Renal and Urinary Disorders
Renal and Urinary Disorders
Renal and Urinary Disorders
Kidney function
The Nephron produces Impaired urine production
urine to eliminate waste and azotemia
Secretes Erythropoietin ANEMIA
to increase RBC
Metabolism of Vitamin D Calcium and Phosphate
imbalances
Produces bicarbonate Metabolic ACIDOSIS
and secretes acids
Excretes excess HYPERKALEMIA
POTASSIUM
Urological Assessment
• Nursing History
▫ Reason for seeking care
▫ Current illness
▫ Previous illness
▫ Family History
▫ Social History
▫ Sexual history
Urological Assessment
Key Signs and Symptoms of
Urological Problems
EDEMA
associated with fluid retention
Renal dysfunctions usually
produce ANASARCA
Urological Assessment
Key Signs and Symptoms of
Urological Problems
PAIN
Suprapubic pain= bladder
Colicky pain on the flank= kidney
Urological Assessment
Key Signs and Symptoms of
Urological Problems
HEMATURIA
Painless hematuria may indicate
URINARY CANCER!
Early-stream hematuria= urethral
lesion
Late-stream hematuria= bladder
lesion
Urological Assessment
Key Signs and Symptoms of
Urological Problems
DYSURIA
Pain with urination= lower UTI
Urological Assessment
Key Signs and Symptoms of
Urological Problems
POLYURIA
More than 2 Liters urine per day
OLIGURIA
Less than 400 mL per day
ANURIA
Less than 50 mL per day
Urological Assessment
Key Signs and Symptoms of Urological
Problems
Urinary Urgency - is a sudden, compelling urge
to urinate
Urinary retention - also known as ischuria is a
lack of ability to urinate
Urinary frequency - Urinating too often, at too
frequent intervals, not due to an unusually large
volume of urine, but rather to a decrease in the
capacity of the bladder to hold urine.
Urological Assessment
PHYSICAL EXAMINATION
Inspection
Auscultation
Percussion
Palpation
Urological Assessment
Laboratory examination
1. Urinalysis
2. BUN and Creatinine levels of
the serum
3. Serum electrolytes
Urological Assessment
Laboratory examination
Radiographic
▫ IVP
▫ KUB x-ray
▫ KUB ultrasound
▫ CT and MRI
▫ Cystography
Implementation Steps for selected
problems
Provide PAIN relief
• Assess the level of pain
• Administer medications usually narcotic
ANALGESICS
Implementation Steps for selected
problems
Maintain Fluid and Electrolyte Balance
• Encourage to consume at least 2 liters of
fluid per day
• In cases of ARF, limit fluid as directed
• Weigh client daily to detect fluid
retention
Implementation Steps for selected
problems
Ensure Adequate urinary elimination
• Encourage to void at least every 2-3 hours
• Promote measures to relieve urinary
retention:
▫ Alternating warm and cold compress
▫ Bedpan
▫ Open faucet
▫ Provide privacy
▫ Catheterization if indicated
• STANDARDS OF CARE GUIDELINES
• Patients at risk for renal impairment include
those with cardiovascular disease, diabetes, and
hypertension; postoperative patients;
hypotensive patients; and those with prostate
and other diseases of the urinary tract.
Thorough assessment of the urinary tract includes:
• Hourly intake and output measurement
• Assessment of color, clarity, and specific gravity
of the urine
• Palpation of the abdomen for suprapubic
tenderness
• Percussion of the flanks for costovertebral angle
tenderness
• Prostate examination
• Subjective assessment for symptoms, such as
urgency, frequency, nocturia, hesitancy,
dribbling, decreased force of stream, hematuria,
and incontinence
• Be alert to drugs that may impair urinary and
renal function, such as nonsteroidal anti-
inflammatory drugs, anticholinergics,
sympathomimetics, aminoglycoside antibiotics.
• Changes in Micturition (Voiding)
Changes in Amount or Color of Urine
• Hematuria - blood in the urine.
▫ Considered a serious sign and requires evaluation.
▫ Color of bloody urine depends on several factors including the
amount of blood present and the anatomical source of the
bleeding.
Dark, rusty urine indicates bleeding from the upper urinary
tract.
Bright red bloody urine indicates lower urinary tract bleeding.
▫ Hematuria may be due to a systemic cause, such as blood
dyscrasias, anticoagulant therapy, or extreme exercise.
