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The Renal System:
History-Taking &
Urine Analysis
Clinical Skills
2013
Anatomy
 Gross structure – 2 adult kidneys approximately
150g each, lying retroperitoneally in the
abdominal cavity on either side of the vertebral
column at level of T12 – L3
 Renal vasculature – renal artery and vein
 Urine drains via pelvis of kidney into the ureters,
which cross over the pelvic brim to drain into
the bladder (NB pelvi-ureteric and vesico-
ureteric junctions – note VUR associated with a
congenital defect)
 Bladder, trigone, urethra, sphincter
Functions of the Kidney
 Controls volume, osmolarity and acid-
base balance of plasma and EC fluid, as
well as the level of electrolytes
 Recovers small molecules filtered by the
nephron, such as amino acids and
sugars
 Excretes nitrogenous waste from protein
metabolism, mainly urea, uric acid and
creatinine
Functions of the Kidney (cont)
 Excretes toxic metabolites and excess
electrolytes and water
 Maintains red cell production by the
secretion of erythropoietin
 Maintains calcium balance by production
of the active form of Vitamin D
 Controls blood pressure
SPECTRUM OF DISEASE
 Congenital abnormalities
 Interstitial nephritis
 Glomerulonephritis
 Cystic kidney disease
 Renal vascular disease
 Nephrotic syndrome
 Renal failure
 Infections of the urinary tract
 Obstruction of the urinary tract
 Urinary tract calculi and nephrocalcinosis
 Malignancy of the urinary tract eg CA bladder
 Incontinence
History-Taking
 Gathering of information
 Patient narrative
 Biomedical perspective
 Psychosocial perspective
 Context
Cardinal symptoms of diseases of the
urinary tract – presenting complaint/s
 Abnormalities of micturition
 Pain presentations
 Alteration in the appearance of urine
 Alteration in the amount of urine
 General symptoms of abnormal renal function
ABNORMALITIES OF
MICTURITION
 Dysuria
 Frequency and nocturia
 Urgency
 Hesitancy, decreased stream and
dribbling
 Retention
 Incontinence
Dysuria
 Dysuria = pain / discomfort during
micturition
 Often referred to as burning on
micturition
 Associated with cystitis or urethritis
Frequency and nocturia
 Frequency = the need to pass small
amounts of urine frequently
 Due to bladder irritation – may be
caused by infection, stone, tumour
 Nocturia = waking up to pass urine at
night (pregnancy - pressure, diabetes –
associated with polyuria)
Urgency
 Urgency = a sudden compelling need to
urinate
 Caused by local irritation or inflammation
Hesitancy, decreased stream
and dribbling
 Hesitancy = delay /difficulty in initiating
micturition
 Poor stream
 Dribbling = terminal dribbling after
passage of urine
 Associated with urinary obstruction –
often associated with prostatism or
bladder outflow obstruction in elderly
men
Retention
 Retention of urine - due to obstructive
lesions such as stricture, benign
prostatic hypertrophy or BPH, tumour
 May be heralded by the phase of
hesitancy
Incontinence
 Incontinence is the inability to hold urine in the bladder
voluntarily
 Spinal cord lesions are associated with retention and
overflow neurogenic incontinence
 Prostatic enlargement is associated with overflow
incontinence – dribbling incontinence after incomplete
urination
 Stress incontinence – more common in women – leakage
of urine after sudden increase in intra-abdominal
pressure eg due to coughing or sneezing, and associated
with bladder prolapse
 Urgency incontinence – associated with urgency and
caused by local irritation or inflammation
PAIN PRESENTATIONS
- renal, ureteric, vesical, urethral
 Renal angle pain - dull ache between 12th
rib
and erector spinae muscle on the side of the
affected kidney – pyelonephritis. (Refer renal
angle tenderness)
 Renal colic – due to ureteric obstruction – a
severe pain – lumbar region; radiates to
abdomen, groin, testes, thigh – due to stone or
tumour
 Ureteric colic – spasmodic, severe pain during
the passage of a renal calculus; radiation path
of renal colic; may be associated with vomiting,
sweating.
