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Nephrology: Summative Revision Notes

Morning Rounds · Nephrology Series
Nephrology
Summative Revision Notes
Seven topics · NEET-PG and UPSC CMS · Key facts, tables, and diagrams
AKI CKD Glomerular Tubular Electrolytes Dialysis & Transplant Hereditary & Vascular

These notes summarise the seven Morning Rounds in the Nephrology series. They are written for rapid pre-exam revision, not first-time learning. Each section is self-contained. Read the debrief panels in the quizzes for the full clinical reasoning — use these notes to consolidate, not to meet the topic for the first time.

Topic 01 · Nephrology
Acute Kidney Injury
RIFLE vs KDIGO — staging
StageCreatinine (both systems)Urine OutputRIFLE equivalent
KDIGO Stage 1≥1.5× baseline or ≥0.3 mg/dL rise within 48 h<0.5 mL/kg/h >6 hRisk
KDIGO Stage 2≥2.0× baseline<0.5 mL/kg/h >12 hInjury
KDIGO Stage 3≥3.0× baseline or Cr ≥4.0 mg/dL or RRT initiated<0.3 mL/kg/h ≥24 h or anuria ≥12 hFailure
RIFLE onlyLoss (>4 weeks); ESRD (>3 months)Outcome stages

Key KDIGO addition over RIFLE: the 0.3 mg/dL rise within 48 hours criterion for Stage 1. KDIGO dropped RIFLE's outcome stages (Loss, ESRD).

Pre-renal vs ATN — rapid differentiation
ParameterPre-renalATN (Intrinsic)
FENa<1%>2%
Urine Na<20 mEq/L>40 mEq/L
Urine SG>1.020~1.010 (isosthenuria)
BUN:Cr ratio>20:1~10:1
Urine microscopyNormal / hyaline castsMuddy brown granular casts
Response to fluidsCreatinine fallsDoes not respond

FENa caveat: falsely elevated (>1%) in pre-renal AKI if patient is on diuretics. Use FE-Urea (<35% = pre-renal) in patients on diuretics. FENa is also <1% in contrast nephropathy and myoglobinuria despite ATN.

RRT indications — AEIOU

Acidosis (pH <7.2 unresponsive to treatment) · Electrolytes (K⁺ >6.5 with ECG changes) · Intoxication (dialysable toxins) · Overload (pulmonary oedema refractory to diuretics) · Uraemia (encephalopathy, pericarditis, bleeding). Creatinine alone is never an absolute threshold.

Contrast-induced AKI

Prevention: IV isotonic saline (1 mL/kg/h before and after) is the only evidence-based intervention. NAC: large RCTs (PRESERVE, ACT) showed no benefit over hydration — no longer routinely recommended. Iso-osmolar contrast reduces osmotic load but does not replace hydration.

FENa <1% = pre-renal Muddy brown casts = ATN KDIGO adds 0.3 mg/dL/48h NAC = no benefit (PRESERVE)

Topic 02 · Nephrology
Chronic Kidney Disease
KDIGO staging — eGFR × albuminuria grid
StageeGFR (mL/min/1.73 m²)LabelAlbuminuria
G1≥90Normal/HighA1 <30 mg/g (normal–mild)
G260–89Mildly decreased
G3a45–59Mild–moderately decreasedA2 30–300 mg/g (moderate)
G3b30–44Moderately–severely decreasedA3 >300 mg/g (severe)
G415–29Severely decreased
G5<15Kidney failure (ESRD)

CKD requires abnormality persisting >3 months. G1A1 or G2A1 without structural abnormality does not constitute CKD.

CKD-MBD — the cascade

Failing kidney → ↓1-alpha-hydroxylase → ↓1,25-OH Vitamin D → hypocalcaemia + phosphate retention → secondary HPT (↑PTH). First-line: dietary phosphate restriction + phosphate binders (sevelamer, calcium carbonate, lanthanum). Active Vitamin D analogues (calcitriol, alfacalcidol) for the 1,25-OH deficiency. Tertiary HPT = autonomous PTH secretion after prolonged secondary HPT; PTH stays high even after calcium corrected.

Slowing progression — evidence hierarchy

RAS blockade (ACEi or ARB): reduces intraglomerular pressure via efferent arteriolar dilation; first-line in diabetic nephropathy with proteinuria. SGLT2 inhibitors: renal protection independent of glycaemic effect — CREDENCE, DAPA-CKD, EMPA-KIDNEY trials. BP target in CKD with proteinuria: <130/80 mmHg. Dual RAS blockade (ACEi + ARB): contraindicated — ONTARGET trial showed increased AKI and hyperkalaemia, no additional benefit.

