Professional Documents
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005844837
005844837
Case 1: (Answer: Acute tubular necrosis following severe intravascular volume depletion)
A 54-year-old man (82kg) presents to the E.R. with malaise, fatigue and oliguria two days after
serving on a pit-crew during the Indianapolis 500 race. Despite sunny skies and temperatures that
hovered in the 90’s, he wore a full-body, fire-proof insulated suit and helmet so the he could change
tires for a car that placed 28th out of 33 cars. He drank three 24-ounce bottles of purified water (2.1
liters) over eight or nine hours that day. He appears pale and his heart rate is 90/min, BP 108/60
mmHg, temperature 99.8F but he has no other physical findings. A stat serum creatinine =
5.8mg/dL, BUN = 70 mg/dL and hematocrit = 49%. You admit the patient and observe that over the
next eight hours he has made only 60cc of urine and his serum creatinine is now 6.3 mg/dL.
Questions:
A) What is the most likely reason for decreased urine output?
ischemia from intravascular volume depletion and subsequent decreased renal blood flow and
tubular damage. (Renal tubules are damaged as a consequence of effective ischemia.)
C) What other laboratory values would you want to know? Potassium (hyperkalemia) and bicarb
(acidosis).
G) Why is radiocontrast a bad idea in this patient? Contrast is not a good idea in a patient with
ATN (exacerbates pre-existing acute injury).
Case 2: (Answer: Acute cellular rejection in transplant recipient)
A 48-year-old postal worker (60 kg female) presents to you three months after receiving a living-
related renal allograft for chronic kidney disease secondary to autosomal dominant polycystic kidney
disease. The patient's last serum creatinine two weeks ago was 1.2 mg/dl. Laboratory results from
this visit reveal a serum creatinine of 1.9 mg/dl and a cyclosporine level of 400 ug/l by monoclonal
RIA (elevated). On the exam the patient has a blood pressure of 160/95 mmHg and she is slightly
tender over her graft sight. She started back to work this week.
Questions:
A) What is the differential diagnosis associated with this acute clinical presentation?
List differential diagnoses under categories of pre-renal, renal and post-renal.
B) How can you clinically distinguish between the categories of pre-renal, renal and post-renal??
1. Pre-renal: history consistent with orthostasis, newly prescribed diuretics, GI loss or
decreased fluid intake, fever, etc.; exam findings for intravascular volume
depletion/hypovolemia, e.g. orthostasis, poor skin turgor
2. Renal: history of transplant; new meds; systemic or multisystem illness; negative
exam.
3. Post-renal: history - symptoms of prostatism; abdom surgeries, etc; exam:
suprapubic tenderness/bladder distension
C) If you suspect that cyclosporine A is the cause of acute renal failure, how is the diagnosis made?
How would you treat the patient?
Either clinically by history or changing dosage and/or levels, or by biopsy. Treat by
decreasing the dosage of offending drug.
D) When is it appropriate to biopsy the patient and what might the renal biopsy show?
Diagnosis: Acute cellular rejection: normal glomeruli and vessels, tubulitis (lymphocytes in
tubule wall) which is graded according to Banff criteria (important for students to know there
is a grading system that directs therapy).
Questions:
A) What would you expect to see on urinalysis?
WBC's (mostly lymphocytes and some neutrophils and eosinophils but these are hard to
differentiate in the urine; IU Hospital no longer does Hensels because of low sensitivity and
specificity, Wright’s stain is considered low yield by the IU clinical pathology lab). Also may
detect low-grade proteinuria, and maybe WBC casts on urine microscopy.
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Case 4: (Answer: Thrombotic microangiopathy c/w malignant hypertension)
A 40-year-old man (70 kg) presents with complaints of headache that has increased in severity over the
last several days and has been associated with blurred vision over the last 12 hours. On exam he has a
blood pressure of 230/135 mmHg and an S4 gallop on auscultation of the heart. Urine dipstick detected
blood and protein.
Questions:
A) You refer the patient to the ER where your fellow intern sees this patient. What would be important
signs to elicit on physical exam? Fundoscopic exam (retinal hemmorhages, exudates,
papilledema), abdominal bruit, multiple ectopy or tachycardia, crackles or tachypnea
(pulmonary edema), asymmetric pulses suggesting dissection of aorta.
B) What laboratory tests would you order? BUN & Creatinine to check renal function. Urine
microscopy to check for RBCs and RBC casts (casts confirming glomerulus as origin of
hematuria).
C) What treatment would you immediately begin? Lower BP with intravenous drugs slowly to
160/90 mmHg range. Monitor for signs of organ ischemia (mental status changes, angina,
decreasing urine output).
D) The next morning, with excellent management, the BP is 156/92 mmHg and serum creatinine is
2.9 mg/dL. What would you do next? Put patient on oral meds and wean the intravenous drugs
keeping blood pressure in the 140-160/90-100 mmHg range and slowly bringing BP down to
<130/80 mmHg over several days.
E) When is a kidney biopsy indicated? Biopsy only if proteinuria and hematuria persist (i.e., other
underlying causes of glomerular disease) or if serum creatinine continues to climb over the
next few days. What would the biopsy show? (Slides on web at “ANGEL”)
1. Light Microscopy:
A. Vessels show:
a. fibrinoid necrosis (eosinophilic, smudged material, may react with anti-fibrin
antibodies)
b. onionskin change (hyperplastic arteriolitis): concentric layers of proliferating intimal
smooth muscle cells
c. mucinous (myxoid) degeneration: loose, blue material in the vessel wall.
d. fragmented RBCs in “lumina”
B. Glomerular lesions are characterized by ischemic alterations (wrinkled GBM),
hemorrhage, thrombosis and fibrinoid necrosis.
If the patient’s malignant hypertension is superimposed on pre-existing benign
hypertension, the vessels may contain hyaline deposits (chronic) along with fibrin (acute).
“Hyaline” is PAS-positive (glassy-pink on H&E) and defined as nonspecific accumulation of
plasma proteins and lipids.
2. IF: +/- detect fibrin (IgG, IgA, IgM, C3, C4, C1q usu. weak to negative/noncontributory).
3. EM would show widened subendothelium with granular, flocculent material along inner
aspect of GBM. Electron dense (immune-type) deposits are usually absent.
F) The patient is scheduled for follow-up with his primary care physician in one week. What other
studies would be appropriate as an outpatient?
If patient does not have history of longstanding severe hypertension or a family history, work
up for secondary causes of hypertension, such as renal artery stenosis, would be appropriate.