 Suprapubic pain from bladder / urethra is
referred to lower abdomen, perineum and glans
penis in males
ALTERATION IN URINE
APPEARANCE
 Change in colour eg
Orange -
Rifampicin
Red -
blood
Black -
malaria
ALTERATION IN AMOUNT
OF URINE
 Polyuria
 Oliguria
 Anuria
Polyuria
 Passage of > 3 litres of urine per day
 Physiological – ingestion of large quantities of
fluid or substances containing diuretics
 Pathological
- Chronic renal failure or CRF – associated
polydipsia
- Diabetes mellitus – associated polydipsia
- Diabetes insipidus – neurohypophyseal or
nephrogenic
- Oedematous states – after administration of
diuretics
Oliguria
 Passage of < 500ml of urine per day
 Physiological - under conditions of
water deprivation
 Prerenal conditions – shock,
dehydration, haemorrhage
 Renal – Acute renal failure or ARF
Anuria
 Passage of <50 mls of urine in a day
 Some causes:
Renal infarct
Dissecting aneurysm
Complete ureteric obstruction
Notes re Renal Failure
 Occurs when glomerular filtration is
compromised
 May also be the consequence of abnormal
tubular function
 Prerenal – due to decreased renal perfusion eg
hypotension due to massive blood loss or
cardiac failure
 Renal – due to disease of nephron, glomeruli,
microvasculature (cf DM) or tubules (cf acute
tubular necrosis)
 Postrenal – due to obstruction to outflow or
recurrent ascending infections
Renal Failure (cont)
 Acute renal failure – sudden
deterioration of renal function, usually
reversible
 Chronic renal failure – longstanding and
progressive impairment of renal
excretory function – may be insidious in
onset
Clinical consequences of renal
failure
 Hypertension – renin secreted in response to impaired
perfusion – activates ACE to convert angiotensin I – II
– vasoconstriction – aldosterone secretion – sodium
and water retention (renin- angiotensin-aldosterone
system)
 Anaemia – erythropoietin deficiency
 Hypoproteinaemia due to protein loss – wasting and
malnutrition
 Renal osteodystrophy from failure of hydroxylation of
Vitamin D to active form (2º hyperparathyroidism)
 Other metabolic complications eg gout (defective
excretion of uric acid), endocrine and neurological
complications
GENERAL CLINICAL
FEATURES OF RENAL
DISEASE
 Renal oedema
 Increased BP - see previous slides on
renal failure
GENERAL FEATURES (cont)
 Other symptoms and signs of renal failure:
Anaemia
Purpura plus GIT bleeding
Urogenital symptoms – polyuria, polydipsia etc
Cardiovascular symptoms
GIT symptoms – anorexia, nausea & vomiting, loss
of weight, ammonia smell on the breath
Skeletal abnormalities – metabolic bone disease
Growth retardation in children and other endocrine
problems including gynaecomastia in men
Neurological symptoms such as depressed cerebral
function and convulsions in severe uraemia
HISTORY-TAKING (cont)
 History of presenting complaint to be in
detail – chronology is important,
especially in chronic conditions
 Don’t forget the systems enquiry – to
cover specific relevant aspects
HISTORY-TAKING - Context
 Past History
Preceding throat or skin infection - Strep
Recurrent UTI
Renal stone
HT, DM, hyperuricaemia (gout)
Childhood enuresis > 3 years of age (may be
associated with vesico-ureteric reflux and renal
scarring)
HIV status, TB and Hepatitis B, C
Past surgery or biopsy
HISTORY-TAKING - Context
 Medications
(Remember to ask about OTC drugs and herbal
medications as well)
Steroids
Immunosuppressants
Antibiotics
Anti-hypertensives
(know which drugs to avoid eg tetracyclines,
NSAIDs)
 Diet – protein, fluid, salt restriction
HISTORY-TAKING - Context
 Family History
DM, hypertension
Inherited forms of renal disease eg adult
polycystic kidney disease - inherited as
an autosomal dominant; Alport’s
Syndrome - inherited as an X-linked
recessive
HISTORY-TAKING - Context
 Social History
Employment – occupational exposures
eg heavy metals such as Cadmium
Home circumstances, family support
Impact of chronic illness, dialysis
Smoking and alcohol use
Urine Volume & Composition
 In health, the kidneys form approx 1500-
2000mls of urine/24hrs
 Urine is normally pale yellow in colour
(becomes paler with decrease in
