
there can also be pharmacodynamic changes in
the actions of some drugs. The blood-brain
barrier is less effective in renal failure patients, so
some centrally acting drugs such as benzodi-
azepines might have exaggerated effects. Renal
patients are more prone to upper gastrointestinal
bleeding and ulceration and so are more
sensitive to the gastro-erosive effects of NSAIDs.
Dosage adjustment
Considering all these possible influences on drug
action and clearance, drug selection and dosing in renal impairment is problematic. It requires
experience and judgement as well as access to
specialised formularies, such as that produced by
the UK Renal Pharmacists Group, giving the
changes in drug parameters such as half life or
proportion of renal clearance in different degrees
of renal impairment. The advice of a renal
pharmacy specialist should always be sought.
Assuming it is essential to give a drug the clear-
ance of which will be affected by renal impair-
ment, pharmacokinetic calculations can be made
to show how clearance will be reduced. These can
be done effectively by programs on hand-held
computers. However, it still needs judgement to
decide how the dosage reduction will be imple-
mented. Suppose it is calculated that the clear-
ance is reduced by 50%. Does this require half the
normal dose at the same interval or the same dose
at double the normal interval? Either would
compensate for the reduced clearance.
It will depend, among other things, on the
plasma level profile required. If a roughly
constant plasma level with small peaks and
troughs is required (e.g. with anticonvulsants,
lithium), dose reduction is indicated; in such
cases, initialising therapy may need a loading
dose. If a pronounced peak or a definite trough
(to minimize toxicity) is required, e.g. as with
gentamicin, an increased interval will be
preferred.
In some cases, there may be an accessible clin-
ical parameter such as blood pressure, blood
glucose or clotting time, which will enable the
more pragmatic approach of therapeutic moni-
toring and dose titration without recourse to
frequent precise calculation and plasma level
monitoring.
The situation is different for patients on dial-
ysis, where clearance may be more difficult to estimate. Once again the advice of a renal pharmacy specialist should be sought.
Renal replacement therapy
The main role of renal replacement therapy
(RRT) is in end-stage renal disease patients whose
GFR has fallen below 5-10 mL/min or in whom
other complications are not responding to
conservative therapy. Renal replacement therapy
involves either the artificial techniques of dial-
ysis or natural replacement with a transplant.
Temporary dialysis may also be required in ARF
or poisoning.
Renal dialysis
Aim
Renal dialysis attempts to mimic the excretory
and to a lesser extent the homeostatic roles of
the kidney. Although dialysis cannot restore
renal endocrine function, it ameliorates some of
the secondary effects of endocrine dysfunction
such as hypertension and hyperphosphataemia.
Anaemia may also be improved. Many patients
on dialysis lead near-normal lives and half of
them return to work. There is a reduced quality
of life compared with normal or after a trans-
plant, but there are far fewer restrictions
compared with conservative treatment in the
later stages of CRF.
When the GFR falls below about 10 mL/min,
toxic nitrogenous metabolites, potassium, acid
and water start to accumulate to a life-
threatening degree. Serum creatinine at this stage
would probably be above 1000 lmol/L and blood
urea more than 30 mmol/L. If there are persistent
complications such as neuropathy, pericarditis or
refractory hypertension, intervention is made
even earlier.
Although there are nowadays few patients for whom transplantation is absolutely contra-
indicated, most will have to wait months or
years for an organ to become available, and dial-
ysis is essential to keep them alive until then.
Many patients have been successfully main-
tained on dialysis for decades. Nevertheless, their poor general health results in a greater mortality than that of the general population.
Principles
Two general techniques are currently available,
namely haemodialysis (HD) and peritoneal
dialysis (PD). Ideally these would perform the
same functions as the natural kidney where
ultrafiltration is followed by reabsorption.
In health filtration involves removal of water
and dissolved small molecules via a size-selective
semi-permeable membrane (the glomerular base-
ment membrane, GBM) driven by hydrostatic
pressure (arterial blood pressure). Reabsorption
involves partially selective, sometimes active
recouping of useful substances (in the tubules).
These processes cannot be mimicked exactly.
Almost all artificial kidneys utilize a membrane
analogous to the GBM, but with a different pore
size. In HD the membrane is artificial, while in
PD the patient’s own peritoneal membrane is
used. In PD the dialysis approaches equilibrium
before the dialysis fluid is changed, whereas in
HD fast cycling of fresh dialysis fluid speeds
diffusion by continually exposing the blood to
maximal concentration gradients. Thus HD is
more efficient.
In addition to its principal use in CRF, dialysis is also used in the oliguric phase of ARF and for drug overdose and poisoning. Some conserva-
tively managed early CRF patients may need
temporary dialysis during acute-on-chronic exacerbations, after which they may stabilize
again and come off it.
Water removal
In both forms of dialysis, water removal is by ultrafiltration. In HD the driving force is hydro-
static, using negative pressure on the dialysate side; in PD water is removed osmotically.
Removal of waste solutes
Essentially dialysis means solute transfer by
diffusion through a membrane down a concen-
tration gradient. In renal dialysis a system is set
up whereby blood on one side of a suitable
membrane is exposed to a dialysis solution on
the other. The dialysis solution may contain low
concentrations of the substances to be removed,
or none at all. Haemodialysis can generate urea
clearances of up to 100 mL/min. Yet because it
relies on diffusion, clearance is inversely propor-
tional to molecular weight, so that ‘middle mole-
cules’ are less efficiently removed than small
molecules such as urea and creatinine. With
high transmembrane flow rates and especially
with larger pores, larger solutes may also be
drawn across by solvent drag or convection.
Renal replacement therapy 917
Conservation of useful substances
There is no equivalent in dialysis to the subtle
processes of natural tubular reabsorption.
However, in practice significant electrolyte and
nutrient losses are uncommon. Two rather crude
substitutes may be used. There can be replace-
ment by dietary supplementation, e.g. of water-
soluble vitamins or amino acids; or else the
dialysis fluid can be loaded with the desired
substances at normal plasma concentrations,
thus inhibiting diffusion. The latter technique
may be extended by adding substances to the
dialysis fluid in excess, to promote net transfer to
the patient’s circulation, e.g. bicarbonate to
combat acidosis, or insulin for diabetics on PD.
Haemodialysis
The early artificial kidneys were cumbersome
and inefficient devices the size of a suitcase,
which had to be painstakingly disassembled and
cleaned between treatments. Modern artificial
kidneys are disposable and little larger than
the organ they replace, though they have about
the same filtration area of 1 m2. In some there
are multiple thin cellophane films which sepa-
rate alternate layers of blood and dialysis fluid;
in others the blood is pumped through a parallel
array of multiple fine, hollow fibres, which are
surrounded by dialysis fluid. In each case the
dialysis fluids flows countercurrent to the blood.
Basic system and apparatus
A diagram of the basic HD system is given in Figure 14.14 and the apparatus is shown in use in Figure 14.15. The sequence is:
• Arterial blood is directed outside the body and
passed through the system by a peristaltic
pump
• The blood is anticoagulated with heparin and
circulated through the artificial kidney.
• A countercurrent of haemodialysis fluid runs
against the blood.
• A small negative pressure is applied to the
blood.
• Blood is returned to a vein and the dialysate is
discarded.
Apart from the artificial kidney itself, the
function of most of the HD apparatus is the maintenance of a safe extracorporeal blood
circulation and the preparation of a suitably
purified dialysis fluid. The blood circuit is
heparinized using an infusion pump at a rate
sufficient to prevent clotting within the appa-
ratus, but which ensures the heparin is inacti-
vated naturally by the time blood is returned
to the patient. Rarely, protamine may be needed
as an antidote, or epoprostenol may be used if
the patient has bleeding problems. Up to
500 mL/min of blood may be removed from the
patient and this must be returned free of air
bubbles and clots and at the correct pressure and
temperature. Physiological saline is flushed
through the blood circuit beforehand to prime it
and afterwards to return as much blood as
possible to the patient. This also facilitates a top-
up infusion if an overshoot in ultrafiltration has
caused fluid depletion.
Vascular access
The patient is usually connected to the HD appa-
ratus via a SC arteriovenous fistula in the arm.
This is an artifical connection constructed surgi-
cally between an artery and a vein in the wrist
area (Figure 14.16(a)). After a few weeks, the
fistula is mature and the vein becomes ‘arterial-
ized’: it swells and its wall becomes thickened,
which facilitates repeated puncture for both
access and return.