Anaemia of CKD — management sequence

Before starting ESA: confirm iron stores adequate — TSAT >20% and ferritin >200 ng/mL (dialysis patients); >100 ng/mL (non-dialysis). IV iron preferred in dialysis (hepcidin blocks oral absorption). ESA targets: Hb 10–12 g/dL. Targeting >13 g/dL increases stroke and thrombosis (CHOIR, CREATE trials). ESA hyporesponsiveness: exclude iron deficiency, infection, aluminium toxicity, haemolysis, myeloma.

RRT timing — IDEAL trial

Early initiation (eGFR 10–14) vs late (eGFR 5–7): no survival advantage to early start. Initiate when uraemic symptoms, refractory fluid overload, or metabolic complications develop — not at a fixed eGFR threshold.

CKD >3 months + two measurements SGLT2i: CREDENCE, DAPA-CKD Dual RAS = contraindicated Hb ceiling 12 g/dL on ESA

Topic 03 · Nephrology
Glomerular Diseases
Nephrotic vs Nephritic — framework
FeatureNephroticNephritic
Proteinuria>3.5 g/day<3.5 g/day
HaematuriaAbsent/minimalProminent (RBC casts)
HypertensionUsually absent initiallyPresent
Oedema mechanismHypoalbuminaemiaSodium retention
Renal functionNormal early↑ Creatinine
Glomerular Diseases — At a Glance Disease Syndrome Key feature IF pattern Marker Treatment MCD Nephrotic (child) Foot process effacement (EM) Negative None Steroids (90% respond) FSGS Nephrotic (adult) Segmental sclerosis on biopsy IgM, C3 (non-specific) None specific Steroids; often resistant MGN Nephrotic (adult) Subepithelial deposits; spike & dome Granular IgG + C3 Anti-PLA2R (70–80%) Rituximab; cyclophosphamide IgA Nephropathy Nephritic Synpharyngitic haematuria Mesangial IgA Normal complement ACEi/ARB; SGLT2i Anti-GBM (Goodpasture) RPGN + haemoptysis Crescents >50%; lung haem Linear IgG Anti-GBM Ab Plasma exchange + steroids + CYC Lupus Nephritis IV Mixed (nephritic++) Wire-loop lesions; diffuse prolif Full house ↓C3, ↑anti-dsDNA MMF + prednisolone (induction) IgA vs PSGN: IgA haematuria concurrent with URTI (synpharyngitic); PSGN haematuria 1–3 weeks after (latent period). PSGN: low C3. IgA: normal C3.
The IF pattern is the single most exam-tested histological feature in glomerular disease. Linear IgG = anti-GBM. Granular IgG+C3 = immune-complex (MGN, PSGN, lupus). Negative IF = MCD. "Full house" (IgG, IgA, IgM, C3, C1q) = lupus nephritis.

Linear IgG = anti-GBM Wire-loop = Lupus IV Anti-PLA2R = primary MGN Synpharyngitic = IgA nephropathy

Topic 04 · Nephrology
Renal Tubular Disorders
RTA — the three-line summary
TypeDefectSerum K⁺Urine pHStones/NCCClassic causes
Type I (Distal)↓H⁺ secretion, collecting duct↓ Low>5.5 alwaysYes (Ca-PO₄)Sjögren, SLE, amphotericin B, lithium
Type II (Proximal)↓HCO₃⁻ reabsorption↓ LowVariable; can be <5.5RareFanconi (Wilson, cystinosis, tenofovir, myeloma)
Type IV↓Aldosterone / resistance↑ High≤5.5NoDM (hyporeninism), ACEi/ARB, heparin, CKD

All three RTAs: normal anion gap metabolic acidosis (NAGMA). Type I is the only one where urine pH cannot fall below 5.5 regardless of systemic acidosis. Type IV is the commonest RTA in adults.

Fanconi syndrome — generalised proximal wasting

All proximal tubular reabsorptates lost: glucose (normoglycaemic glycosuria), phosphate, uric acid, amino acids, potassium, bicarbonate. Mnemonic: GARBAGE. Causes: cystinosis (children), Wilson disease, tenofovir (TDF), ifosfamide, lead, multiple myeloma. Tenofovir mechanism: mitochondrial DNA polymerase gamma inhibition in proximal tubular cells. Switch to TAF (tenofovir alafenamide — less nephrotoxic).

Bartter vs Gitelman — the calcium pivot

Both: hypokalaemic metabolic alkalosis, normal BP, high renin/aldosterone, mimic diuretics. Bartter (thick ascending limb defect = furosemide-like): presents in infancy/childhood, hypercalciuria, nephrocalcinosis, polyuria. Gitelman (DCT defect = thiazide-like): presents in adults incidentally, hypomagnesaemia + hypocalciuria. Exam pivot: Bartter = Ca up; Gitelman = Ca down.