osmolarity when large volumes of water
are ingested, and vice versa)
 pH is about 6 – slightly acidic
Urine composition vs that of
plasma
 Much higher levels of nitrogenous waste
products such as urea and ammonia
 Much lower concentrations of glucose,
protein and amino acids
 Solutes such as salts eg NaCl, KCl and
NaHCO3, and urea are excreted at a
fairly constant rate, independent of the
volume of urine
 Plasma has a constant osmolarity
whereas that of urine varies widely
URINE EXAMINATION
 Inspection
- colour and appearance (? foamy)
- deposits - cloudiness of the urine may be due
to the presence of bacteria or crystals
(phosphates - white, urates – pink)
 Specific gravity (1.005 – 1.035 Naish) Note SG
of water is 1.000 and of plasma 1.010
- Decreased SG - CRF
- Increased SG - DM
URINE EXAMINATION
 Reaction
- usually acidic
 Smell
- mild smell of ammonia is normal
- smell of antibiotics, foodstuffs
- fishy odour associated with UTI
 Quantity
- (N) in 24hrs = 1500 - 2000ml
Chemical Analysis
•Chemical reagent strips eg Combur-9
“Dipstix”
•Strip is dipped in urine; colour changes are
measured after a set period and compared
with a colour chart
•Analysis of pH, protein, glucose, ketones,
nitrite, bilirubin, urobilinogen, blood and
leucocytes
•To be demonstrated in Skills Lab
Protein:
Dipstix measurement is semi-quantitative + -
++++
Causes of proteinuria– renal disease eg
diabetic nephropathy, fever, post-operative,
CCF, orthostatic proteinuria
Glucose:
Causes of glycosuria – usually diabetes
mellitus, also renal glycosuria (Note false
positive and negative results eg large doses
Vit C)
Ketones:
Causes of ketonuria – diabetic keto-
acidosis and starvation
Nitrite:
– positive due to infection with bacteria that
produce nitrite – correlates well with UTI
(inaccurate results with Vitamin C ingestion)
Pus (WBCs):
Causes of pyuria (pus in the urine)
Urinary tract infection UTI
Sterile pyuria in renal tuberculosis
Blood:
– positive dipstix is abnormal
(Causes of haematuria, haemoglobinuria, etc
– see next slide)
Causes of haematuria – examples:
Renal causes – glomerulonephritis, renal carcinoma,
analgesic nephropathy, bleeding disorders, trauma
Urinary tract – cystitis, calculi, tumour
Causes of haemoglobinuria – examples:
Intravascular haemolysis eg haemolytic anaemia, march
haemoglobinuria
Causes of myoglobinuria – examples:
Convulsions, viral myositis, toxins such as snake venom
(due to muscle destruction)
Microscopy – ref Talley
MSU - NB Method of collection – need a clean
uncontaminated specimen using a sterile urine jar
• Microscopic examination of a centrifuged specimen
Look for:
• RBCs – circular, without a nucleus – uniform if from the
urinary tract, dysmorphic if from the glomeruli , usually 0, < 5
per lpf in very concentrated urine
• WBCs – lobulated nuclei < 6 per hpf – up to 10 may be
present in very concentrated urine
• Epithelial cells
• Bacteria – infection or contamination
• Casts - cylindrical moulds formed in the lumen of renal
tubules or collecting ducts
- size determined by the dimension - they indicate damage
to the glomerular basement membrane or tubule
Types of casts
Hyaline casts - < 1 per lpf, consist of Tamm-Horsfall
mucoprotein secreted by renal tubules, may contain 1-2
RBCs or WBCs
Granular casts – consist of hyaline material containing
fragments of serum proteins
Red cell casts – always abnormal – indicate primary
glomerular disease, contain 10-50 RBCs – post-
Streptococcal GN, SBE etc
White cell casts – WBCs adhere to inside of cast –
usually indicate bacterial pyelonephritis
Fatty casts – these suggest nephrotic syndrome
Culture and Sensitivity
To identify organism in infections
To assess sensitivity to anti-microbials
References
• Past protocols
• Medical Science, Jeannette Naish et al
Chapter 14 The Renal System
• Clinical Examination, Talley and o’Connor
Chapter 6 The Genitourinary System
• Principles and Practice of Medicine,
Davidson

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Renal system history taking & urine analysis 2012

  • 1. The Renal System: History-Taking & Urine Analysis Clinical Skills 2013
