Misc.
glomerulo-
nephritis
APSGN
Pyelonephritis
urinary calculi
100

Name 2 kidney functions

Any two: fluid balance, regulate electrolytes and acid/base balance, removes waste, produces erythropoietin, synthesizes vitamin D, regulates BP

100

Glomerulonephritis is the ___ leading cause of ____ _____

3rd leading cause of renal failure

100

What does APSGN stand for?

acute post-streptococcal glomerulonephritis

100

Name 2 clinical manifestations of acute pyelonephritis

Lower urinary tract symptoms

Fever, chills, vomiting, malaise

Flank pain

Costovertebral angle pain

Elevated WBC

RBC, Wbc, casts, and bacteria can be present in the urine

100

what is a cause of urinary calculi?

hypercalcemia, UTI, uric acid, cystine

200

What is the autoimmune disease in which antibodies attack the basement membranes of the alveoli and glomeruli?

Goodpasture syndrome

200

True or false: Glomerulonephritis occurs only in the glomerulus.

False: it can occur in other areas within the kidneys

200

How long after the step infection to patients usually develop APSGN?

2-3 weeks

200

What is a life-threatening potential complication of pyelonephritis?

Urosepsis

200

Define nephrolithiasis vs urolithiasis

Nephro: formation of kidney stone

Uro: formation of stone in urinary tract

300

True or false: the kidney produces erythropoeitin

True

300

Name a risk factor for glomerulonephritis

Infection (strep), immune disease (SLE/Goodpasture), glomerular scarring (diabetic neuropathy, HTN)

300

Name 3 clinical manifestations of APSGN

Hematuria (cola-colored urine), anasarca, HTN, decreased GFR, sodium retention, proteinuria

300

What is something you must obtain if you suspect pyelonephritis?

Urine cultures

Blood cultures (if extremely ill)

300

A patient with a kidney stone and a calcium level of 11.1 states that he would like to have 3 glasses of milk per day, one with each meal. How would you educate this patient?

We want to remove the causative factor. Milk contains calcium, and your high calcium levels could be what caused your stone.

400

What is the term for generalized body edema?

Anasarca

400

Name a possible treatment option for rapidly progressing glomerulonephritis

Correction of fluid overload

-managing blood pressure

-Corticosteroids, cytotoxic drugs, plasmapheresis

-Potential need for dialysis and/or transplant

400

Diet for APSGN management includes ____ protein, ____ sodium, and ____ restricted diet.

Low protein, low sodium, fluid restriction

400

Patients with pyelonephritis or suspected pyelonephritis can not have procedures with this nephrotoxic item

Contrast dye

400

Name 3 management/treatment options for urinary calculi

treat pain, monitor for complications, manage present complications, strain urine to identify causative factor, maintain hydration, avoid dietary intake of causative factor  (ex, avoid or decrease milk if stone was caused by calcium), Extracorporeal shock-wave lithotripsy, percutaneous ultrasonic lithotripsy, cystoscopy, ureteroscopy

500

Which drug can cause rapidly progressive glomerulonephritis?

Penicillamine

500

Name 2 labs that will be increased and 2 labs that will be decreased in chronic glomerulonephritis

Increased: BUN, creatinine, potassium, phosphorus


Decreased: GFR, Albumin, calcium

500

Name 2 things to educate the patient with APSGN on discharge

symptoms, complications, fluid restrictions, diet modifications, when to contact HCP, signs of infection, follow up appts for labs and BP checks

500

Acute pyelonephritis usually occurs in combination with a predisposing factor. Name 2

untreated UTI, vesicoureteral reflex, BPH, stricture, stones, catheter

500

How long does the shock wave lithotripsy procedure typically last?

30min-2hr

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