For temporary dialysis, or during the few weeks while a fistula matures, either a tempo-
rary IV line (jugular or subclavian catheter) or, less comonly nowadays, an external shunt
(Figure 14.16(b)) is used. Fistulae last for several years before becoming unusable, when a
different site needs to be fashioned. Shunts, although quick to set up, last less than a year
and are very inconvenient.
Dialysis fluid
The 100-200 L of dialysis fluid needed for each
treatment are prepared automatically in the
proportionating unit using concentrated dialysis
solution. This is diluted as required with mains water that has been thoroughly purified. Ion
exchange or reverse osmosis remove potentially
dangerous cations. Aluminium and calcium are
the main problems long term: the former causes
encephalopathy (‘dialysis dementia’) and
complicates osteodystrophy, while calcium can
cause acute neurological problems during dial-
ysis. Various environmental toxins and pyrogens
are adsorbed onto carbon, and ultaviolet radia-
tion is used as a microbicide. Flow rates of up to
800 mL/min mean that up to 150 L of water may
be needed for a single treatment. The blood
circuit has to be scrupulously sterile, and most of
it is disposable.
The ionic composition of the dialysis fluid is
adjusted individually to normalize each
patient’s plasma, i.e. low in those ions to be
removed, high in those to be taken up. Usually
it is equimolar in Na and Mg2 , K is between
0-3 mmol/L, Ca2 is variable and alkali is
supplied as lactate or acetate, bicarbonate
being incompatible with Ca2 and Mg2 . For diabetics, glucose is sometimes added to prevent hypoglycaemia.
Routine therapy
Most patients need 3-6 h of HD two to three
times each week, depending on their fluid and
electrolyte retention between treatments, which
itself partly depends on residual urine output.
Dialysis requirement is usually monitored by
weight gain, and progress of HD is followed
measuring dialysate outflow. Ideally the patient
should not gain more than 1500 g between treat-
ments, i.e. 1.5 L of fluid, to avoid cardiovascular and pulmonary problems. Moreover, removing more than this in 4-6 h can cause temporary
fluid or electrolyte imbalance, the so-called ‘dis-
equilibrium syndrome’ (involving weakness, hypotension, dizziness or cramps) because plasma concentrations change far more rapidly than in extravascular sites.
Dialysis may be carried out overnight, thus
maximizing the utilization of dialysis facilities,
although in UK hospitals it is more usually done
during the day. Many patients continue full or
part-time work. Patients can also make tempo-
rary arrangements with dialysis units in holiday
areas. Once patients are stabilized, dialysis equip-
ment may be set up in their homes. This
depends on whether the patient and carers can
cope physically, intellectually and psychologi-
cally, and also on logistical factors, such as water
supply, whether there is a spare room (some
patients have Portakabins erected in their
garden) and whether there is someone to help
them cope with any problems that may arise
while dialysing.
Most CRF dietary restrictions on potassium,
phosphate, etc. still need to be observed by
patients on HD, and daily fluid intake must not
exceed 500 mL plus urine output. Advice and
counselling from a dietician is important. Anti-
hypertensive treatment is frequently continued,
although the hypertension may improve. Vita-
mins B complex and C are required to compen-
sate for losses of these water-soluble substances to
the dialysate, as are iron and folate for the blood
losses incurred. Epoetin and osteodystrophy
treatments need to be continued.
Problems
Acute problems include fluid or electrolyte
imbalance resulting from the rapid changes
causing cramps, hypotension, headaches, etc.
and ischaemia distal to the access site, e.g. in the
hand. Immediately after treatment some
patients need an oral sodium supplement for
cramps caused by electrolyte deficiency The
main chronic problems are related to the
vascular access and include thrombosis, local or
systemic infection, haemorrhage, phlebitis and
haemolysis, etc.
Patients do very well on HD and feel better
than they did in the later stages of CRF before
starting dialysis, and it is used by about three
quarters of all dialysis patients. The quality of life
is reduced on account of regular disruption and
dependence on machinery, but some patients
still prefer this to the continuous commitment
of PD.
Haemofiltration
Drawbacks to the conventional HD system
include complex apparatus and poor clearance
of ‘middle molecules’. The intermittent nature of
the treatment can impose high haemodynamic
stresses, especially in ARF. Several alternatives
have been developed that are particularly useful
for short-term dialysis, e.g. in ARF or cases of
poisoning.
In continuous arteriovenous haemofiltration
(CAVH) no dialysis fluid is used. The system
operates more like a plasma exchange, with large
quantities of fluid (up to 20 L per day) being
removed in an artificial kidney with a more
permeable membrane. Crystalloids follow by
convection, rather than diffusion as in
haemodialysis. Fluid and electrolytes (without
unwanted toxins) are replaced continuously via
the return line, the volume replaced depending
on how much fluid needs to be lost. Where urea
levels are high, e.g. in the hypercatabolic states
of severe ARF, a blood pump and negative pres-
sure are used, which also improves the removal
of ‘middle molecules’. Alternatively, there may
be additional intermittent haemodialysis.
The newer technique of continuous arterio-
venous haemodiafiltration (CAV-HD) represents
a compromise. Dialysis fluid and a more porous
dialyser unit are used and a pump may not be
required. Fluid removal is controlled by the dial-
ysis fluid flow rate, which is generally much
slower than in normal HD. In haemoperfusion a
sterile activated charcoal column is put in the
blood circuit rather than an artificial kidney.
This is sometimes useful in poisoning treatment.
In continuous venovenous haemofiltration a
single dual-lumen IV catheter is used and a
pump added to the circuit.
Peritoneal dialysis
This process is far simpler mechanically. Up to
2.5 L of sterile dialysis fluid are run directly into the patient’s peritoneal cavity under gravity via
an indwelling silastic catheter, over about 10
min (Figure 14.17). Dialysis then takes place
between the blood in peritoneal capillaries and
the dialysis fluid in the peritoneum. The
dialysing interface is composed of the vascular
basement membranes and the peritoneal
membranes, both of which are semi-permeable.
The process is thus analogous to the formation
of tissue fluid or ascites. The entire fluid volume,
including excess water and dialysed substances,
is then drained out again under gravity, often by
simply putting the empty dialysis fluid bag on
the floor below the patient.
PD fluid comes ready-made and sterile, and is
similar in composition to diluted HD fluid but
with little potassium, clearances being lower
than in HD. Because a hydrostatic pressure
gradient cannot be set up in the peritoneum to
promote water removal, different concentrations
of glucose are added (1.36-4%) to effect different
rates of removal osmotically. The system is rela-
tively cheap to set up and maintain and requires
far simpler equipment and fewer specialized staff
when used in hospital.
There are several different ways of organizing and scheduling PD.
Intermittent peritoneal dialysis
In its conventional hospital-based form this
method involves multiple hourly fill-drain
cycles with short dwell times, repeated 24-48
times over 1-2 days. Because the rate of
diffusion of molecules (equivalent to their
clearance) declines as their concentration in
the peritoneal dialysate increases, a 30-min
contact time within the peritoneum is
optimal.
Intermittent peritoneal dialysis (IPD) is only
about one-fifth as efficient as HD, with urea
clearance of about 20 mL/min. The cycle must
be repeated, two or three times weekly, using
50-100 L of PD fluid each time. Perhaps surpris-
ingly, it is not overly uncomfortable for most
patients, although they are physically restricted
for long periods. However, IPD is rarely used
nowadays except in patients awaiting some
other management, in those for whom all other
methods have failed, and in those with some
residual renal function when the inefficiency of
IPD is less of a problem.
Continuous ambulatory peritoneal dialysis
Originally devised to exploit the simplicity of PD
but free the patient of its restrictions, continuous ambulatory peritoneal dialysis (CAPD) yielded unexpected additional benefits and is now the most popular form of dialysis in theUK(about 40-50% of cases). Instead of the frequent fluid changes being made during several specified periods in the week, the patient carries the fluid in their abdomen continuously, day and night, while living an otherwise almost normal life.
The solution is changed two to five times daily, the longest dwell being overnight.
PD fluid is run in from a soft plastic bag, and
the line is then closed. After 4-6 h the dialysate
is drained out and fresh fluid run in. The
changeover takes 30-40 min, and the patient
needs training in aseptic technique. CAPD is
not suitable for all: some cannot cope emotion-
ally or intellectually, while others have manipu-
lative difficulties, e.g. the aged or arthritic;
others do not appreciate the need for strict
asepsis. On the other hand, some patients are
even able to judge the right glucose concentra-
tion to use each time to extract more or less
fluid as required.
To reduce the chances of infection the
‘disconnect-flush before fill’ system is practised.