  • 2. Anatomy  Gross structure – 2 adult kidneys approximately 150g each, lying retroperitoneally in the abdominal cavity on either side of the vertebral column at level of T12 – L3  Renal vasculature – renal artery and vein  Urine drains via pelvis of kidney into the ureters, which cross over the pelvic brim to drain into the bladder (NB pelvi-ureteric and vesico- ureteric junctions – note VUR associated with a congenital defect)  Bladder, trigone, urethra, sphincter
  • 3. Functions of the Kidney  Controls volume, osmolarity and acid- base balance of plasma and EC fluid, as well as the level of electrolytes  Recovers small molecules filtered by the nephron, such as amino acids and sugars  Excretes nitrogenous waste from protein metabolism, mainly urea, uric acid and creatinine
  • 4. Functions of the Kidney (cont)  Excretes toxic metabolites and excess electrolytes and water  Maintains red cell production by the secretion of erythropoietin  Maintains calcium balance by production of the active form of Vitamin D  Controls blood pressure
  • 5. SPECTRUM OF DISEASE  Congenital abnormalities  Interstitial nephritis  Glomerulonephritis  Cystic kidney disease  Renal vascular disease  Nephrotic syndrome  Renal failure  Infections of the urinary tract  Obstruction of the urinary tract  Urinary tract calculi and nephrocalcinosis  Malignancy of the urinary tract eg CA bladder  Incontinence
  • 6. History-Taking  Gathering of information  Patient narrative  Biomedical perspective  Psychosocial perspective  Context
  • 7. Cardinal symptoms of diseases of the urinary tract – presenting complaint/s  Abnormalities of micturition  Pain presentations  Alteration in the appearance of urine  Alteration in the amount of urine  General symptoms of abnormal renal function
  • 8. ABNORMALITIES OF MICTURITION  Dysuria  Frequency and nocturia  Urgency  Hesitancy, decreased stream and dribbling  Retention  Incontinence
  • 9. Dysuria  Dysuria = pain / discomfort during micturition  Often referred to as burning on micturition  Associated with cystitis or urethritis
  • 10. Frequency and nocturia  Frequency = the need to pass small amounts of urine frequently  Due to bladder irritation – may be caused by infection, stone, tumour  Nocturia = waking up to pass urine at night (pregnancy - pressure, diabetes – associated with polyuria)
  • 11. Urgency  Urgency = a sudden compelling need to urinate  Caused by local irritation or inflammation
  • 12. Hesitancy, decreased stream and dribbling  Hesitancy = delay /difficulty in initiating micturition  Poor stream  Dribbling = terminal dribbling after passage of urine  Associated with urinary obstruction – often associated with prostatism or bladder outflow obstruction in elderly men
  • 13. Retention  Retention of urine - due to obstructive lesions such as stricture, benign prostatic hypertrophy or BPH, tumour  May be heralded by the phase of hesitancy
  • 14. Incontinence  Incontinence is the inability to hold urine in the bladder voluntarily  Spinal cord lesions are associated with retention and overflow neurogenic incontinence  Prostatic enlargement is associated with overflow incontinence – dribbling incontinence after incomplete urination  Stress incontinence – more common in women – leakage of urine after sudden increase in intra-abdominal pressure eg due to coughing or sneezing, and associated with bladder prolapse  Urgency incontinence – associated with urgency and caused by local irritation or inflammation
  • 15. PAIN PRESENTATIONS - renal, ureteric, vesical, urethral  Renal angle pain - dull ache between 12th rib and erector spinae muscle on the side of the affected kidney – pyelonephritis. (Refer renal angle tenderness)  Renal colic – due to ureteric obstruction – a severe pain – lumbar region; radiates to abdomen, groin, testes, thigh – due to stone or tumour  Ureteric colic – spasmodic, severe pain during the passage of a renal calculus; radiation path of renal colic; may be associated with vomiting, sweating.  Suprapubic pain from bladder / urethra is referred to lower abdomen, perineum and glans penis in males