Nephrogenic DI — lithium mechanism

Lithium enters collecting duct principal cells via ENaC → inhibits adenylyl cyclase → ↓cAMP → AQP2 channels not inserted → tubule impermeable to water despite normal/high ADH. DDAVP test: no response (vs central DI where urine osmolality rises >50%). Paradoxical treatment: thiazides (mild volume depletion → ↑ proximal reabsorption → ↓ urine volume) + amiloride (blocks ENaC, ↓ lithium entry).

Type I RTA: urine pH >5.5 always Type IV: K⁺ high Bartter = hypercalciuria Gitelman = hypoMg + hypocalciuria

Topic 05 · Nephrology
Electrolytes — The Renal Lens
Hyponatraemia — diagnostic axis
Volume statusUrine NaDiagnoses
Hypovolaemic<20 mEq/LGI/skin losses (vomiting, diarrhoea, burns)
Hypovolaemic>20 mEq/LDiuretics, adrenal insufficiency, RTA
Euvolaemic>40 mEq/LSIADH, hypothyroidism, polydipsia
Hypervolaemic<20 mEq/LCCF, cirrhosis, nephrotic syndrome

SIADH criteria: true hypoosmolar hyponatraemia + urine osmolality >100 mOsm/kg + urine Na >40 + euvolaemic + normal thyroid/adrenal. Causes: SSRIs, carbamazepine, malignancy (SCLC), pulmonary/CNS disease. Treatment: fluid restriction first; hypertonic saline for symptomatic severe cases. Correction ceiling: 8 mEq/L in 24 h. Overcorrection → ODS (osmotic demyelination syndrome).

Hypernatraemia correction

Always a free-water deficit. Formula: Water deficit = 0.6 × weight × [(Na/140) − 1]. Replace with 0.45% saline or 5% dextrose. Correction rate: no faster than 0.5 mEq/L/hour or 10–12 mEq/L/day. Rapid correction → cerebral oedema (brain has made idiogenic osmoles).

Hyperkalaemia — C-B-D-E-R sequence

Calcium gluconate (membrane stabilisation, onset 1–3 min — first when ECG changes present) → Bicarbonate (if acidotic) → Dextrose-insulin (10 u actrapid + 50 mL 50% dextrose, lowers K by 0.5–1.5 mEq/L, onset 15–30 min) → Excretion (resonium, patiromer, SZC, loop diuretic) → RRT. Calcium does not lower K — it antagonises membrane depolarisation.

Hypokalaemia with hypertension — Conn syndrome

Hypokalaemia + hypertension + metabolic alkalosis + renal K wasting (UK:UCr elevated) + suppressed renin + elevated aldosterone = Primary Hyperaldosteronism. Workup: ARR (>30 with aldosterone >15 ng/dL) → confirmatory test → adrenal CT → adrenal vein sampling. Unilateral adenoma: adrenalectomy. Bilateral hyperplasia: spironolactone/eplerenone.

Metabolic alkalosis — urine chloride classification

Urine Cl <20 mEq/L = chloride-responsive (saline-responsive): vomiting, nasogastric drainage, antacid excess, post-diuretic state. Treat with IV normal saline. Urine Cl >20 = chloride-resistant: primary hyperaldosteronism, Cushing — saline will not correct; treat the cause. Alkalosis → tetany from reduced ionised calcium (alkalosis increases protein binding).

ODS: >8 mEq/L/day overcorrection Ca gluconate first in hyperkalaemia Conn: suppressed renin + ↑ aldosterone Urine Cl classifies metabolic alkalosis

Topic 06 · Nephrology
Dialysis & Transplantation
HD vs PD — key comparison
FeatureHaemodialysisPeritoneal Dialysis
SettingHospital/centre, 3×/weekHome (CAPD or APD)
Residual renal functionLost faster (haemodynamic stress)Better preserved
Solute clearanceMore efficient per session (KT/V ≥1.2)Continuous but lower per-session
ContraindicationsVascular access failurePrior abdominal surgery/adhesions, herniae
AccessAV fistula (preferred), graft, CVCTenckhoff catheter
Intra-dialytic hypotension (IDH)

Commonest HD complication (~20–30% sessions). Mechanism: UF rate exceeds plasma refilling. Management: stop UF, Trendelenburg, IV saline/hypertonic saline. Prevention: sodium profiling, cooled dialysate (35°C), UF rate limit <13 mL/kg/h, hold antihypertensives on dialysis day.