The intraperitoneal catheter terminates exter-
nally as a Y-tube, both arms of which can be
sealed. At changeover both an empty and the
new bag are connected. The dialysate is first
drained off, flushing away potential contamina-
tion from the connection procedure; new fluid is
then run in.
Successful patients achieve a steady contin-
uous clearance of water, electrolytes and uraemic
toxins with stable if somewhat higher than
normal blood levels, so the process resembles
normal renal function more closely than other
forms of dialysis. There is little of the peaking
and troughing of electrolyte levels characteristic
of both HD and IPD. In addition, the use of a
natural membrane and longer dwell time
improves the removal of ‘middle molecules’.
Thus there is a more stable fluid and electrolyte
balance and consistently lower levels of toxins,
and consequently patients feel very much better.
Moreover, there are few dietary restrictions, the
main remaining modification being an increased
protein intake to compensate for losses across
the peritoneum. Water-soluble vitamins are
given as usual.
Automated peritoneal dialysis
This technique is increasingly used where CAPD
has failed to provide control or where it
produces unacceptable daytime restrictions for
patients. Automated peritoneal dialysis (APD)
involves automation of intermittent PD, with a
machine to switch between bags and control the
tap. It can be used easily at home, and when run
overnight causes less discomfort because the
patient is recumbent. The more rapid cycling
compared with CAPD means that night-time
exchanges may provide sufficient control and
obviate the necessity for the patient to dialyse
during the day, or else only require a few
daytime cycles. Thus, APD is preferred by many
patients and now is used by about one-quarter of
PD patients in theUK.
Problems
Contra-indications. Patients with respira-
tory or abdominal disease present difficulties.
Diaphragm movement is impeded by the fluid-
filled abdomen, and this possibly impairs respi-
ration. Fistula formation might be encouraged in
IBD, with consequent peritonitis, and hernias
may be aggravated. Gut surgery can leave fibrous
adhesions which reduce the effective membrane
area.
Peritonitis. Infections from contamination
during bag switching are unfortunately common:
a CAPD patient experiences one such episode on
average every 2-3 years. It is less frequent in
hospital-based PD. Usually, a commensal Gram-
positive skin organism (Staphylococcus epider-
midis) is implicated, but enterococcal infection
(Streptococcus faecalis) suggestive of an intestinal
fistula may occur and is far more serious. Infec-
tion may be painless and is usually detected
when the dialysate becomes cloudy or takes far
longer than usual to drain. CAPD patients must
then report to the hospital immediately.
The dialysate should be sampled for culturing
and sensitivity testing before antibiotics are
given, but blind therapy must be started
promptly to minimize the development of
peritoneal fibrosis. Initial treatment is a cephalo-
sporin plus an aminoglycoside in the dialysis
fluid, with one or the other stopped according
to sensitivity data. A loading dose, possibly IV,
may be needed in severe cases: otherwise most episodes are managed with the patient at home
or as an outpatient. Treatment should last 7-10
days, during which normal dialysis may be
continued, although at an increased frequency
because the inflamed membranes reduce urea
clearance.
A less invasive and far cheaper recommenda-
tion for mild peritonitis is to perform three rapid
exchanges at the first sign of infection and then
simply to stop PD for 2 days and allow for
natural resolution, though this requires careful
supervision in hospital. Exit site or catheter
tunnel infections are usually Gram-positive and
an antistaphylococcal agent such as vancomycin
is used.
Apart from the immediate problems of serious infection, each peritonitis episode causes scar-
ring and adhesions that gradually degrade the peritoneal surface area and reduce ultrafiltration efficiency. This may be exacerbated by the continuous exposure of the peritoneum to an
abnormal fluid volume.
Hyperglycaemia. The glucose in the dialysis
fluid causes hyperglycaemia and obesity, espe-
cially in CAPD because there is significant
absorption during the long dwell times. This is a
particular problem with diabetics. The hyper-
lipidaemia which all renal patients suffer is exac-
erbated in PD patients, possibly due to the
hyperglycaemia. Another consequence of glucose
absorption is a gradual reduction in the osmol-
arity of the in situ dialysis fluid, which reduces
ultrafiltration as each exchange proceeds.
Glucose polymers, e.g. icodextrin, which exert a
significant oncotic pressure in the dialysis fluid
but cannot be absorbed, minimise this.
Other problems include:
• Loss of protein and amino acids.
• Blockage of the catheter (which otherwise
lasts many months, and is regularly cleared
with a heparin flush).
• Local infection around catheter insertion site.
• Sclerosing peritonitis, a rare, potentially fatal
complication, possibly associated with dial-
ysis fluid contaminants or additives, e.g. chlorhexidine, acetate.
There is a high drop-out rate from CAPD, with
up to half of patients switching to some other
Renal replacement therapy 923
method within 3 years, and few lasting 10 years.
In theUKmany would regard CAPD as the treat-
ment of second choice (after transplantation) for
ESRD, and intensive efforts are being made into
improving its success rate because of the quality
of life it permits and its economic benefits. Up to
50% of dialysis patients are on CAPD and most
of the remainder on HD. However, the position
is different in the rest ofEurope; e.g. in Scandi-
navia, only 30-40% choose CAPD, the majority
preferring HD. There may be economic reasons
for this.
Drug therapy in PD
Many drugs can, like antibiotics, be given safely and effectively by the intraperitoneal route in
CAPD fluid. The most notable example is insulin for diabetics with ESRD, and very smooth diabetic control can be achieved in this way.
Further information may be obtained in the
References and further reading section.
Comparison of dialysis types
The 10-year survival rate for both methods is
about 75%, with CAPD patients achieving a
slightly better rate. Table 14.21 summarizes
important features of the two main types of dial-
ysis, and compares their relative advantages and
disadvantages.
Transplantation
For the vast majority of ESRD patients a renal
transplant is the best possible treatment. In
Europeas a whole about 30% of patients receive
replacement kidneys, but there are regional
differences. TheUK, with 30 kidney donations
per million population annually, has the lowest
rate.
The shortage of organs is still the major
impediment to improving these figures, the
situation having been exacerbated by seat-belt
legislation which has reduced road traffic fatal-
ities. In addition, certain ethnic groups may
have cultural or religious objections. On the
other hand, as tissue matching and immuno-
suppressive regimens improve and surgical
experience grows, so the survival rate, especially
of non-related or unmatched living grafts improves, and the admission criteria to
transplant programmes have been relaxed.
Patients who formerly would not have been
grafted owing to age or an underlying disease that
predisposed them to renewed renal damage, e.g.
diabetes, hypertension, arterial disease, are now
considered. There remain few absolute contra-
indications; these include extensive neoplastic
disease, serious infection, and the inability to
withstand major surgery or immunosuppression,
e.g. otherwise immunocompromised patients.
A successful graft is an almost complete cure:
all fluid, electrolyte and toxaemic complications
are reversed, and in time the anaemia and even
the bone disease resolve. There may be some
residual hypertension but the only significant
disadvantage is the lifelong immunosuppression
that is needed, with its attendant risks, and the inconvenience of regular monitoring.
Organ donation
Live donors
Using live donors is convenient and allows
ample preoperative preparation. It also results in
improved graft survival because of the reduced
time that the organ spends disconnected from a
blood supply (cold ischaemic time). Donors are
carefully screened for renal disease or relevant
risk factors, e.g. hypertension, and for general
and psychological health. The loss of a kidney
does not adversely affect an otherwise healthy
person, and the operative risk is low (mortality
about 1/3000). Their remaining kidney hypertro-
phies, giving an eventual GFR of about two-
thirds the pre-donation level. Long-term follow-
up of donors has shown no significantly increased risk of renal disease or hypertension, nor any reduction of life expectancy.
Related donors are preferred. Obviously the
ideal of an identical twin is rarely achieved;
failing that, other siblings are preferred.
However, genetically unrelated spouse donors
are being increasingly used, with surprising
success. Anonymous organ donation for profit is
not permitted in most countries. In the future
there may be transplants from other species such
as pigs (xenotransplantation). One experimental
approach is to modify animals genetically to
make their tissues immunologically better
tolerated by the human immune system.
Increasingly, diabetic patients are being offered simultaneous renal and pancreatic trans-
plantation (see Chapter 9).
Cadaveric donation
About 75% of donations are cadaveric. The pref-
erence is for ‘beating heart’ donors, such as
brain-damaged patients taken off life-support
systems, and only 10% of cadaveric kidneys
come from non-heart beating donors, e.g. road
traffic accidents. At 25%, theUKhas a relatively
low proportion of living donors to cadaveric, the
highest beingNorwaywith 45%. The criteria
applied in this controversial area are affected by
ethical, cultural, ethnic and religious considera-
tions that are outside the scope of this book.
