Disorders of The Urinary System General Introduction
Disorders of The Urinary System General Introduction
Disorders of The Urinary System General Introduction
General introduction
Jining medical college
affiliated hospital
qiubo
Tel:15153701881
Main contents
anatomic structure of the kidneys
physiological function
approach of renal diseases
clinical syndromes
treatment of renal diseases
Anatomic Structure of The kidney
•Retroperitoneally on
the posterior of the
abdomen
•11cm long 6cm wide
4cm thick
nephron
Bowman,s capsule
Renal corpuscle
glomerulus
nephron
Proximal tubule
Loop of henle
Renal tubule
Distal tubule
Collecting duct
URINARY SYSTEM
1,000,000nephro
ns in each
kidney
Figure 3.
Fig. Glomerular basement membrane (GBM)
URINARY SYSTEM
1°
proces
s
pedicels
2
°
URINARY SYSTEM
Mesangium sonsists of
mesangial cell and martrix
which provide structure
support for the capillary
Exhibit phagocytic activity
Secrete extraceliular matrix
and prostaglandins
May contribute to regulation
of blood flow through the
glomerular capillaries
GFR Renin
Angiotensin
Blood Pressure
JGA
Major Functions of The Kidney
• Regulation of osmolality of the body fluid
• Regulating the volume of the extracellular fluid
• Regulating concentrations of electrolytes of the
extracellular fluid
• Regulation of acid-base balance
• Clearance of metabolic waste products (urea, uric
acid, creatinine)
• Production of special substances (erythropoietin,
renin, prostaglandins, and thromboxane)
Physiological functions
Ultrafiltrate form
favoring forces:hydraulic pressure in
the glomerular capillaries
opposing forces:hydraulic pressure
in bowman space,colloid osmotic
pressure in the capillaries
Net Filtration Pressure
BHP 60 out
10 out
COP 32 in
NFP
CP 18 in
cystitis
Extraglomerular calculi
interstitial nephritis
(90%)
renal neoplasm
IgA nephropathy
thin GBM disease
glomerular causes postinfectious glomerulonephritis
(10%) membranoproliferative
glomerulonephritis
systemic nephritic syndrome
Estimation of GFR
Glomerular filtration rate (GFR)
Provides a useful index of overall renal function,
measures the amount of plasma ultrafiltered
across the glomerular capillaries and correlates
with the ability of kidneys to filter fluids and
various substances
Can be measured by determining the renal
clearance of plasma substance that are not
bound to plasma proteins, and are freely filtrate
across the glomerulus, and are neither secreted
nor reabsorbed along the renal tubules
Estimation of GFR
Normal 100-120ml/min
Means : inulin creatinine
MDRD formula
GFR =186 x Scr -1.154 x Age -0.203
Cockroft-Gault
•Arteriography is useful in
evaluation atherosclerotic or
fibrodysplatic stenotic lesions
•Venography is the best test for
diagnosis of renal vein thrombosis
Renal biopsy
Is important to identify the cause, guide
treatment, and to estimate prognosis
Indications
Acute renal faiture or chronic renal insufficiency
Acute nephritic syndromes
Proteinuria or hematuria
Systemic diseases associated with kidney dysfunction
Transplant rejection
Renal biopsy
Relative contraindication
Solitary or ectopic kidney
Uncorrected bleeding disorder (uncontrolled bleeding)
Severe uncontrolled hypertension (bleeding)
Renal infection (bacteremia,blood poisoning)
Renal neoplasm
Hydronephrosis ESRD
Congenital anomalies Multiple cysts
Uncooperative patient Horseshoe kidney
Normal Kidney:
Renal biopsy
Immunofluorescence
microscope
Crescentic
glomerulonephritis
There are a lot of fibrin
deposit in the capsule
Clinical syndrome of renal disease
Acute renal failure syndrome
Acute rapidly progressive
glomerulonephritis syndrome
Acute glomerulonephritis syndrome
Chronic renal failure syndrome
Nephrotic syndrome
Asymptomatic urinary abnormalities
Nephritic Nephrotic
Hematuria Proteinuria
Proteinuria (“nephrotic range”
Hypoalbuminemia >3.5g/24h)
Hypoalbumimenia
Oliguria (GFR↓, Cr
↑, BUN↑) Edema
Edema (salt and Hyperlipidemia
water retention) Lipiduria
Hypertension
Acute renal failure syndrome
Rapid severe decrease in GFR, usually with reduced
urine output
Extracellular fluid expansion leads to edema
hypertension, and occasionally to chronic renal failure
Hyperkalemia, hyponatremia, and acidosis are common
ischemia
nephrotoxic injury
Etiologies: renalvascular disease
pregnancy
prerenal or postrenal ailure
Acute rapidly progressive
glomerulonephritis syndrome
Occurs over Weeks to months
Oliguric or nonoliguric
Hypertension is common
Urinalysis:show hematuria, proteinuria,
and RBC casts
Pulmonary manifestation range from
asymptomatic infiltrates to life-threating
hemoptysis
Chronic renal failure syndrome
Progressive permanent loss of renal function over months to years,
and dose not cause symptom of uremia until GFR is reduced to
about 10-15ml/min
Symptom
hypertension, anorexia, nausea, vomiting
insomnia, weight loss weakness
paresthesia, bleeding, serositis, anemia
acidosis, hyperkalemia
Causes
diabetes mellitus hypertension
glomerular disease polycystic kidney disease
interstitial nephritis
Acute glomerulonephritis syndrome
An acute illness with sudden onset of
hematuria, edema, hypertension,
oliguria,and elevated BUN and creatitine
Pulmonary congestion
RBC casts and serum complement may
be decreased
Nephrotic syndrome
Albuminuria
Edema
Hypoalbuminemia
Hyperlipidemia
Complication
severe edema thrombosis events
infection protein malnutrition
Asymptomatic urinary abnormalities
Hematuria with/or proteinuria without edema,
hypertension and renal function lesion
causes
Hematuria may be due to neoplasm, stone,
infection, sickle cell disease, IgA nephrotic or
analgesic abuse
Modest proteinuria may be due to fever,
exertion, chronic heart failure, or upright posture.
renal causes include diabetes mellitus,
amyloidosis, or other glomerular diseases
Treatment of renal disease
To slow the progression of CRD
To prevent the extrarenal complicrtions
Removal of predisposing factors
Salt restriction and diuretics
Immunosuppressive treatment
Symptomatic treatment
Renal replacement treatment
Treatment of renal disease
Immunosuppressive treatment
Glucocorticoid and cyclophosphamide are
the mainstays of treatment
Mycophemolate Mofeil (MMF) and
cyclosporin A (cycA) have been used in
some refractory glomerulonephritis, but
their long-term effects are still
controversial
Treatment of renal disease
Management of hypertension
Two goals: