Symptoms of Renal Disease
Symptoms of Renal Disease
Symptoms of Renal Disease
• Itching
• Muscle cramps
• Nausea and vomiting
• Not feeling hungry
• Swelling in your feet and ankles
• Too much urine (pee) or not enough urine
• Trouble catching your breath
• Trouble sleeping
What causes chronic kidney
disease (CKD)?
• Diabetes mellitus
• High blood pressure (hypertension)
• Obstructive uropathy
• Glomerulonephritis
• Drugs
• Pyelonephritis
• Having a family member with kidney disease
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Renal Function Tests
• for serum creatinine and blood urea nitrogen (BUN) levels, a random
blood sample
• timed urine collections such as the 24-hour urine creatinine
clearance, (5 to 8-hour timed collection is preferable to a 24-hour
collection.)
• Collection of early morning midstream urine for urine analysis
Investigations
• S/Urea
• S/ creatinine
• S/E
• S/Ca
• S /PO4
Urea may be decreased in starvation, low-protein diet, and severe liver
disease.
Serum creatinine is a more accurate assessment of renal function than
urea; however, urea is increased earlier in renal disease.
Cystatin C
• Creatinine
• Serum creatinine is elevated when there is a significant reduction in the
glomerular filtration rate or when urine elimination is obstructed.
About 50% of kidney function must be lost before a rise in serum
creatinine can be detected. Thus serum creatinine is a late marker of
acute kidney injury.
• BUN
• Serum urea/BUN is increased acute and chronic renal disease.
• eGFR equations are used to determine the presence of renal disease,
stage of CKD and to monitor response to treatment.
• Creatinine clearance is then calculated using the equation:
• C = (U x V) / P
• C = clearance, U = urinary concentration, V = urinary flow rate
(volume/time i-e ml/min), and P = plasma concentration
Improving Global Outcomes (KDIGO) stages of chronic kidney disease
(CKD):
• Plain X-ray
• Ultrasonography
• Computed tomography (CT)
• Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI)
Computed tomography (CT)