However, it should be noted that rigorous rules
for determining brain death are now applied,
which effectively eliminate the risk of error.
Graft matching
All ESRD patients approaching end-stage are
tissue-typed and registered centrally. When a
kidney becomes available, several closely
matched potential recipients are urgently called
to their local renal unit and a direct cross-match
is done. All other things being equal, the patient
with the best match is then immediately
prepared for surgery.
Histocompatibility
Two important immunological criteria affect the
risk of rejection. Blood group (ABO) compati-
Renal replacement therapy 925
bility operates as in blood transfusion, i.e. group O is a universal donor, etc. More complex is HLA compatibility (see Chapter 2). Class II HLA-D antigens seem to be the more important in transplantation.
The intensity of an immune response and thus
the likelihood of rejection depends on the degree
of HLA similarity between donor and recipient;
e.g. they may have the same HLA-A and HLA-B
antigens (both Class I), but may differ in HLA-DR.
Children have a mixture of their parents’ HLA
genes. Identical (monozygotic) twins will have
identical genes, as occasionally may two siblings
by chance. The more distant the relationship, the
less compatibility there is likely to be.
In discussing the outcome of transplantation it
is usual to refer to graft survival, because if a graft
fails the patient is simply returned to the dialysis
programme. Grafts from an identical twin
(isografts) have the best chance of survival.
Survival figures for grafts are better for live dona-
tions than from cadaveric (Table 14.18). The
longer a graft survives the lower the incidence of
rejection; at the best centres the 10-year graft
survival rate with well-matched kidneys can
reach 70%, although the average is about 50%.
Immunosuppressant drugs can keep rejection
at bay at the cost of potential myelosuppression,
infection and other chronic iatrogenic complica-
tions. Improvements here have brought about
gradually increasing graft survival. Better
matching reduces not only the chance of rejec-
tion but also the immunosuppressant doses
required, which itself improves patient survival.
Cross-matching
HLA-A, B, and C can be typed at any time using
specific antisera and the patient’s or donor’s
blood. For HLA-D, it is necessary to mix recipient
lymphocytes and potential donor serum directly,
from which donor lymphocytes must be deleted
by a cytotoxic drug so that only the recipient’s
lymphocytes can respond to any incompati-
bility. Because typing takes 5 days, it is not prac-
ticable for cadaveric donors. The D subgroup
called DR (D-related), currently the best
predictor of graft tolerance, is detectable serolog-
ically, providing faster, more accurate matching.
Nevertheless, even completely HLA-mis-
matched grafts are sometimes successful and the
paramount significance of HLA matching is
disputed. Blood group compatibility, general
health, previous transfusions and effective
immunosuppression seem to be equally impor-
tant in determining graft survival. Graft survival
rates from cadavers and living unrelated donors
are fast approaching those from living related
donors.
The ‘transfusion effect’ is an immune toler-
ance that seems to be induced in ESRD patients.
A wide variety of antigens are present in the
pooled blood of the numerous transfusions
usually received by ESRD patients during the
course of their illness. Theoretically these would
be expected to stimulate the production of
multiple antibodies, some of which could - and
sometimes do - reject a subsequent graft.
However, a significant overall graft-sparing effect
results from transfusions given in the months
before grafting.
A final direct cross-matching of recipient serum and donor lymphocytes is performed just before surgery to check if there are any pre-
existing cytotoxic serum antibodies which would cause an immediate rejection. Such anti-
bodies could have arisen from previous blood transfusions, transplants or pregnancy.
Surgical procedure
The operation is not complex surgically,
compared for example to heart transplanation
(Figure 14.18). The donor organ is removed
along with lengths of renal artery, renal vein and
ureter. For living donors this can now be done
laparoscopically (‘keyhole surgery’) to minimize
trauma and improve post-operative recovery. It
is placed extraperitoneally in an iliac fossa,
where it can easily be felt and biopsied after
operation. This also preserves the peritoneum
should further dialysis be necessary. The graft’s
renal artery and vein are connected to major
local abdominal vessels and the ureter is
implanted into the recipient’s bladder. The
bladder connection may occasionally cause
subsequent problems, but the operation has few
complications and a low risk.
The original kidneys are usually conserved
even if the patient is anuric, unless there is
strong evidence of renal hypertension, stones (a
focus of infection) or a tumour. This preserves and utilizes any remaining function - especially important should the graft fail. Equally impor-
tant, it helps maintain the haematocrit as some erythropoietin is still secreted even when the
GFR is minimal. Bilateral nephrectomy intro-
duces further operative risk for no improvement in graft or patient survival.
Kidneys are implanted as soon as possible after
removal from the donor. This is easy to arrange
with a living donor using adjoining operating
theatres, and this contributes to the success of
this type of transplant. Cadaveric kidneys are
perfused with specially formulated organ preser-
vation solution at 5°C immediately after removal
to preserve their viability during transportation.
The ischaemic period after donor organ
removal causes a variable degree of ATN that
may manifest as ARF in the recipient for up to
about 10 days after transplantation. During this
time the patient may need to continue on dial-
ysis, depending on their urine output and blood
chemistry. The sooner the organ is implanted
the less serious this episode is, and up to 75% of
recipients start producing urine within a few
days.
Rejection
A kidney graft may be rejected at any time,
although the longer it survives the less likely this
becomes. Moreover, most rejection episodes can
be controlled. About half of patients undergo at
least one epispode and a patient may undergo
several episodes yet still ultimately retain the
graft. However, if it cannot be saved the patient
is returned to dialysis and to the transplant
waiting list. The failed graft neeed not be
removed unless it is a focus of infection or
chronic inflammation; otherwise, further
surgery can be avoided by allowing it to become
fibrosed and eventually atrophy.
There are three main types of rejection:
Hyperacute or immediate rejection. This is
caused by either pre-existing plasma antibodies
attaching to the graft and initiating an immune
response, or by ABO mismatch. It occurs within
days or even hours, as soon as the organ
becomes adequately perfused, and results in renal vascular thrombosis and loss of the graft. Fortunately rare, this condition is untreatable
because the antibodies are already formed, although plasmapheresis has been tried.
Acute rejection. This is the most common
form. It can occur at any time, but usually in the
first fortnight. It is a normal T cell-mediated
response to HLA antigens involving primary
sensitization, lymphocyte proliferation and
subsequent attack. The resulting vascular and
tubular damage initially causes non-specific
symptoms such as fever and tenderness over the
graft. If the organ has started functioning there
will be a decline in renal function, with oliguria
and a rise in serum creatinine.
There are problems in diagnosing acute rejec-
tion. If it occurs during the period of ATN that often follows cadaveric grafting, reduced renal
function cannot be identified. Furthermore, a
similar picture could be caused by a recurrence of
the primary disease, by post-operative infection
or obstruction, or by nephrotoxicity especially
from ciclosporin. Consequently, most such
episodes are treated by default as if they were
rejection while efforts are made to identify other
causes.
Chronic rejection. This may occur at any
time after the first few months, and partly
involves immune-complex deposition within
the glomeruli and renal vessels resembling
chronic glomerulonephritis. Now referred to as
chronic allograft nephropathy, it is relentless
and usually irreversible, resulting in loss of the
graft.
Prevention and treatment of rejection
Immunosuppressant therapy is started immedi-
ately before grafting, gradually reduced over 2-6
months to a maintenance dose and, except for
isografts (HLA-identical), is continued lifelong. If
there is an acute rejection episode it is increased
temporararily until the rejection is controlled or
the graft is lost. Treatment generally consists of
combination therapy with drugs acting at
different sites in the immune process (Figure
14.19). Combined therapy permits lower individual doses, but monotherapy avoids the toxicity of some drugs completely.
Prevention
The range of drugs used includes:
Corticosteroids (prednisolone), which non-
specifically inhibit the action of many immune cells, including lymphocytes and macrophages, partly by interfering with cytokine production. The main drawback is the well-known range of dose-related steroid side-effects.
Anti-proliferative agents (azathioprine, myco-
phenolate mofetil, sirolimus). Azathioprine non-
specifically depresses cellular proliferation,
including immune cells; mycophenolate is more
specific for lymphocytes, more effective but also
more expensive. Sirolimus is also more specific
and is not nephrotoxic, making it a good substi-
tute if a calcineurin inhibitor is not tolerated.
