Ch 14 ppt renal

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Copyright ©2009 by Pearson Education, Inc. Upper Saddle River, New Jersey 07458 All rights reserved. Understanding the Essentials of CRITICAL CARE Nursing Understanding the Essentials of Critical Care Nursing Kathleen Ouimet Perrin Chapter 14 Care of the Patient with Acute Renal Failure

Transcript of Ch 14 ppt renal

Page 1: Ch 14 ppt   renal

Copyright ©2009 by Pearson Education, Inc.Upper Saddle River, New Jersey 07458

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Understanding the Essentials of

CRITICAL CARE Nursing

Understanding the Essentials of Critical Care NursingKathleen Ouimet Perrin

Chapter 14Care of the Patient with Acute Renal Failure

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Copyright ©2009 by Pearson Education, Inc.Upper Saddle River, New Jersey 07458

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Understanding the Essentials of Critical Care NursingKathleen Ouimet Perrin

Learning Outcome 1

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Understanding the Essentials of Critical Care NursingKathleen Ouimet Perrin

Prerenal (~60% of cases of ARF)

•Caused by decreased renal blood flow– Decreased cardiac output– Severe hypotension– Hypovolemia– Severe vasoconstriction– Renal vascular disease– Obstruction of the renal artery

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Understanding the Essentials of Critical Care NursingKathleen Ouimet Perrin

Prerenal (~60% of cases of ARF) (cont.)

•Nephrons and glomeruli are structurally and functionally normal

•↓GFR is related to ↓ in renal blood flow

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Understanding the Essentials of Critical Care NursingKathleen Ouimet Perrin

Nursing Management Assessment

•Common Causes– Hypovolemia from hemorrhage– Trauma– Hypovolemic shock– Inadequate volume replacement prior to

surgery– Burns– Pancreatitis

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Understanding the Essentials of Critical Care NursingKathleen Ouimet Perrin

Nursing Management Assessment (cont.)

•Common Causes– Excessive use of diuretics– Cardiovascular disorders (heart failure or

dysrhythmias)– Vasodilation from sepsis or medications

(antihypertensives)

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Understanding the Essentials of Critical Care NursingKathleen Ouimet Perrin

Patient Assessment for Hypovolemia

•Hypotension/orthostatic hypotension

•Tachycardia

•Dry mucous membranes

•Poor skin turgor

•Flat jugular veins

•Weight loss

•Low CVP or PAWP pressures

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Understanding the Essentials of Critical Care NursingKathleen Ouimet Perrin

Patient Assessment For Extreme Vasodilation or Cardiovascular Disease

•Edema

•Ascites

•Weight gain

•Increased CVP or PAWP pressures

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Understanding the Essentials of Critical Care NursingKathleen Ouimet Perrin

Intrarenal (intrinsic) (~30–40% of cases of ARF)

•Due to disturbances within the glomerulus or renal tubules

•Most commonly results from failure to promptly and adequately treat renal hypoperfusion that produces tubular hypoxia with dysfunction, inflammation, and possibly necrosis

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Understanding the Essentials of Critical Care NursingKathleen Ouimet Perrin

Inflammatory Mediators

•Death of cells

•Disrupts renal blood flow

•Causes damage to the basement membranes and the renal tubules

•Tubular dysfunction results in impaired sodium and water reabsorption

•Can be differentiated from prerenal dysfunction by urinalysis

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Understanding the Essentials of Critical Care NursingKathleen Ouimet Perrin

Postrenal (5–10% of cases of ARF)

•Due to obstruction of urinary outflow

•Benign prostatic hypertrophy in older male—most common

•Tubular obstruction from crystals (uric acid or acyclovir)

•Bilateral ureteral obstruction

•Prostatic cancer

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Understanding the Essentials of Critical Care NursingKathleen Ouimet Perrin

Renal Failure

•Results when obstruction causes an increase in tubular pressure, which results in ↓ GFR

