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ANURIA AND OLIGURIA

ANURIA AND OLIGURIA
Diminished output of urine (oliguria with less than 500 mL output in 24 hours) and no output of urine (anuria) are best understood using pathophysiology. The causes may be divided into prerenal (where less fluid is delivered to in (kidney for filtration), renal (where the kidney is unable to produce urine because of intrinsic disease), and postrenal (where the kidney is obstructed and the urine cannot be excreted).
The clinical picture will be helpful in determining the cause of anuria. In cases of prerenal azotemia, there will be decreased skin turgor and orthostatic hypotension if the cause is volume depletion. If the cause is CHF, there will be jugular vein distention, hepatomegaly, and pedal edema. Patients with postrenal azotemia may have an enlarged prostate, a distended bladder, and other signs of obstructive uropathy. Patients with renal azotemia may have bilateral flank masses (polycystic kidney), hypertension, peripheral emboli (embolic glomerulonephritis), or a rash (collagen disease, interstitial nephritis).
The initial workup includes a CBC; urinalysis; urine culture and sensitivity; personal examination of the urine for casts, and so forth; chemistry panel; spot urine sodium; serum and urine osmolality; flat plate of the abdomen for kidney size; chest x-ray; and ECG. The bladder is catheterized for residual urine and if this is significant, postrenal azotemia is likely and a urologist is consulted. He will most likely do a cystoscopy and retrograde pyelography once the patient’s condition is stabilized. Ultrasonography can be used to determine if there is significant residual urine also.
The laboratory studies will determine whether there is prerenal or renal azotemia. If the sodium concentration in the spot urine is less than 10 meq/L, prerenal azotemia is likely. Also, in prerenal Azotemia, the BUN: creatinine ratio is 20:1 or greater and the urine osmolality is 450 mOsm per kilogram of water or greater. The urine sediment will show granular and red cell casts in most cases of renal azotemia, and the BUN:creatinine ratio will be 10:1 or less.
Further workup will depend on what the presumptive diagnosis is. If volume depletion is the cause, intravenous saline and plasma volume expanders are given while carefully monitoring the urine output. If this is ineffective, furosemide and a mannitol drip can be utilized to reestablish urine output. If these measures are ineffective, the patient obviously has a renal cause for his/her anuria and a urologist should be consulted.
Renal causes can be differentiated by further workup. If intravascular hemolysis is suspected, serum haptoglobins should be ordered. If dissecting aneurysm or bilateral renal artery stenosis is suspected, aortography and angiography would be done. If polycystic kidney disease is suspected, ultrasonography or CT scan of the abdomen may be done. Eosinophilia of the blood or urine will be found in drug-induced nephritis. If a collagen disease is suspected, one should order an ANA, double-stranded DNA (dsDNA) antibody titer or lupus erythematosus (LE) cell prep. A renal biopsy may also be necessary in these disorders and many others.
Read excerpts from these other book chapters related to Lack of urine:
Copyright Details: Differential Diagnosis in Primary Care, Copyright © 2008 Williams & Wilkins.
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More About This Book:
Title: Differential Diagnosis in Primary Care Authors: R. Douglas Collins Publisher: Lippincott Williams & Wilkins Copyright: 2007 ISBN: 0-7817-6812-8
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