Eval Renal FXN
More Renal Tests/ Critical thinking
Urine
PeePee
WeeWee
100

What percentage of glomeruli are affected before azotemia occurs? 

65-70%

100

1. What can cause Albumin to increase?

2. What can cause it to decrease? 

1. Dehydration

2. Liver disease (↓ prod.), Kidney disease, GI loss

100

CRITICAL THINKING: You are running a urinalysis on a patient and you place a sample on the test strip. You notice the square listed "blood" is showing positive. What all could cause this square to be positive? How do you confirm what is causing this to be positive? 

Blood, Hemoglobin, Myoglobin

Confirm RBC: Microscopic exam

Confirm Hemoglobin: red serum

Confirm Myoglobin: Clear serum

100

A patient's urine is considered isothenuric if the USG is:

This means the urine and _________ have the same concentration. 

1.008-1.012

Plasma

100

What is the renal threshold for glucose in most species and cattle? 

Most: 180mg/dL

Cattle: 100mg/dL

200

Blood Urea Nitrogen (BUN) is:

1. Made from:

2.Produced in: 

1. ammonia - toxin during normal protein metabolism

2. Liver - placed in bloodstream to be secreted by kidney during glomerular function

200

What values do you expect to change regarding a patient that has renal disease? (Chem profile) 

* ↑ Phosphorus 

* ↑ BUN

* ↑ Creatinine 

* ↓ Albumin

* ↓ Potassium (K) - Cats with urethral block

200

What are physical properties that are evaluated with urine? (3)

*Color

* Turbidity 

*USG

200

What is the normal pH of urine? 

6.5-7.2

200

What is the best way to detect azotemia before BUN and Creat increase on chem profile? 

Protein in urine 

300
1. What causes a high BUN?

2. What causes a low BUN?

1. Kidney Disease - ↓ GFR, GI bleeds

2. Liver disease - portosystemic shunt, Diuresis (↓ Aldosterone - Addison's)

300

CRITICAL THINKING: You are working in an ICU and you have a patient that was diagnosed with renal disease. Your vet places the patient on IVF. The next day you run more BW on this patient and see that the renal values have decreased from yesterday. How can this happen? What is it called? 

Pre-renal Azotemia:

Pre-renal is cause by dehydration or shock, so the kidneys are working, but due to decreased blood perfusion to the kidneys this decreases GFR. 

REMEMBER: With pre-renal the kidneys are still able to concentrate urine. 

300

What can cause a color change in urine? 

Diet, disease, drugs, RBCs, or heme pigments 

300

Ketonuria indicates: 

* Excessive fat metabolism

* Deficiency in carbohydrate metabolism 

300

What has a better quantitation of protein loss than test strip? 

Protein/Creatinine ratio

400

1. What causes creatinine to increase?

2. What causes it to decrease? 

1. Kidney disease (↓GFR), rhabdomyolysis 

2. Starvation, Diuresis 

400

CRITICAL THINKING: Otter, a 4 y/o MC DSH, comes to your clinic due to a possible urinary blockage. Your vet wants to run BW before sedating patient. What do you expect this bloodwork to show before and after blockage is corrected? 

Otter will have increased renal values and possibly increased Potassium.

After urinary blockage is corrected, renal values should return to normal. Renal failure may occur is Otter was left blocked too long. 

400

Normal urine should be clear. If you collect a fresh urine sample that is cloudy, what could be the cause? 

*Pus

*Blood

*Mucus

*Bateria

*Casts

*Crystals

400

If there is bilirubin present in urine, this indicates:

liver damage

400

FROM CHART ON PAGE 140: You determine that there is blood present in urine (clear supernatant). What does this indicate? What other values should be evaluated? 

Indicates: Possible UTI, bleeding mass, bleeding problems

Other values: urine sediment, PCV, TP, platelets 

500

What are the total proteins found in blood? 

* Globulins

* Albumin

500

What type of azotemia can not be corrected with IVF and the kidneys are not able to concentrate urine?

Renal azotemia

500

What is the normal USG for dogs and cats?

Dogs: 1.030

Cats: 1.035

500

Glucose is filtered by the: 

glomerulus 

500

FROM CHART ON PG 140: You determine that there is hemoglobin present in urine. What does this indicate? What other values should be evaluated? 

Indicates: RBC destruction 

Other Values: PCV, TP, Blood film

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