•Commonly results in sudden onset of anuria

•Quickly and accurately identified by renal ultrasound

•Usually resolves quickly with removal of obstruction

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Understanding the Essentials of Critical Care NursingKathleen Ouimet Perrin

Learning Outcome 2

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Understanding the Essentials of Critical Care NursingKathleen Ouimet Perrin

Differential Testing—Urinalysis

Urine Results Prerenal Dysfunction

Intrinsic Dysfunction

Urine osmolality > 500 mOsm/L < 350 mOsm/L

Urine sodium < 20 mmol/L > 40 mmol/L

Fractional excretion of: Sodium (FENa)

Less than 1% Greater than 1%

Casts Few ++

Sediment Little ++

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Understanding the Essentials of Critical Care NursingKathleen Ouimet Perrin

Learning Outcome 3

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Understanding the Essentials of Critical Care NursingKathleen Ouimet Perrin

Management of Prerenal Dysfunction

•Restore normal renal perfusion– Reestablish normovolemia– Increase cardiac output– Relieve renal artery obstruction

•Reestablish normovolemia– NSS challenges until CVP = 12– Assess BP, HR, U/O, and CVP or PAWP– Identify and treat signs of fluid overload

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Understanding the Essentials of Critical Care NursingKathleen Ouimet Perrin

Management of Prerenal Dysfunction (cont.)

•Increase cardiac output– MAP of 70 or greater– Norepinephrine for BP support if necessary

•Relieve renal artery obstruction– Angioplasty– Stent placement

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Learning Outcome 4

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Understanding the Essentials of Critical Care NursingKathleen Ouimet Perrin

Prevention of Further Renal Injury During Renal Failure

•Avoid nephrotoxic agents if possible

•Administer drugs that must be excreted by the kidneys with caution

•Monitor peak and trough levels of nephrotoxic drugs

•Prophylactic acetylcysteine if contrast is necessary

•Scrupulous aseptic technique

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Learning Outcome 5

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Management of Electrolyte Imbalance: Dilutional Hyponatremia

•Fluid restriction

•Diuretics + saline infusion

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Understanding the Essentials of Critical Care NursingKathleen Ouimet Perrin

Management of Electrolyte Imbalance: Hyperkalemia

•Limit potassium intake

•Increase potassium loss via the urine with diuretics

•IV calcium to patients not on digitalis

•Shift potassium intracellularly (insulin with dextrose or bicarb)

•Kayexalate

•Dialysis

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Understanding the Essentials of Critical Care NursingKathleen Ouimet Perrin

Management of Electrolyte Imbalance: Hypocalcemia

•Oral supplementation if mild

•IV replacement if serious

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Understanding the Essentials of Critical Care NursingKathleen Ouimet Perrin

Management of Electrolyte Imbalance: Hyperphosphatemia

•Adequate hydration

•Dietary restriction of phosphate

•Calcium supplementation

•Phosphate binders

Page 25: Ch 14 ppt   renal

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Understanding the Essentials of Critical Care NursingKathleen Ouimet Perrin

Learning Outcome 6

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Understanding the Essentials of Critical Care NursingKathleen Ouimet Perrin

Fluid Volume Management

•Fluid volume excess– Fluid restriction– Renal replacement therapies

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Understanding the Essentials of Critical Care NursingKathleen Ouimet Perrin

Learning Outcome 7

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Understanding the Essentials of Critical Care NursingKathleen Ouimet Perrin

Disadvantages of Peritoneal Dialysis for Treatment of Acute Renal Failure

•Treatment occurs slowly

•Dysfunction progresses quickly

•Ineffective for removal of urea

•Peritoneal “dwell” fluid impairs respiratory function

•Poorer patient outcomes than other modalities

Page 29: Ch 14 ppt   renal

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Learning Outcome 8

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Understanding the Essentials of Critical Care NursingKathleen Ouimet Perrin

Continuous Renal Replacement Therapies

•Advantages– Can be used for patients who are

hemodynamically unstable. Allows for controlled removal of fluid over 24 hours or more

•Disadvantages– Very time-intensive for the critical care nurse

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Understanding the Essentials of Critical Care NursingKathleen Ouimet Perrin

Hemodialysis

•Advantages Can be used daily for 1–2 hour sessions

Page 32: Ch 14 ppt   renal

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Understanding the Essentials of Critical Care NursingKathleen Ouimet Perrin

Hemodialysis (cont.)

