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    KIDNEY COMPLICATION

     

    Clinical complications of chronic kidney disease

    The clinical complications of chronic kidney failure are widespread such as:


    Cardiovascular System

    The single most important complication of chronic kidney disease is raised arterial blood pressure, which accelerates atherosclerosis and is the main cause of the left ventricular hypertrophy that is found in 75 per cent of patients. Left ventricular dilatation, coronary atherosclerosis, ventricular dysfunction, and cardiac failure are common, explaining why cardiac disease is the leading cause of death in patients with ESRF, the relative risk being highest in the young. There is a high risk of acute myocardial infarction, but sudden arrhythmic death is the more common fatal cardiac event. Patients are prone to develop pulmonary oedema with relatively small increases in extracellular fluid and tolerate dialytic removal of fluid poorly.

    The factors giving rise to this dangerous combination of left ventricular hypertrophy and coronary atherosclerosis operate early in chronic renal failure and include hypertension, dyslipidaemia, anaemia, hyperparathyroidism, and hyperhomocysteinaemia. The combination of these factors has a synergistic effect on the risk of cardiovascular disease.

    Pericarditis is a dreaded complication of chronic renal failure because it may lead to tamponade and death. It was more common in the days when dialysis was delayed until the patient was extremely uraemic, but it still occurs in underdialysed, chronically fluid overloaded, and infected patients. Progression to constriction is rare.

    Calcific aortic stenosis and mitral valve calcification leading to incompetence occurs in about one-third of patients in dialysis. Endocarditis is not uncommon in haemodialysis patients, but could still be considered as surprisingly rare considering the frequency with which access to the circulation is made. It is usually caused by Staphylococcus aureus and leads to destructive valve disease often needing surgery.

     

     

     Related Links

    • Hypertension relatively with kidney failure