The main adverse effect of all antiproliferatives is
some degree of bone marrow depression through
inhibition of haematological precursors.
Calcineurin inhibitors (ciclosporin, tacrolimus)
inhibit activation of lymphocytes targeted
against specific antigens, and thus do not depress
the bone marrow. They have potentially serious
long-term adverse effects, including hyper-
lipidaemia, hepatotoxicity, lymphoma and,
unfortunately, nephrotoxicity that results in
hypertension. Tacrolimus is diabetogenic and can
cause cardiomyopathy, so monitoring is required.
Both have formulation dependant bioavailability
so brand and formulation changes should be
avoided. Toxicity is minimized by careful plasma
level monitoring. They are metabolized by the
cytochrome P450 (3A4) system so interact with
enzyme inducers and inhibitors.
Anti-lymphocyte antisera (anti-lymphocyte
globulin, ALG; anti-thymocyte globulin, ATG),
are raised in animal hosts against human
lymphocytes and contain a wide range of anti-
bodies and so are polyclonal and non-specific.
OKT3 (anti-CD3) also targets lymphocytes but is
monoclonal.
Monoclonal anti-interleukin agents (anti-
CD25 agents: basiliximab, daclizumab) block the interleukin-2 receptor (IL-2R), interfering with activated lymphocyte action. These agents are highly specific and appear to have few serious adverse effects. They are recommended by NICE for anti-rejection induction.
Treatment regimens vary widely between
centres. A typical combination used in the UK is:
• Prednisolone, used high-dose for ‘induction’
immediately before implantation (1 g methyl- prednisolone IV) and then at moderate doses
following implantation (e.g. 20-30 mg pred-
nisolone oral daily) for 1-3 months then tailed
off to a maintenance level (5-10 mg daily).
• Azathioprine, initiated post-operatively at a
maintenance dose.
• Tacrolimus, also started post-operatively and
carefully monitored.
Following a rejection episode the regimen would
be changed (rescue or salvage therapy), substi-
tuting mycophenolate and/or siroliumus. The
development of numerous alternatives has now
made it feasible to tailor regimens for particular
patients or situations, which can improve
survival or minimize adverse effects, or both,
starting with the most suitable drugs. For
example, start with the second-line agents for a
high risk patient such as a re-transplant; avoid
nephrotoxic drugs following implantation with
an organ exposed to warm ischaemia; use steroids
and tacrolimus only with caution if latent diabetes
is suspected.
Management of rejection
The standard response to suspected rejection is
to increase the steroid dose substantially, e.g. IV
methylprednisolone 1 g daily for 3 days. There is
no point in raising antiproliferative dosage as
the cells doing the damage are already in the
blood, and calcineurin inhibitors cannot be
increased because the dose being used was prob-
ably maximal before rejection, so that raising it
would cause unacceptable toxicity. The episode
will usually be aborted within a few days and
normal prophylactic doses can be resumed.
Should steroids fail other immunotherapeutic regimens are used, e.g ATG, ALG, OKT3.
Other post-transplant complications
Successfully transplanted patients are still not
entirely problem-free, owing mainly to their
immunosuppressant therapy. They need regular
renal, liver and blood screening and must
be monitored for infective or haematological
complications throughout the rest of their lives.
Many patients still have hypertension: contrib-
utory factors may include iatrogenic disease (e.g.
steroid-induced fluid retention or ciclosporin
Important renal diseases 929
nephrotoxicity), an imperfectly functioning graft
and the influence of the original, diseased
kidneys. A slightly increased risk of malignancy
(lymphoma and skin) is associated with long-
term cytotoxic therapy. Vascular disease is
common. Dyslipidaemia due to steroids and
calcineurin inhibitors and hypertension lead to
atherosclerotic complications, mainly IHD and
stroke, which are a major cause of death. The
increased incidence of peptic ulcer may be
related to steroids, as may osteoporosis and
osteonecrosis. Hepatic disease may result from
treatment with both azathioprine and ciclosporin.
Immunosuppression from cytotoxic drug-
induced bone marrow suppression and
steroids predispose to infections, especially
cytomegalovirus, Pneumocystis, reactivated TB
and bacterial urinary-tract infections. Patients
are often put on a combination of antimicro-
bials for several months post-operatively,
including antivirals co-trimoxazole, isoniazid,
and antifungal lozenges.
Important renal diseases
In this final section some of the more impor-
tant renal diseases, many of which may be the
underlying cause of ARF or CRF, are considered.
Obstructive uropathy
Obstruction can occur anywhere from the renal
pelvis to the urethra and may be either unilateral
or bilateral (Figure 14.20). Certain forms pro-
duce acute symptoms; bilateral obstruction, if
untreated, may lead to CRF. Drugs have little role
in the management of these conditions.
Pathology
The effect of obstruction depends on the site.
Obstruction in the ureter or above, e.g. a stone or
calculus, causes fluid accumulation in the renal
pelvis (hydronephrosis) and a rise in tubular
hydrostatic pressure. The increased tubular back
pressure reduces the GFR but filtrate continues to
be produced for some time, even following complete obstruction. The resulting increase in
intrarenal pressure causes dilatation and gross
damage owing to compression of renal tissue
within the tough renal capsule. The prolonged
urinary stasis which follows can promote
secondary effects such as urinary-tract infection,
because organisms are not regularly flushed out;
stasis can also promote stone formation.
If the obstruction is relieved promptly, there
may be a complete restoration of renal function.
There usually follows a massive and prolonged
diuresis, which can be fatally dehydrating: a urine
output of up to 50 L in 24 h has been reported.
Such losses suggest delayed tubular recovery
(compare this with the polyuric phase of ARF,
p. 901) in addition to the simple clearance of
accumulated fluid. Because post-renal failure is
potentially reversible, a patient presenting with
sudden oliguria or anuria must always be investi-
gated for possible obstruction. Although a
comparatively rare cause of CRF, obstruction is
one of the few causes that are preventable.
Chronic partial obstruction leads to chronic
renal inflammation, scarring and possible infec-
tion. Such obstruction is often a result of
congenital incompetence of the valve mecha-
nism between the ureter and the bladder (the
vesicoureteric junction; Figure 14.20), Vesi-
coureteric reflux leading to reflux nephropathy usually starts in infancy, and may stabilize or
progress slowly to CRF in adulthood.
In bladder outflow obstruction, e.g. prostatic hypertrophy, urinary retention may be accom-
modated by bladder distension, with little serious rise in intrarenal pressure.
Aetiology
The commonest causes of obstruction are listed
in Table 14.22. In the West, the most frequent
causes are gynaecological problems in women,
prostatic hypertrophy in men, and stones in
both.
Renal calculi (urolithiasis)
The lifetime prevalence of renal stones is about
10% in males and 5% in females, although not
all cases are symptomatic. The causes are poorly
understood. Calcium oxalate stones, the most
common type, may result from hypercalciuria
(high urinary calcium) or excessive gastro-
intestinal absorption of oxalate (hyperoxaluria).
Stone formation is encouraged by an alkaline
urine, e.g. from renal tubular acidosis, and
hyperuricosuria, e.g. in hyperuricaemia or gout
(Chapter 12). Conversely, hyperuricaemia
together with an acid urine predisposes to urate
stones. In urinary infections caused by urease-
producing organisms, especially Proteus spp., the
urinary alkalinity and ammonium content cause
co-precipitation of mixed phosphate stones
(calcium, magnesium and ammonium). In
cystinuria, an inherited metabolic disorder, the
reduced tubular reabsorption of cystine results in
high urinary levels and cystine stone formation.
Clinical features and investigation
Symptoms depend on whether the lesion is
above or below the bladder outlet. In the latter
case, dysuria, hesitancy, frequency, terminal
dribbling or bladder distension and discomfort
occur. Above-bladder obstruction usually causes
renal colic (sudden severe and debilitating
unilateral loin pain due to ureteric spasm) often
associated with haematuria and complete
ureteric obstruction. Colic is also caused by the movement of stones in the ureter.
The urine flow disturbance will also depend on
the degree and site of obstruction and whether it
is bilateral. Paradoxically, polyuria may occur,
owing to tubular damage. Chronic reflux
nephropathy, caused by bladder contents being
refluxed into the renal pelvis, may result in
hypertension and recurrent renal infection
(pyelonephritis).
Investigation ranges from simple examination and analysis of the urine to sophisticated imaging and biopsy.