•Disadvantages– Fluid overload, waste accumulation, and

electrolyte imbalances develop between treatments

– May precipitate hemodynamic instability– Difficulties with vascular access– Problems with anticoagulation– Dialysis membrane incompatibility– Dialysis disequilibrium syndrome

Page 33: Ch 14 ppt   renal

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Understanding the Essentials of Critical Care NursingKathleen Ouimet Perrin

Learning Outcome 9

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Understanding the Essentials of Critical Care NursingKathleen Ouimet Perrin

Nursing Management of Patients Requiring Hemodialysis

•When caring for a patient with an AV fistula or graft, the nurse assesses and maintains the patency of the access by: – Palpating for the thrill or auscultating the bruit

over the access– Checking the CSM in the access extremity

Page 35: Ch 14 ppt   renal

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Understanding the Essentials of Critical Care NursingKathleen Ouimet Perrin

Nursing Management of Patients Requiring Hemodialysis (cont.)

•When caring for a patient with an AV fistula or graft, the nurse assesses and maintains the patency of the access by: – Avoiding any obstruction of blood flow in that

extremity such as: BP measurement IV placement Phlebotomy Positioning the patient so there is pressure on the

access

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Understanding the Essentials of Critical Care NursingKathleen Ouimet Perrin

Nursing Measures for a Patient Prior to Hemodialysis

•The nurse determines if there is a “dry weight” for the patient on record and determines the patient’s current weight

•Other measurements of fluid balance the nurse should assess before dialysis include BP, skin turgor, intake and output, breath sounds, and CVP or PAWP if available

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Understanding the Essentials of Critical Care NursingKathleen Ouimet Perrin

Nursing Measures for a Patient Prior to Hemodialysis (cont.)

•The nurse also reviews the patient’s laboratory results and identifies the goals the nephrologist has established for correction of electrolyte and acid-base abnormalities

•Care of the critically ill patient during the dialysis session requires specialized knowledge and experience

Page 38: Ch 14 ppt   renal

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Understanding the Essentials of Critical Care NursingKathleen Ouimet Perrin

Nursing Measures for a Patient Prior to Hemodialysis (cont.)

•The patient’s BP may be measured as frequently as every 2 to 5 minutes at the start of dialysis but may be taken every 15 to 30 minutes after the patient has stabilized

•The entire dialysis session will usually take between 2 and 4 hours

Page 39: Ch 14 ppt   renal

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Understanding the Essentials of Critical Care NursingKathleen Ouimet Perrin

Nursing Measures for a Patient Prior to Hemodialysis (cont.)

•The nurse will hold certain medications prior to hemodialysis– The doses of medications that may cause

hypotension such as beta blockers, angiotensin-converting enzyme (ACE) inhibitors, and calcium channel blockers that are due to be administered 2 to 4 hours prior to dialysis are usually held until dialysis has been completed.

Page 40: Ch 14 ppt   renal

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Understanding the Essentials of Critical Care NursingKathleen Ouimet Perrin

Nursing Measures for a Patient Prior to Hemodialysis (cont.)

•Medications that are removed from the body by dialysis (a current list is usually available from the dialysis center) are also held until the end of dialysis.

•Finally, prior to dialysis, the nurse may check the patient’s temperature and should assess the patient’s access.

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Understanding the Essentials of Critical Care NursingKathleen Ouimet Perrin

Nursing Management of Patients Requiring CRRT

•Vital signs, hemodynamics, and fluid status every ½ hour

•Assessment of ultrafiltration rate hourly

•Administration of replacement fluid

•Obtain and review lab results every 4–6 hours

•Maintain the patency of the system