▫ Painless hematuria may indicate neoplasm in the urinary tract.
▫ Hematuria is common in patients with urinary tract stone disease
and may also be seen in renal tuberculosis, polycystic disease of
kidneys, acute pyelonephritis, thrombosis and embolism
involving renal artery or vein, and trauma to the kidneys or
urinary tract.
Polyuria - large volume of urine voided in given
time.
• Volume is out of proportion to usual voiding
pattern and fluid intake.
• Demonstrated in diabetes mellitus, diabetes
insipidus, chronic renal disease, use of diuretics.
Oliguria - small volume of urine.
• Output between 100 and 500 mL/24 hours.
• May result from acute renal failure, shock,
dehydration, fluid and electrolyte imbalance
Anuria - absence of urine output.
• Output less than 50 mL/24 hours.
• Indicates serious renal dysfunction requiring
immediate medical intervention.
Symptoms Related to Irritation of the
Lower Urinary Tract
Dysuria - pain or difficult urination.
• Burning sensation seen in wide variety of
inflammatory and infectious urinary tract
conditions.
Frequency - voiding occurs more commonly
than usual when compared with the patient's
usual pattern or with a generally accepted norm
of once every 3 to 6 hours.
Purpose/Rationale
• Tests the ability to concentrate solutes in the
urine.
• Concentration ability is lost early in kidney
disease; hence, this test detects early defects in
renal function
Creatinine clearance
• Provides a reasonable approximation of rate of
glomerular filtration.
• Measures volume of blood cleared of creatinine
in 1 minute.
• Most sensitive indication of early renal disease.
• Useful to follow progress of the patient's renal
status.
Serum creatinine
• A test of renal function reflecting the balance
between production and filtration by renal
glomerulus.
• Most sensitive test of renal function.
Serum urea nitrogen (Blood urea nitrogen
[BUN])
• Serves as index of renal excretory capacity.
• Serum urea nitrogen depends on the body's urea
production and on urine flow. (Urea is the
nitrogenous end-product of protein metabolism.)
• Affected by protein intake, tissue breakdown.
Protein
• Random specimen may be affected by dietary
protein intake. Proteinuria >150 mg/24 hours
may indicate renal disease.
Microalbumin/Creatinine ratio
• Sensitive test for the subsequent development of
proteinuria; >30 mcg/mg creatinine predicts
early nephropathy.
Urine casts
• Mucoproteins and other substances present in
renal inflammation; help to identify type of renal
disease (eg, red cell casts present in
glomerulonephritis, fatty casts in nephrotic
syndrome, white cell casts in pyelonephritis).
Prostate-Specific Antigen
• PSA is an amino acid glycoprotein that is measured in
the serum by a simple blood test.
• An elevated PSA indicates the presence of prostate
disease, but is not exclusive to prostate cancer.
• Level rises continuously with the growth of prostate
cancer.
• Normal serum PSA level is less than 4 mg/mL. Levels
less than 10 mg/mL may be indicative of benign
prostatic hyperplasia (BPH) and not necessarily prostate
cancer.
• Patients who have undergone treatment for prostate
cancer are monitored periodically with PSA levels for
recurrence.
PSA
Nursing and Patient Care Considerations
• No patient preparation is necessary.
• Some clinicians prefer not to perform digital
rectal examinations of the prostate at the same
time that a PSA is drawn, to prevent artificial
elevation of PSA level, although this association
has not been proved.
Urinalysis
• Involves examination of the urine for overall
characteristics, including appearance, pH,
specific gravity, and osmolality as well as
microscopic evaluation for the presence of
normal and abnormal cells.
• Appearance - normal urine is clear.
• Cloudy urine (phosphaturia) is not always
pathologic, related only to the precipitation of
phosphates in alkaline urine. Normal urine may
also develop cloudiness on refrigeration or from
standing at room temperature.
• Abnormally cloudy urine due to pus (pyuria),
blood, epithelial cells, bacteria, fat, colloidal
particles, phosphate, or lymph fluid (chyluria).
• Odor - normal urine has a faint aromatic
odor.
• Characteristic odors produced by ingestion of
asparagus, thymol.
• Cloudy urine with ammonia odor - urea-splitting
bacteria such as Proteus, causing UTIs.
• Offensive odor may be due to bacterial action in
presence of pus.
Color shows degree of concentration and depends on amount
voided.