  • 16. ALTERATION IN URINE APPEARANCE  Change in colour eg Orange - Rifampicin Red - blood Black - malaria
  • 17. ALTERATION IN AMOUNT OF URINE  Polyuria  Oliguria  Anuria
  • 18. Polyuria  Passage of > 3 litres of urine per day  Physiological – ingestion of large quantities of fluid or substances containing diuretics  Pathological - Chronic renal failure or CRF – associated polydipsia - Diabetes mellitus – associated polydipsia - Diabetes insipidus – neurohypophyseal or nephrogenic - Oedematous states – after administration of diuretics
  • 19. Oliguria  Passage of < 500ml of urine per day  Physiological - under conditions of water deprivation  Prerenal conditions – shock, dehydration, haemorrhage  Renal – Acute renal failure or ARF
  • 20. Anuria  Passage of <50 mls of urine in a day  Some causes: Renal infarct Dissecting aneurysm Complete ureteric obstruction
  • 21. Notes re Renal Failure  Occurs when glomerular filtration is compromised  May also be the consequence of abnormal tubular function  Prerenal – due to decreased renal perfusion eg hypotension due to massive blood loss or cardiac failure  Renal – due to disease of nephron, glomeruli, microvasculature (cf DM) or tubules (cf acute tubular necrosis)  Postrenal – due to obstruction to outflow or recurrent ascending infections
  • 22. Renal Failure (cont)  Acute renal failure – sudden deterioration of renal function, usually reversible  Chronic renal failure – longstanding and progressive impairment of renal excretory function – may be insidious in onset
  • 23. Clinical consequences of renal failure  Hypertension – renin secreted in response to impaired perfusion – activates ACE to convert angiotensin I – II – vasoconstriction – aldosterone secretion – sodium and water retention (renin- angiotensin-aldosterone system)  Anaemia – erythropoietin deficiency  Hypoproteinaemia due to protein loss – wasting and malnutrition  Renal osteodystrophy from failure of hydroxylation of Vitamin D to active form (2º hyperparathyroidism)  Other metabolic complications eg gout (defective excretion of uric acid), endocrine and neurological complications
  • 24. GENERAL CLINICAL FEATURES OF RENAL DISEASE  Renal oedema  Increased BP - see previous slides on renal failure
  • 25. GENERAL FEATURES (cont)  Other symptoms and signs of renal failure: Anaemia Purpura plus GIT bleeding Urogenital symptoms – polyuria, polydipsia etc Cardiovascular symptoms GIT symptoms – anorexia, nausea & vomiting, loss of weight, ammonia smell on the breath Skeletal abnormalities – metabolic bone disease Growth retardation in children and other endocrine problems including gynaecomastia in men Neurological symptoms such as depressed cerebral function and convulsions in severe uraemia
  • 26. HISTORY-TAKING (cont)  History of presenting complaint to be in detail – chronology is important, especially in chronic conditions  Don’t forget the systems enquiry – to cover specific relevant aspects
  • 27. HISTORY-TAKING - Context  Past History Preceding throat or skin infection - Strep Recurrent UTI Renal stone HT, DM, hyperuricaemia (gout) Childhood enuresis > 3 years of age (may be associated with vesico-ureteric reflux and renal scarring) HIV status, TB and Hepatitis B, C Past surgery or biopsy
  • 28. HISTORY-TAKING - Context  Medications (Remember to ask about OTC drugs and herbal medications as well) Steroids Immunosuppressants Antibiotics Anti-hypertensives (know which drugs to avoid eg tetracyclines, NSAIDs)  Diet – protein, fluid, salt restriction
  • 29. HISTORY-TAKING - Context  Family History DM, hypertension Inherited forms of renal disease eg adult polycystic kidney disease - inherited as an autosomal dominant; Alport’s Syndrome - inherited as an X-linked recessive
  • 30. HISTORY-TAKING - Context  Social History Employment – occupational exposures eg heavy metals such as Cadmium Home circumstances, family support Impact of chronic illness, dialysis Smoking and alcohol use
