38. Laboratory diagnosis and monitoring of chronic renal diseases

Revision as of 20:10, 24 May 2024 by Nikolas (talk | contribs) (Created page with "{{#lst:Chronic kidney disease|clinical biochemistry}} Category:Clinical Biochemistry (POTE course)")
(diff) ← Older revision | Latest revision (diff) | Newer revision → (diff)

Chronic kidney disease (CKD), previously called chronic renal failure is defined as the presence of either kidney damage or decreased kidney function for more than 3 months. Decreased kidney function is measured by decreased GFR.

Classification

CKD is classified according to the GFR and the degree of albuminuria:

GFR category GFR (mL/min)
G1 > 90
G2 60 – 89
G3a 45 – 59
G3b 30 – 44
G4 15 – 29
G5 < 15

We usually call stage G4 and G5 “chronic kidney failure”, while stage G5 is referred to as end-stage kidney disease (ESKD).

Albuminuria can be categorized either by measuring the total albumin amount in a 24-hour urine sample, or from a single sample where the ratio between albumin and creatinine is measured.

Albuminuria category Albumin excretion rate (AER) (mg/24 hours) Albumin creatinine ratio (ACR) (mg/mmol) Old term
A1 < 30 < 3
A2 30 – 300 3 – 30 Microalbuminuria
A3 > 300 > 30 Macroalbuminuria

As such, a person with GFR of 43 and AER of 100 is stage G3bA2. A person with a GFR of 100, AER of 5, and polycystic kidney disease has stage G1A1 CKD.

The following laboratory alterations may be present:

Hyperkalaemia can be a problem in CKD, because of the decreased renal elimination of potassium and because of the RAAS inhibitors’ tendency to cause it. Treatment may be necessary.