• Normal urine is clear yellow or amber because of the
pigment urochrome.
• Dilute urine is straw-colored.
• Concentrated urine is highly colored; a sign of insufficient
fluid intake.
• Cloudy or smoky colored may be from hematuria,
spermatozoa, prostatic fluid, fat droplets, chyle.
• Red or red-brown due to blood pigments, porphyria,
transfusion reaction, bleeding lesions in urogenital tract,
some drugs and food (beets).
• Yellow-brown or green-brown may reveal obstructive lesion
of bile duct system or obstructive jaundice.
• Dark brown or black due to malignant melanoma, leukemia.
• pH of urine reflects the ability of kidney to maintain
normal hydrogen ion concentration in plasma and
extracellular fluid; indicates acidity or alkalinity of
urine.
• pH should be measured in fresh urine because the
breakdown of urine to ammonia causes urine to
become alkaline.
• Normal pH is around 6 (acid); may normally vary
from 4.6 to 7.5.
• Urine acidity or alkalinity has relatively little clinical
significance unless the patient is on a special diet or
therapeutic program or is being treated for renal
calculous disease.
• Specific gravity reflects the kidney's ability to
concentrate or dilute urine; may reflect degree of
hydration or dehydration.
•Bacterial invasion of
the kidneys or bladder
(CYSTITIS) usually
caused by Escherichia
coli
Urinary Tract Infection (UTI)
• Predisposing factors include
1. Poor hygiene
2. Irritation from bubble baths
3. Urinary reflux
4. Instrumentation
5. Residual urine, urinary stasis
Urinary Tract Infection (UTI)
PATHOPHYSIOLOGY
• The invading organism ascends the
urinary tract, irritating the mucosa and
causing characteristic symptoms
▫ Ureter= ureteritis
▫ Bladder= cystitis
▫ Urethra=Urethritis
▫ Pelvis= Pyelonephritis
• Women are more susceptible to developing acute
cystitis because of shorter length of urethra,
anatomical proximity to vagina, periurethral
glands, and rectum (fecal contamination), and
the mechanical effect of coitus.
• Poor voiding habits may result in incomplete
bladder emptying, increasing the risk of
recurrent infection.
• Acute infection in women most commonly arises
from organisms of the patient's own intestinal
flora (Escherichia coli).
In men, obstructive abnormalities (strictures,
prostatic hyperplasia) are the most frequent
cause.
Assessment findings
Urinary Tract Infection (UTI)
Urinary Tract Infection (UTI)
Assessment findings
• Low-grade fever
• Abdominal pain
• Enuresis
• Pain/burning on urination
• Urinary frequency
• Hematuria
Urinary Tract Infection (UTI)
Assessment findings: Upper UTI
• Fever and CHIILS
• Flank pain
• Costovertebral angle
tenderness
Urinary Tract Infection (UTI)
Laboratory Examination
1. Urinalysis
2. Urine Culture
Urinary Tract Infection (UTI)
Nursing interventions
• Administer antibiotics as ordered
• Provide warm baths and allow client to
void in water to alleviate painful voiding.
• Force fluids. Nurses may give 3 liters of
fluid per day
• Encourage measures to acidify urine
(cranberry juice, acid-ash diet).
Urinary Tract Infection (UTI)
• Provide client teaching and discharge
planning concerning
a. Avoidance of tub baths
b. Avoidance of bubble baths that might
irritate urethra
c. Importance for girls to wipe perineum
from front to back
d. Increase in foods/fluids that acidify
urine.
Urinary Tract Infection (UTI)
Pharmacology
1. Sulfa drugs
▫ Highly concentrated in the urine
▫ Effective against E. coli!
2. Quinolones
• Bacteriuria refers to the presence of bacteria in
the urine (105 bacteria/mL of urine or greater
generally indicates infection).
• In asymptomatic bacteriuria, organisms are
found in urine, but the patient has no symptoms.
Recurrent UTIs may indicate the following:
• Relapse - recurrent infection with an organism
that has been isolated during a prior infection
• Reinfection - recurrent infection with an
organism distinct from previous infecting
organism
Complications
• Pyelonephritis
• Hematogenous spread resulting in sepsis
Nursing Diagnoses
• Acute Pain related to inflammation of the
bladder mucosa
• Deficient Knowledge related to prevention of
recurrent UTI
THE END