Management
Whereas surgery used to be common in treating
obstruction, conservative management is increas-
ingly used, owing to the growing appreciation
that renal function may be preserved or restored,
and to the development of techniques of percuta-
neous intrarenal manipulation. Surgical repair
may be essential in some cases, e.g. a congenital
defect, but nephrectomy is now quite rare.
Small stones (especially cystine) may be
passed in the urine if output is encouraged by
ample fluid intake (more than 3L daily),
especially overnight. Antispasmodics such as
propantheline (contra-indicated in bladder
outflow obstruction) or catheterization may also
assist the passage of stones. Penicillamine will
help to dissolve cystine stones. Reducing
urinary urate levels with allopurinol may help.
Alkalinization of the urine, e.g. with potassium
citrate mixture, will also reduce hypercalciuria
and in turn the formation of both urate and
cystine stones. Urinary acidification, e.g. with
ammonium chloride, will minimize phosphate
stone production.
For oxalate stones, sodium restriction and thiazides are used both to reduce urinary calcium (thiazides promote tubular reabsorption of calcium) and to increase urine flow. It is impor-
tant not to reduce dietary calcium in an attempt to treat hypercalciuria, because, paradoxically, this tends to increase future stone formation and also cause loss of calcium from bones.
Nephrostomy may permit extraction of larger
pelvic stones and drainage in hydronephrosis.
Stones may be ultrasonically disrupted by extra-
corporeal shock-wave lithotripsy (ESWL) and the
fragments passed out in the urine. Fibre-optic
ureteroscopy, which requires general anaesthetic,
may be required. Open surgery is rarely necessary.
In reflux nephropathy prompt treatment of
infections and adequate control of hypertension are likely to prevent progression. Surgery is rarely indicated, except for reconstruction of a congen-
itally abnormal vesicoureteric junction.
Renal colic is treated with either pethidine or,
increasingly, an NSAID (diclofenac), which
reduces ureteric spasm in addition to its anal-
gesic effect. IV fluids are used to promote urine
flow, especially as the patient is likely to be
extremely nauseous.
In all methods employing treatments to encourage urine flow, it is of course important to ensure initially that there is not complete
obstruction.
Infection
As with obstruction, there is a significant differ-
ence between infections of the lower and upper
renal systems. Lower urinary-tract infection (e.g.
urethritis, cystitis) causes discomfort, inconve-
nience and not a little pain, but is essentially
benign if restricted to a single attack at that site.
Conversely, infection of the kidney (upper
urinary-tract infection or pyelonephritis) is
always serious and has systemic complications. It
may even lead to CRF: indeed, chronic
pyelonephritis accounts for some 10% of all
ESRD.
However, urinary-tract infection and
pyelonephritis are not completely distinct. Most
kidney infections are presumed to have ascended
from asymptomatic, untreated or inadequately
treated urinary-tract infection, and this retro-
grade infection is encouraged by the urinary
stasis, which can result from obstruction.
Repeated or serious urinary-tract infection can
itself lead to obstruction by causing ureteric
fibrosis and stricture (narrowing). The patholog-
ical spectrum, from asymptomatic bacteriuria to
what is still termed chronic pyelonephritis, is
illustrated in Figure 14.21.
Because pyelonephritis causes inflammatory
damage there is also some pathological similarity
to such conditions as nephrotoxicity, analgesic
nephropathy, reflux nephropathy and the renal
manifestations of connective tissue disorders,
e.g. SLE. The generic term interstitial nephritis is
often preferred.
Urinary-tract infection
Because of the close pathogenetic links between
urinary-tract infection, reflux nephropathy,
obstruction and pyelonephritis, some of the
general features of urinary-tract infection are
discussed here so as to present a complete
picture of renal system infections. Full details of
urinary-tract infections, especially their investi-
gation and management, are given in Chapter 8.
Aetiology and pathology
Urine is normally sterile. The faecal commensal
Escherichia coli is responsible for acute infection in
75% of those cases where a urinary organism is
identified. Less common pathogens include
staphylococci, faecal streptococci, Proteus and
Klebsiella. Non-specific urethritis (i.e. non-
gonococcal) is usually caused by Chlamydia spp.
Women. Even with the strictest hygiene,
urinary-tract contamination with skin commen- sals or faecal organisms is difficult to avoid in
women. This is due to the anatomical proximity
of the urethral and anal openings, and the rela-
tively short urethra. Simple urinary-tract infec-
tion is far more common among women than
men.
The route of infection may be anus-
vagina-vulva-urethra. Vaginal secretions, urine
and the urinary tract all normally have protec-
tive antimicrobial properties, e.g. mucosal IgA,
locally acidic pH, frequent flow. Thus, recurrent
infection suggests a breakdown in these defence
mechanisms, e.g. obstruction, or a protected
focus of infection, e.g. infected stones. Persisting
vaginal organisms may be introduced into the
urethra mechanically, especially during inter-
course - hence the rather quaint but now
distinctly anachronistic term ‘honeymoon
cystitis’. Urinary-tract infection is more common
among postmenopausal women owing possibly
to a loss of protection afforded by oestrogens.
Although bacteriuria is found in about 5% of
adult women, few of these suffer symptoms.
Such asymptomatic or covert bacteriuria gener-
ally does not require treatment except during
pregnancy, where there is a 30% chance of
progression to acute pyelonephritis due to intra-
abdominal ureteric compression. On the other
hand, no organism can be found in up to 50% of
women who do have symptoms of cystitis; this is
known as abacterial cystitis (or ‘urethral
syndrome’).
Men. Infection in males is much rarer and
always requires investigation. Sexually trans-
mitted non-specific urethritis is the most common cause in young men and chronic bac-
terial prostatitis in older men.
Both sexes. In the elderly of either sex the
prevalence of urinary-tract infection may rise to 30% and this is a particular problem in institu-
tions. Catheterization alone carries a risk of infec-
tion variously estimated at between 2% and 20%. In diabetics, reduced host defence and glycosuria predispose to urinary bacterial growth.
Clinical features and course
The hallmark of acute urethritis/cystitis is an
intense burning sensation on micturition, to
which the simple term dysuria fails to do justice.
The condition may be exacerbated by a more
acid urine resulting from local bacterial metabo-
lism. Urinary frequency is common and there
may be suprapubic pain or discomfort. Pyuria,
purulent discharge or even haematuria may also
occur but, although alarming and requiring
investigation, are not necessarily sinister. There
are no systemic signs. The elderly commonly
present with acute confusion, fever, malaise or
anorexia but few specific urinary symptoms,
making it easy to miss during examination. It is
also difficult to spot in young children if not
suspected.
Urinary-tract infection is usually self-limiting within a few days, especially if fluid intake is promptly increased substantially. It may have no complications in the absence of any other renal abnormality. However, recurrence is common owing either to infection with a different organism, or to relapse or re-infection with the same organism. The latter situation suggests the presence of a complicating factor that is preventing complete eradication.
Investigation
Two things must be determined: (i) which
organism is responsible; and (ii) are there any
underlying causes or correctable complications?
The collection of urine samples and the indica-
tions for further investigation are discussed in
Chapter 8.
Management
In the management of urinary-tract infection
the aims are to:
• reduce the risk of renal damage. • provide symptomatic relief.
• render the urine sterile.
• provide prophylactic therapy.
The first of these is achieved by prompt atten-
tion and full investigation when appropriate.
General measures include increasing the fluid
intake substantially to promote urine flow, and
providing advice on hygiene. For women, advice
includes front-to-back wiping after defaecation
(although the role of this has been disputed),
and micturition before and after coitus. Frequent
recurrence or relapse in the absence of obstruc-
tive or other correctable complications may
require prophylactic therapy. For details of treat-
ment, see Chapter 8.
Acute pyelonephritis
Like lower urinary-tract infection, most cases of acute pyelonephritis (APN) occur in women. E. coli is the usual culprit, but Proteus, Staphylo-
coccus and Pseudomonas are found more commonly than in simple urinary-tract infec-
tion. Tubular inflammation causes polyuria and a dilute urine but severe cases may progress to acute oliguric renal failure.
Clinical features
An acute onset of severe loin pain is accompa-
nied by systemic features such as fever, nausea
and vomiting. There may also be lower urinary-
tract infection symptoms of cystitis and
urethritis (Figure 14.20). Rarely, if both kidneys
are affected, tubular oedema and inflammatory
exudate may cause intrarenal obstruction with
acute post-renal failure.
Management
Prompt appropriate oral antimicrobial therapy and an increased fluid intake are always indi-
cated. The same agents are used as in urinary-
tract infection. However, close attention to microbiological results is vital because of the
greater likelihood of unusual or resistant organ-
isms and the importance of characterizing recur-
rence as either relapse, i.e. the same organism, or re-infection possibly with another.
