Renal Failure- Acute Kidney Injury (AKI), Chronic Kidney Disease (CKD) for Progressive Care Certified Nurse (PCCN)

You're watching a preview. 300,000+ students are watching the full lesson.
Master
To Master a topic you must score > 80% on the lesson quiz.

Included In This Lesson

NURSING.com students have a 99.25% NCLEX pass rate.

Outline

Renal Failure- Acute Kidney Injury (AKI), Chronic Kidney Disease (CKD)

 

Definition/Etiology:

  • Renal Failure – Caused by acute and/or chronic conditions
  • AKI
    • Definition -Acute kidney injury, also known as acute renal failure, is when the kidneys stop working over the period of a few hours or a few days.
      • Cause Pre/Intra/Post renal
      • Sudden onset & usually reversible
  • CKD – Gradual Loss
    • Definition – Chronic kidney disease includes conditions that damage the kidneys and decrease their ability to effectively filter waste products from the blood. Chronic kidney disease (CKD) develops slowly over time.
      • Cause – uncontrolled hypertension and diabetes mellitus
      • Slow onset & rarely reversible

 

Pathophysiology:

  • Acute Renal Failure (AKI)
    • Pre-Renal (Decreased blood flow)
      • Low BP, Sepsis, etc
    • Intrarenal (Direct Injury to kidney)
      • Vancomycin, Contrast Dye, etc
    • Post-Renal (Decreased outflow)
      • Prostate disease, Stones
  • Chronic Renal Failure
    • No stages, rather persistent impairment of kidney function that results renal fibrosis
    • Leads to ESRD & Dialysis

 

Noticing: Assessment & Recognizing Cues:

  • AKI – symptoms are sudden/severe and are easily recognized
    • History of acute illness or toxic medication
    • ↑ HR & ↑ BP
    • Oliguria
      • 50 – 400 ml/day
    • Edema in lower extremities
  • CKD – symptoms develop slowly and are easily mistaken for other conditions
    • History of HTN/DM
    • Vitals normalized
    • Anuria
      • Less than 50ml/day
    • Periorbital Edema
    • Chronic changes
      • Grey Skin – toxins
      • Anemic signs/sx

 

Interpreting: Analyzing & Planning:

  • Labs
    • Bun/Creatinine – AKI specific
      • 20/1.3
    • Glomerular filtration rate (GFR) – CKD specific
      • 90
    • Potassium
      • High in both
    • Calcium
      • CKD = Low related to ↓D levels
    • Hemoglobin
      • erythropoietin
    • UA – Protein & Blood
  • Diagnostics
    • ABD Xray – Renal Stones
    • Renal Ultrasound
      • AKI – Normal/Enlarged Kidney
      • CKD – Small Shrunken Kidney
    • 12 Lead
      • Arrhythmias
    • CXR
      • Pleural Effusion
      • Uremic Pericardial Congestion

 

Responding: Patient Interventions & Taking Action:

  • Pharmacological Interventions
    • Withhold Nephrotoxic drugs
    • Fluids vs Diuretics
      • Is the patient Oliguric?
      • Do they need Kidneys flushed?
    • Epoetin alfa = synthetic erythropoietin
    • Hyperkalemia
      • Insulin/Glucose
      • Calcium gluconate ↑K + Arrhythmia
    • Flomax – Prostate
  • Non-Pharmacological Interventions
    • Daily Weight
    • Foley
      • Goal = ↑ 400 ml/24 hours
    • Dialysis
      • Short vs long term

 

Reflecting: Evaluating Patient Outcomes:

  • Monitor KCL Levels
    • Hyperkalemia → EKG changes (peaked T waves, flat P, wide QRS, blocks, asystole)
    • Continuous cardiac monitoring
    • Low potassium diet
    • Potassium lowering medications
  • Immediate Dialysis
    • Severe Hyperkalemia
    • Acidosis
    • Uremic Pericarditis
    • Encephalopathy

 

Linchpins (Key Points):

  • Notice AKI or CKD = Renal Failure
    • Is this acute or a chronic issue? Patient’s will present a little differently, especially labs.
  • Interpret
    • Labs & Imaging
      • Is there something we can immediately fix?
  • Respond
    • KCL Interventions
  • Reflect
    • KCL & Dialysis Watch

 

 

 

 

Unlock the Complete Study System

Used by 300,000+ nursing students. 99.25% NCLEX pass rate.

200% NCLEX Pass Guarantee.
No Contract. Cancel Anytime.

Transcript

References

  • AACN, & Hartjes, T. (2023). AACN Core Curriculum for Progressive and
    Critical Care Nursing (8th ed.). Elsevier Health Sciences (US). Dennison, R. D., & Farrell, K. (2015]). Pass PCCN!. Elsevier Health Sciences(US).
  • Kupchik, N. (2017). Ace The Pccn®!: You can do it!: Practice question review book. Nicole Kupchik Consulting, Inc.
  • Stone, L. M. (2018). Certification and Core Review for High Acuity, Progressive,
    and Critical Care Nursing (7th ed.). Elsevier Health Sciences (US).
    Trivium Test Prep. (2019). Pccn review book 2019-2020: Pccn Study Guide
    and Practice Test Questionsfor the Progressive Care Certified Nurse Exam.

Study Faster with Full Video Transcripts

99.25% NCLEX Pass Rate vs 88.8% National Average

200% NCLEX Pass Guarantee.
No Contract. Cancel Anytime.

Elite Access:
Private Coaching

Private Coaching 3 Private Tutoring Sessions, Lifetime Memberships, + Med-Surg Mega Kit

Wow, 3 Live Private Tutoring Sessions . . .
+ Lifetime Memberships, + Med-Surg Mega Kit.

Adaptive Brain SIMCLEX Study Plan – 20 Sep 2020

Concepts Covered:

  • Documentation and Communication
  • Legal and Ethical Issues
  • Psychological Emergencies
  • Trauma-Stress Disorders
  • Noninfectious Respiratory Disorder
  • Respiratory Emergencies
  • Perioperative Nursing Roles
  • Cardiac Disorders
  • Emergency Care of the Cardiac Patient
  • Intraoperative Nursing
  • Microbiology
  • Preoperative Nursing
  • Communication
  • Acute & Chronic Renal Disorders

Study Plan Lessons