PD peritonitis

Diagnosis: effluent WBC >100/mm³ with >50% neutrophils. Commonest organism: coagulase-negative Staphylococcus. Treatment: intraperitoneal vancomycin + ceftazidime (empirical). Catheter removal: fungal peritonitis, refractory/relapsing peritonitis, faecal peritonitis, tunnel infection with peritonitis.

Transplant rejection — summary
TypeTimingMechanismIF patternTreatment
HyperacuteMinutes on tablePre-formed anti-HLA AbThrombosis, fibrinIrreversible; nephrectomy
Acute CellularWk 1–3 (peak)CD8+ T-cell mediatedTubulitis + interstitial infiltratePulse IV methylprednisolone ×3d
ChronicMonths–yearsT-cell + antibodyFibrosis, intimal hyperplasiaOptimise IS; no reversal

Hyperacute prevented by pre-transplant crossmatch. Standard triple IS: tacrolimus + MMF + prednisolone. Steroid-resistant acute rejection: ATG (anti-thymocyte globulin).

PTLD — post-transplant lymphoproliferative disorder

EBV-driven B-cell proliferation from immunosuppression-induced T-cell suppression. Presents months–years post-transplant. First step: reduction of immunosuppression (RIS) — stop MMF first. CD20+ disease not responding: rituximab. Aggressive disease: R-CHOP.

PD peritonitis: WBC >100 Hyperacute = pre-formed Ab ACR: pulse steroids PTLD: reduce IS first

Topic 07 · Nephrology
Hereditary, Vascular & Structural Nephrology
ADPKD — key facts
FeaturePKD1 (chromosome 16p)PKD2 (chromosome 4q)
Frequency~85%~15%
ProteinPolycystin-1Polycystin-2
ESRD median age~54 years~74 years
SeverityMore severeMilder
InheritanceAutosomal dominant (1 in 400–1000)

Earliest manifestation: hypertension (↑intrarenal RAAS). Progression marker: total kidney volume (TKV) on MRI. Treatment: tolvaptan (V2-receptor antagonist slows TKV growth — TEMPO trial). Diagnosis by ultrasound: Ravine criteria (age-dependent cyst counts).

Extrarenal manifestations: intracranial berry aneurysms (5–10%, most feared — SAH), hepatic cysts (commonest, ~80% by age 60, usually benign), mitral valve prolapse (~25%), aortic root dilatation, pancreatic and seminal vesicle cysts. MRA brain screening: indicated if family history of SAH, high-risk occupation, prior aneurysm — not routine for all.

Renal artery stenosis — FMD vs atherosclerotic
FeatureFibromuscular DysplasiaAtherosclerotic RAS
PatientYoung womenOlder, cardiovascular risk factors
LocationMid/distal renal arteryOstial/proximal
AngiographyString of beadsSmooth stenosis
TreatmentPTA alone (no stent)Medical therapy (ASTRAL, CORAL trials — stenting no benefit)

ACEi/ARB in RAS: contraindicated in bilateral RAS or RAS in a solitary kidney — loss of efferent arteriolar tone → acute GFR fall.

Malignant hypertension

Severe BP + papilloedema (Grade IV retinopathy) + AKI + MAHA (schistocytes). Fibrinoid necrosis of arterioles → RAAS activation → vicious cycle. Treatment: IV antihypertensives (labetalol, nicardipine). Critical rule: reduce MAP by no more than 20–25% in the first hour. Rapid normalisation → cerebral/renal hypoperfusion (autoregulation reset). Renal function may transiently worsen before improving.

HUS vs TTP
FeatureSTEC-HUSTTP
MechanismShiga toxin → endothelial injuryADAMTS13 deficiency → ultra-large vWF
TriggerE. coli O157:H7 (bloody diarrhoea)Autoantibody to ADAMTS13
Dominant organKidney (AKI)Brain (neuro symptoms)
TreatmentSupportive; avoid antibioticsPlasma exchange (urgent)
Age/contextChildren, food outbreakYoung women, idiopathic/drug

Both: MAHA (schistocytes) + thrombocytopenia + negative Coombs. In STEC-HUS: antibiotics lyse bacteria → massive Shiga toxin release → worsens clinical course. Plasma exchange is not indicated in STEC-HUS; it is essential in TTP (ADAMTS13 <10%).

ADPKD berry aneurysm: screen if FHx SAH FMD: PTA no stent MAP: max 25% drop in 1st hour HUS: no antibiotics

Nephrology Summative Revision · atsixty.com · Morning Rounds Series
For clinical reasoning practice, return to the seven Morning Rounds quizzes linked in the series index.