Most patients have a single attack of APN
and recover completely, but recurrent attacks
or persistent asymptomatic bacteriuria require
further investigation. If the recurrence is a
relapse with the same organism, either the
antimicrobial therapy was inadequate or
there may be obstructive/reflux abnormalities.
Frequent re-infection with different organisms
or strains suggests that the host defences are
defective, and that prophylactic antimicrobial
therapy should be considered. This can be
continuous low-dose therapy, or intermittent
5-day full-dose courses at the onset of symp-
toms, which the patient can be instructed to
initiate.
Reflux nephropathy (chronic pyelonephritis)
Definition
The term chronic pyelonephritis has traditionally
been used to describe a condition diagnosed radi-
ologically where one or both kidneys appear irreg-
ular, shrunken and scarred. However, because
evidence is accumulating of a strong association
with reflux or infection, the term reflux
nephropathy is now preferred. Although most
cases do not progress to renal failure, it can be
extremely difficult to treat, and renal scarring is
present in up to 20% of patients starting dialysis.
Pathogenesis
The relative contributions of chronic infection
and sterile reflux (causing simple pressure
damage) are still uncertain. Many patients have
neither bacteriuria nor a history of urinary-tract
infection, and although urinary-tract infection
and APN are far more common in women,
reflux nephropathy shows equal sex distribu-
tion. One form may result from vesicoureteric
reflux starting in the very young, and this has a
poorer prognosis because it may be silent or
undiagnosed for long periods. In adults, recur-
rent urinary-tract infection or APN may be
responsible.
Bacterial reflux nephropathy commonly
involves more virulent Gram-negative organ-
isms, including Pseudomonas, and persistent
infection with relapses is common. In contrast to
the urinary tract the renal pelvis seems to have
no natural antibacterial defences (presumably
evolution never anticipated organisms there).
There may even be factors that encourage the
microbial persistence, so complete eradication is
difficult.
Clinical features and investigation
The condition may be asymptomatic or may
present as proteinuria, hypertension or recurrent
urinary-tract infection. Rarely, the first indica-
tion may be symptoms of incipient renal failure
Important renal diseases 935
such as polyuria or nocturia, because the renal
damage is primarily tubular. Early reflux damage
may initiate the hypertension-renal failure
vicious cycle, and sometimes a history of related
childhood illnesses such as enuresis or cystitis
may be traced. Diagnosis and investigation
involve urography, urine microbiology and renal
function tests.
Management
In the absence of renal impairment, all that may
be required is regular monitoring of blood pres-
sure, urine microbiology and renal function.
Infective episodes must be treated promptly as
for APN, and appropriate antimicrobial prophy-
laxis may be indicated if bacteriuria cannot be
eliminated. In children, surgery to correct reflux
may be necessary.
Course and prognosis
Most patients have stable disease, especially if their BP and bacteriuria are managed success-
fully. Recurrent infective exacerbations carry a poorer prognosis, but only about 1% of patients progress to CRF.
Glomerular disease
Glomerular disease invariably affects both kidneys. Glomeruli seem especially sensitive to inflammatory immune damage, and most forms of glomerular disease involve immunological mechanisms. Glomerulonephritis (GN) is the single most important cause of CRF.
Classification
For such a small and apparently simple structure
the glomerulus presents inordinate pathological
complexity. Descriptions of glomerular disease
have a long history in medicine, and under-
standing of the condition is confounded by the
numerous methods of classification. Moreover,
increasingly sophisticated microscopy and
immunological techniques continue to identify
new criteria and subgroups. Thus, in addition to simple clinical and aetiological classes there are histopathological and immunopathological groupings (Table 14.23).
There is no consistent correlation between
these different methods of classification and
much overlap. No single classification provides
an unequivocal guide to management, and
usually each aspect needs to be specified when
considering a particular patient. Thus, for
example, diabetes is usually associated with
chronically progressive glomerulosclerosis and a
poor outcome. On the other hand, acute post-
infective nephritis showing diffuse proliferative
change has an excellent prognosis with minimal
treatment being required.
Presenting syndromes
The histopathological classification is becom-
ing the standard among nephrologists but
glomerular disease remains perplexing for the
non-specialist. It is best tackled by first under-
standing that there are four main ways in which
it may present, ranging in severity from asymp-
tomatic proteinuria through nephritic syndrome
and nephrotic syndrome to irreversible renal
failure. This is illustrated in Figure 14.22,
although this scheme must not be taken to
imply an inevitable or direct progression. Each
syndrome can have various aetiologies and
outcomes, so the likely cause should be identi-
fied if possible and the pathology described. It is
then possible to decide treatment and judge
prognosis.
The clinical features and management options
for these syndromes will be summarized in
general terms, including a brief description of
the main varieties of nephritic syndrome as
commonly classified by prognostic categories.
The syndrome of chronic renal failure was
described above.
Asymptomatic proteinuria
Normal urine contains only trace amounts of
protein, usually less than 100 mg excreted over
24 h. Most plasma proteins are too large for
filtration; smaller ones such as microglobulin are
filtered to some extent, but most is reabsorbed in
the tubules. Proteinuria means the presence of
more than 500 mg protein in 24 h. If these are
smaller proteins it implies a tubular defect, i.e. a
failure of reabsorption (a ‘tubular pattern’).
Albumin is larger, and its presence in signifi-
cant amount suggests a ‘glomerular pattern’, i.e.
a failure of filtration. Thus it is more correctly
called albuminuria. Albumin is usually discov-
ered as an incidental finding during a general
medical examination or during investigation of
some other disease. Albumin loss below about
2 g/24 h may be benign, but such patients are
always investigated and regularly monitored for
the possible development of conditions such as
glomerulonephritis, diabetes and hypertension.
A medication history is also important. Intermit-
tent proteinuria is quite a common normal
finding after exercise or after prolonged standing
or walking.
Microalbuminuria (÷200 mg albumin per 24 h)
is a prognostic marker of the possible develop-
ment of nephropathy in diabetes. Urine
dipsticks can currently detect this level of
proteinuria. Microscopic haematuria may be
benign. Even macroscopic haematuria need not
be a sinister sign although it is obviously very
alarming. Of course, both conditions also require
thorough investigation.
Nephritic syndrome
Definition
The hallmarks of nephritis are renal impairment
with oliguria, sodium and fluid retention,
peripheral oedema, mild to moderate proteinuria
and possibly haematuria. Urinary RBC ‘casts’ are
diagnostic; these are clumps of cells that have
been shaped by the tubular lumen. Frequently
there are no further complications, but hyper-
tension, hypertensive encephalopathy and
pulmonary oedema may occur. Serum creatinine
is moderately elevated, but only rarely does olig-
uric ARF supervene. The pathophysiological
basis of these features is illustrated in Figure
14.23.
Aetiology and pathogenesis
Acute nephritis following a non-renal strepto-
coccal infection, e.g. streptococcal sore throat, is the most common form although other infections may be responsible, e.g. malaria, bacterial endo-
carditis. Drug reactions and connective tissue disorders, e.g. SLE and Wegener’s granulomatosis, are other possible causes.
Most cases are extra-renal in origin, involving
immune complex (IC) deposition on the GBM.
These complexes may be Ig plus, for example,
streptococcal antigen or a drug acting as a
hapten. In connective tissue disorder, anti-
nuclear antibodies may be involved. Why some
patients react in this way, and why the ICs are
deposited in the glomeruli rather than being
cleared by the reticuloendothelial system as
usual, is not known. Low plasma complement
levels may be implicated, although this may be effect rather than cause, complement having
been precipitated on the GBM.
Course and prognosis
Usually nephritis runs an acute florid course
with excellent recovery, especially in children.
Some older patients may have benign persistent
or intermittent proteinuria for many months or
years. A significant number progress slowly to
CRF and a few follow a rapidly progressive
decline.
Management
The aims of management are to:
• identify any specific cause (e.g. infection) and
treat that,
• institute simple symptomatic and supportive
measures until the patient recovers.
The range of therapies used include the
following (see Table 14.24), although the precise
combinations that are effective will depend on
precise histological assessment following biopsy.
Immunosuppression. This can include corti-
costeroids, often in combination with antiprolif-
eratives such as cyclophosphamide, azathioprine,
mycophenolate mofetil, sirolimus and ciclosporin. Surprisingly, it is not universally effective.