  • 31. Urine Volume & Composition  In health, the kidneys form approx 1500- 2000mls of urine/24hrs  Urine is normally pale yellow in colour (becomes paler with decrease in osmolarity when large volumes of water are ingested, and vice versa)  pH is about 6 – slightly acidic
  • 32. Urine composition vs that of plasma  Much higher levels of nitrogenous waste products such as urea and ammonia  Much lower concentrations of glucose, protein and amino acids  Solutes such as salts eg NaCl, KCl and NaHCO3, and urea are excreted at a fairly constant rate, independent of the volume of urine  Plasma has a constant osmolarity whereas that of urine varies widely
  • 33. URINE EXAMINATION  Inspection - colour and appearance (? foamy) - deposits - cloudiness of the urine may be due to the presence of bacteria or crystals (phosphates - white, urates – pink)  Specific gravity (1.005 – 1.035 Naish) Note SG of water is 1.000 and of plasma 1.010 - Decreased SG - CRF - Increased SG - DM
  • 34. URINE EXAMINATION  Reaction - usually acidic  Smell - mild smell of ammonia is normal - smell of antibiotics, foodstuffs - fishy odour associated with UTI  Quantity - (N) in 24hrs = 1500 - 2000ml
  • 35. Chemical Analysis •Chemical reagent strips eg Combur-9 “Dipstix” •Strip is dipped in urine; colour changes are measured after a set period and compared with a colour chart •Analysis of pH, protein, glucose, ketones, nitrite, bilirubin, urobilinogen, blood and leucocytes •To be demonstrated in Skills Lab
  • 36. Protein: Dipstix measurement is semi-quantitative + - ++++ Causes of proteinuria– renal disease eg diabetic nephropathy, fever, post-operative, CCF, orthostatic proteinuria Glucose: Causes of glycosuria – usually diabetes mellitus, also renal glycosuria (Note false positive and negative results eg large doses Vit C) Ketones: Causes of ketonuria – diabetic keto- acidosis and starvation
  • 37. Nitrite: – positive due to infection with bacteria that produce nitrite – correlates well with UTI (inaccurate results with Vitamin C ingestion) Pus (WBCs): Causes of pyuria (pus in the urine) Urinary tract infection UTI Sterile pyuria in renal tuberculosis Blood: – positive dipstix is abnormal (Causes of haematuria, haemoglobinuria, etc – see next slide)
  • 38. Causes of haematuria – examples: Renal causes – glomerulonephritis, renal carcinoma, analgesic nephropathy, bleeding disorders, trauma Urinary tract – cystitis, calculi, tumour Causes of haemoglobinuria – examples: Intravascular haemolysis eg haemolytic anaemia, march haemoglobinuria Causes of myoglobinuria – examples: Convulsions, viral myositis, toxins such as snake venom (due to muscle destruction)
  • 39. Microscopy – ref Talley MSU - NB Method of collection – need a clean uncontaminated specimen using a sterile urine jar • Microscopic examination of a centrifuged specimen Look for: • RBCs – circular, without a nucleus – uniform if from the urinary tract, dysmorphic if from the glomeruli , usually 0, < 5 per lpf in very concentrated urine • WBCs – lobulated nuclei < 6 per hpf – up to 10 may be present in very concentrated urine • Epithelial cells • Bacteria – infection or contamination • Casts - cylindrical moulds formed in the lumen of renal tubules or collecting ducts - size determined by the dimension - they indicate damage to the glomerular basement membrane or tubule
  • 40. Types of casts Hyaline casts - < 1 per lpf, consist of Tamm-Horsfall mucoprotein secreted by renal tubules, may contain 1-2 RBCs or WBCs Granular casts – consist of hyaline material containing fragments of serum proteins Red cell casts – always abnormal – indicate primary glomerular disease, contain 10-50 RBCs – post- Streptococcal GN, SBE etc White cell casts – WBCs adhere to inside of cast – usually indicate bacterial pyelonephritis Fatty casts – these suggest nephrotic syndrome
  • 41. Culture and Sensitivity To identify organism in infections To assess sensitivity to anti-microbials
  • 42. References • Past protocols • Medical Science, Jeannette Naish et al Chapter 14 The Renal System • Clinical Examination, Talley and o’Connor Chapter 6 The Genitourinary System • Principles and Practice of Medicine, Davidson