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This review discusses the alterations in renal and urinary tract function, diagnostic evaluations, management of patient dysfunction, assessment findings, behavioral strategies, pharmacologic therapy, surgical management, urinary retention, neurogenic bladder, and nursing management.
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Alterations in Renal and Urinary Tract Function Larry Santiago, MSN, RN
Review • Kidneys excrete urine and help regulate the water, electrolyte, and acid-base content of the blood • As blood passes through the glomerulus, water and dissolved substances are filtered through the capillary walls, resulting in glomerular filtrate • After passing through the tubules, final product is urine
Diagnostic Evaluation • Urinalysis and Urine Culture • Detects protein, glucose, and ketone bodies • Detects RBCs, WBCs, crystals, pus, and bacteria
X-ray and other imaging modalities • KUB (Kidney, ureters, and bladder) • Delineates size, shape, and position of the kidneys • Reveals abnormalities like renal calculi, cysts, tumors
Renal Ultrasound • Uses sound waves passed into the body through a transducer • Fluid accumulation, masses, congenital malformations, megaly, or obstructions can be identified • Requires a full bladder
Bladder Ultrasound • For measuring urine volume in the bladder • Indicated for urinary frequency, measurement of postvoiding residual urine volume, inability to void postoperatively
Computed Tomography (CT) and Magnetic Resonance Imaging (MRI) • Noninvasive techniques that provide excellent cross-sectional views of the kidney and urinary tract • Evaluates GU masses, renal and urinary tract trauma, metastatic disease, soft tissue abnormalities
Management of Patients With Upper or Lower Urinary Tract Dysfunction
Urinary Incontinence • Stress incontinence – involuntary loss of urine through an intact urethra because of intra-abdominal pressure (sneezing, coughing, etc.)
Urinary Incontinence 2 • Urge Incontinence – involuntary loss of urine associated with a strong urge to void that cannot be suppressed • Reflex incontinence – Hyperreflexia in the absence of normal sensations associated With voiding - Common with spinal cord injury
Assessment and Diagnostic Findings • Causes of Transient Incontinence (DIAPPERS) • Delirium • Infection of the urinary tract • Atrophic vaginitis, urethritis • Pharmacologic agents (anticholinergics, sedatives, alcohol, analgesics, diuretics) • Psychological factors (depression) • Excessive urine production (excessive intake, diabetes insipidus, ketoacidosis) • Restricted activity • Stool impaction
Pharmacologic Therapy • Ditropan (oxybutynin) and Antispas (dicyclomine) • Inhibit bladder contraction • Considered first-line meds for urge incontinence
Behavorial Strategies • Fluid management • Take fluid in small increments b/w breakfast and dinner • Avoid caffeine, carbonation, alcohol, artificial sweetener
Standardized Voiding Frequency • Timed voiding – set voiding frequency (such as q2h) • Prompted voiding – assist with BRP and positive reinforcement • Bladder retraining – incorporates a timed voiding schedule and urinary urge inhibition exercises to inhibit voiding
Pelvic Muscle Exercise • AKA Kegel exercises • Strengthens the voluntary pelvic muscles • For both men and women • Gently tighten the pelvic muscles for 5-10 second increments, then 10 seconds of rest • Perform 2-3 times a day, with 10-30 repetitions
Surgical Management • Women: Vaginal sling - Compresses urethra and increases resistance to flow • Men: Transurethral resection - Relieve symptoms of prostatic enlargement
Urinary Retention • Pathophysiology • May result from diabetes, prostate enlargement, urethral pathology, trauma, PG, CVA, SCI, MS, or Parkinson’s • Many meds can cause
Assessment and Diagnostic Findings • What was the time of the last voiding, and how much urine was excreted? • Is the patient voiding small amounts of urine frequently? • Is the patient dribbling urine? • Does the patient complain of pain or discomfort in the lower abdomen? • Is the pelvic area rounded and swollen?
Complications • Can lead to chronic infection • Unresolved infections • calculi, pyelonephritis, and sepsis
Nursing Management • Promoting normal urinary elimination • Promoting urinary elimination • Promoting home and community-based care
Neurogenic Bladder • Results from a lesion of the nervous system • Caused by spinal cord injury, spinal tumor, herniated vertebral disc, MS, congenital anomalies
Pathophysiology • Spastic Bladder • More common • Caused by any spinal cord lesion above the voiding reflex arc • Loss of conscious sensation and cerebral motor control
Pathophysiology 2 • Flaccid bladder • Caused by lower motor neuron lesion, commonly from trauma • Bladder continues to fill and becomes greatly distended
Medical management • Preventing overdistention of the bladder • Emptying the bladder regularly and completely • Maintaining urine sterility with no stone formation • Maintaining adequate bladder capacity with no reflux
Medical Management 2 • Continuous, intermittent, or self-catheterization, • Condom catheter • Low Calcium diet (to prevent calculi) • Increased fluid intake • Double voiding
Catheterization • Indwelling devices and infections • UTIs are 40% of nosocomial infections • 80% of those are indwelling catheter related • Pathogens include E. coli, Klebsiella, and Proteus
Suprapubic Catheterization • Inserting a catheter into the bladder through a suprapubic incision • Diverts the urine flow from the urethra when the urethral route is impassible
Nursing Management • Assessing the Patient and the System • Assessing for Age-Related Complications • Preventing Infection
Minimizing Trauma • Using an appropriate-sized catheter • Lubricating the catheter adequately with a water-soluble lubricant during insertion • Inserting the catheter far enough to prevent trauma when the balloon is inflated
Mr. Kennett says: “Chip and dip” for women “Ice the cake” for men
Bladder Retraining • Timed voiding schedule, usually every 2-3 hours • After voiding, bladder scan performed • Straight cath if >100cc remain in bladder
Assisting with Intermittent Self-Catheterization • Provides periodic drainage of urine from the bladder • Nurse must use aseptic technique • Patient can use clean technique at home • Emphasize importance of frequent catheterization (q 4-6 hours)
Dialysis • Removes fluid and uremic waste products from the body when the kidneys cannot do so • Methods include hemodialysis and peritoneal dialysis
Hemodialysis • For acute renal failure and chronic renal failure • Must undergo treatment for life or until a successful kidney transplant • Tx occurs 3-4 times a week for about 3-4 hours
Principles of Hemodialysis • Extracts toxic nitrogenous substances from the blood and to remove excess water • Toxins and wastes removed by diffusion (they move from an area of higher concentration to an area of lower concentration in the dialysate)
Vascular Access • Subclavian, Internal, Jugular, and Femoral Catheters Provides immediate access Insertion of double or multi-lumen catheter through the vein Can be used for several weeks
Vascular Access 2 • Fistula • Created surgically by joining an artery to a vein • Artery for arterial flow • Vein for reinfusion of the dialyzed blood
Complications of Hemodialysis • Arteriosclerotic cardiovascular disease • Heart failure, stroke, peripheral vascular insufficiency • Anemia, fatigue, GI problems • Insomnia • Hypotension • Painful muscle cramping
Pharmacologic Therapy • Antihypertensive therapy • Renagel • Nephrovite – multivitamin for renal failure, including Folic Acid and B vits is indicated for the control of serum phosphorus in patients with Chronic Kidney Disease on hemodialysis.
Nutritional Therapy • Restriction of Protein, Sodium, Potassium, and fluid intake • Protein 1 g/kg ideal body weight q day • Sodium 2-3mg/day • Potassium 1.5-2.5g/day