Plasma exchange (plasmapheresis). The aim
of this is to remove circulating auto-antibodies
and ICs from the blood. Whole blood is removed
and centrifuged: the supernatant plasma,
containing the harmful immune products, is
discarded and the cellular components are then
re-injected. Fluid, electrolytes and albumin
must also be administered to compensate for
losses.
Renoprotection. As discussed above when
consdering CRF, protein restriction needs to be
used with caution, for fear of malnutrition.
ACEIs, possibly in combination with ARAs, offer
reduced progression and blood pressure control.
In addition, antihypertensive agents, anti-
microbials, diuretics, fluid restriction and dietary protein manipulation may be necessary, as appropriate.
Common presentations
Acute glomerulonephritis. This is the classic
post-streptococcal form usually seen in children
or young adults. A very abrupt and severe renal
inflammatory response might develop for
example a few weeks after a severe throat infec-
tion. Disease severity usually correlates with the
patient’s titre of ASO. In children particularly,
the prognosis is excellent with resolution in a
week or less, and only supportive therapy is
required. Anti-inflammatory therapy is usually
ineffective.
Rapidly progressive glomerulonephritis. In
about 1% of patients who develop acute GN
there is rapid progression to acute oliguric
failure. If this occurs the outlook is poor, with
progression to ESRD within 2 years. Progressive
GN may be associated with the presence of anti-
GBM auto-antibodies (e.g. Goodpasture’s
disease), or arise in association with vasculitic
connective tissue diseases (e.g. polyarteritis
nodosa, PAN). The renal damage caused by
malignant hypertension usually presents as a
rapidly progressive GN although in this case the
damage is not immunological.
Treatment and prognosis depend on the aeti-
ology. For the connective tissue diseases early
aggressive immunosuppressive therapy with
cytotoxic drugs and steroids may induce a remis-
sion or retard progression. In idiopathic forms or
in Goodpasture’s disease this is rarely successful,
but plasmapheresis may be helpful. Nevertheless,
eventual progression to CRF and renal replace-
ment therapy is common. Following transplanta-
tion a recurrence of the disease is still possible,
but the tendency nowadays is to transplant
anyway.
Chronic glomerulonephritis. About 10% of
GN patients, usually adults, progress to chronic
illness. It is this slowly progressive, late-
presenting form of GN that is the most common
cause of CRF. Invariably there are co-existent
hypertension and proteinuria. The cause of
chronic GN is usually unknown. Diabetic
nephropathy could be considered to be one form
of the condition, although strictly speaking this
is glomerular sclerosis rather than inflammation,
and nephrotic syndrome is a more common
presentation.
Specific treatment is rarely possible and the
patient must enter a renal replacement
programme. Certain forms of chronic GN with
less glomerular damage (‘membranous’ and
‘minimal change’ GN) may respond to immuno-
suppressant therapy, but this is still controversial.
Nephrotic syndrome
The nephrotic syndrome can occur in associa-
tion with many forms of nephritis or may arise
independently. It is defined by the symptom
triad:
• Heavy proteinuria.
• Hypoalbuminaemia.
• Gross pitting oedema.
The hallmark of nephrotic syndrome is extensive
urinary protein loss associated with hypopro-
teinaemia sufficient to cause severe generalized
oedema. The liver can synthesize albumin up to
a maximum of about 15 g/24 h in an attempt to
maintain plasma albumin levels, but paradoxi-
cally proteinuria no greater than 4-6 g/24 h may
be sufficient to cause nephrotic syndrome. Thus
there is probably another avenue of protein loss
involved. This is may be an increase in the renal
tubular catabolism of albumin, such that
measurement of urinary protein loss underesti-
mates the total deficit. These combined losses
exceed hepatic capacity to synthesize protein
and lead to progressive hypoproteinaemia,
regardless of dietary protein intake (Figure
14.24).
Aetiology
The nephrotic syndrome may be a complication
or progression of GN or it may present de novo.
Specific aetiologies include diabetes, drugs (e.g.
penicillamine, captopril, heavy metals) and infections (e.g. malaria, endocarditis).
Pathophysiology
The apparently paradoxical combination of a
reduced GFR with a ‘leak’ sufficient to pass
albumin molecules of molecular weight 60 kDa
may arise because the reduced plasma volume
causes a mild pre-renal impairment of filtration,
while changes in the GBM electrostatic charge
allow smaller proteins, that are normally repelled,
to pass through. In mixed nephritic-nephrotic
syndromes there is also some glomerular obstruc-
tion. The phenomenon of proteinuria is still not
understood.
The oedema forms by a quite different mecha-
nism to that of simple nephritis or heart failure.
In the latter cases there is redistribution of the
raised total body water with increased volumes
in all compartments, plasma hypervolaemia
causing hypertension and tissue hypervolaemia
causing the oedema. By contrast, in nephrotic
syndrome there is a reduced plasma volume and
often hypotension. The hypovolaemia results
from the reduced plasma oncotic pressure
brought about by the hypoproteinaemia, which
permits a loss of plasma water to the extravascular
compartment (Figure 14.23).
In nephrotic syndrome the RAAS acts to
restore BP by increasing renal sodium and water
reabsorption. However, blood volume cannot be
expanded while plasma protein is low because
the resultant low plasma oncotic pressure
permits renally retained fluid to pass straight to
the tissue. This exacerbates the oedema and
causes further fluid and electrolyte retention.
This vicious cycle may result in gross oedema,
and the presence of over 20 L of oedema fluid
has been reported. Nevertheless, many patients
are not overtly hypotensive, possibly owing to
the direct vasoconstrictor action of persistently
raised angiotensin levels. Postural hypotension
is usual, however. This classical account of the
pathophysiology of oedema in nephrotic
syndrome has been challenged and may not
represent the whole picture.
Course and prognosis
The prognosis will depend on the age of the
patient and the underlying lesion. In children
the cause is usually acute GN and the outlook is good, with an 80% remission rate. In adults the underlying pathology is more likely to be a
chronic progressive disease and the average remission rate is nearer 20-30%.
Clinical features
The clinical picture is usually very distinctive.
Nephrotic syndrome may have an acute or
insidious onset and resembles acute GN, except
that the oedema is usually greater, including
pulmonary oedema and ascites, and the patient
Important renal diseases 941
is not hypertensive and may be hypotensive. The
patient is usually very ill, weak, anorexic and
oliguric. A common unexplained finding is
hyperlipidaemia, possibly related to disordered
protein metabolism (an attempt to synthesize
new amino acids). High aldosterone levels often
cause hypokalaemia.
Management
The aims of management are:
• To investigate and treat the cause (e.g. an
underlying disease).
• To correct haemodynamic and metabolic
abnormalities.
• To reduce glomerular inflammation.
Table 14.25 summarizes the treatment options.
The effectiveness of immunosuppressant ther-
apy, initially high-dose steroids, will depend on
the cause, but in general steroid therapy is
more beneficial than in simple GN. Patients
who relapse after steroid withdrawal, i.e. are
steroid-dependent, may benefit from cytotoxic
drugs.
Reversal of the hypoproteinaemia must
usually await resolution of the glomerular
damage, but high-protein diets are traditional.
The principal clinical problems are oedema and
sodium and fluid retention. Salt and water
restriction and loop diuretics are used and high
doses may be needed, e.g. 50 mg furosemide. Care
must be taken not to exacerbate hypovolaemia
and precipitate pre-renal failure by too rapid a
diuresis; thus the use of diuretics may be delayed
until there is a recovery in urine output. This
can be prevented by subsequent infusion of a
plasma expander such as salt-free albumin.
Hypokalaemia, which would be exacerbated by
loop diuretics, can be treated with high-dose
spironolactone and potassium supplements.
Polycystic disease
Adult polycystic disease is the most common
inherited renal disease. Both kidneys become
enlarged up to two or three times normal size,
owing to the development of many fluid-filled,
inert cysts. These gradually crush adjacent renal
structures.
The more common autosomal dominant form
has a prevalence of 1/1000. The age of onset
and progression are highly variable. Progression
to end-stage renal failure usually occurs within
10-20 years of diagnosis, so patients who first
present late in life may avoid this. Nevertheless,
10% of ESRD patients have polycystic disease.
In the rarer recessive form, onset and rapid
progression to renal failure occur in childhood.
Clinical features are similar to those of other
forms of RF. Hypertension is common, there
may be loin or lumbar pain, and haematuria if a
cyst ruptures. Diagnosis is based on ultrasound
imaging.
There is no specific treatment beyond the stan-
dard procedures for CRF; control of BP will slow progress. Regular screening of siblings and offspring is important.
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