This episode unpacks acute kidney injury and chronic kidney disease with a focus on older adults. Loretta and James walk through causes, manifestations, diagnostics, and management, using real-world case studies and practical nursing insights. Expect focused discussion on exam-critical concepts and actual clinical scenarios.
Chapter 1
Loretta Swift
Hi everyone! Welcome to another episode of NSG4052 Renal. Iâm Loretta Swift, and with me as always is James A. Bond. Today, weâre deep diving intoâwhat else?ârenal failure. You know, I remember when I was a brand new nurse, the whole idea of a kidney âfailingâ sounded so catastrophic⊠and honestly, it is. But itâs also more complex than just a switch flipping off.
James A. Bond
Absolutely, Loretta. And hello from across the pond, everyone. Renal failure is all about the kidneys losing their knack for doing the basic jobs: excreting waste, keeping the fluids and electrolytes in a delicate dance, the acid-base thingâweâll unpack all of that. Whether itâs partial or total, when kidney function drops, nothing in the body escapes. Honestly, the impact is systemic and, well, itâs life-changing for patients and their families. And it can be acuteâsomething that sneaks up or hits suddenly, as with infection or surgeryâor chronic, which unfortunately is progressive and doesnât reverse.
Loretta Swift
Yeah, and you know, one thing that stuck with meâIâll never forget my very first patient in total renal failure. The family made all the difference; they learned, they adapted, and it just reinforced how this isnât a condition only for the person in the bed. It shakes up the entire household, jobs, food at the dinner table, everything. And acute kidney injuryâAKIâsometimes gets better, sometimes not. Chronic kidney disease? Thatâs a whole journey, and not an easy one. Letâs walk through what happens and what we, as nurses, really watch for.
Chapter 2
James A. Bond
So, letâs break down AKI. There are three main types: prerenal, intrarenal, and postrenal. You might remember those from class. Prerenal is all about the plumbing before the kidneyâsay, severe dehydration, heart failure, hypovolemia. Basically, not enough blood gets to the kidney. It accounts for, what, around sixty percent of cases, Loretta?
Loretta Swift
Yeah, I always remember it as âbefore the kidney,â like a traffic jam upstream. And older adults? Double risk with chronic hypertension, volume depletion, even over-the-counter NSAID useâthink aspirin or ibuprofen. I had a lady whose only issue was too many âheadache pills.â That alone triggered her AKI when she got the flu.
James A. Bond
Spot on. Then, intrarenalâdirect hit to the nephrons themselves. That could be ischemia from prolonged low oxygen, nephrotoxic drugs like IV contrast, or diseases like glomerulonephritis. Iâll never forget a patient post-angiogram⊠contrast dye did a number on him. After surgery, his creatinine shot up. Itâs why we have to flag kidney function before these procedures, especially in elderly folks who might already have one foot in CKD.
Loretta Swift
And postrenal is a bit rarerâless than ten percentâbut dramatic. Think blockages: BPH, kidney stones, strictures, tumors. Or even trauma. If that urine canât leave, it backs up. I once had a guy with bilateral stonesâhydro-nephrosis in both kidneys. You fix the blockage quick, and sometimes you can turn things around; if not, the damage can stick around for good.
James A. Bond
Letâs not forget risk factors: besides the usual suspects, things like ongoing hypovolemia, repeated admissionsâjust being in the hospital and exposed to nephrotoxins. And with older adults, every additional med is another gamble. Spotting the risk early makes a world of difference.
Chapter 3
Loretta Swift
So, AKI isnât just one long declineâitâs got stages. First up is the oliguric phaseâless than 400 milliliters of urine per day, often within a week of injury. Your patient may be puffy, hypertensive, and showing all the signs. For example, case J.K.âa construction worker, fell off a roof, a mess of trauma and blood loss. He started passing less and less urineâclassic oliguria. Fatigued, high BUN and creatinine, his blood pressure was sky high. Thatâs the oliguric phase: not enough pee, metabolic acidosis, hyperkalemia, risk of serious complications.
James A. Bond
Exactly. Then, after the oliguric phase, the kidneys sometimes go into a kind of overdrive: the diuretic phase. Urine output suddenly jumpsâsometimes two liters or more overnight. And it can be a surprise. But itâs not always good news straight away. The kidneys might excrete water, but not concentrate urine yet, risking dehydration, hypotension, and electrolyte lossâhyponatremia, especially. Youâve gotta watch vitals closely and replace fluids carefully.
Loretta Swift
Right, and after that, recovery phase. You see the labs normalize, GFR rises, BUN and creatinine trend down. But in the elderly, or with major complications, sometimes recovery isnât total. Iâve had patients who hovered at early CKD for months. These phasesâoliguric, diuretic, recoveryâthey really help you gauge how things are progressing. And the labs! Iâm always quizzing my students: Tell me whatâs happening to BUN, creatinine, GFR, potassium. AKI changes them allâwatch for big swings in those values.
Chapter 4
James A. Bond
Diagnosing AKI, compared to, say, a simple UTI, is a bit more involved. Youâll rely on everything: serum creatinine, BUN, checking urine output, urinalysis for casts or protein. A renal ultrasound is king for ruling out obstructions, while CT might be next, but, and this is a biggieâcontrast is a no-go if possible. In some cases, a biopsy is the gold standard, especially if we canât pin down the cause, but thatâs not for everyone.
Loretta Swift
So true. And older folks? Have to be twice as careful with diagnosticsâyou donât want to push them into contrast-induced nephropathy. I had an elderly patient come in for a âroutineâ scanâhe wound up in full-blown AKI because of the dye. It was that delicate balance of working with radiology, nephrology, and pharmacy that actually saved himâeveryone talked, watched his trends, and adjusted the plan together. Thatâs interprofessional gold.
James A. Bond
And sometimes none of that is enough. We look at when to start renal replacement therapyâRRT. The big flags are fluid overload, stubborn hyperkalemia, rising acidosis, BUN over 120, altered mental status, or pericardial problems. As for modalities: peritoneal dialysis isnât as common in AKI, but intermittent hemodialysis or continuous renal replacementâCRRTâmay be lifesavers, especially for hemodynamically unstable patients.
Loretta Swift
It all comes back to early detection, communication, and having a team that listens. Thatâs honestly what makes the difference, especially in our older crowd.
Chapter 5
Loretta Swift
Alright, shifting gears to chronic kidney diseaseâCKD. The big difference? Itâs slow, sneaky, and once youâve lost the nephrons, they donât come back. CKD is seriously underdiagnosed, especially in older adults. You could have a patient with a GFR under 60 for months before anybody notices. And a lot of folks donât show symptoms until itâs advanced.
James A. Bond
Spot on, Loretta. Leading causes are diabetes and hypertension. Stage-wise, CKD goes from one to fiveâstage one being a normal or mildly reduced GFR, stage five is end-stage renal disease, GFR less than fifteen. I had a gentleman in the UK, years of poorly controlled type 2 diabetes, who came in for pruritusâintense, all-consuming itching. Turned out he was in advanced CKD with mineral deposits in the skin. Thatâs what chronic kidney failure can doâfluid overload, elevated BUN and creatinine, anemia, hyperkalemia, metabolic acidosis⊠it literally touches every organ system.
Loretta Swift
Absolutely. And youâll see issues from neuro changesâfatigue, confusionâto GI symptoms, anemia from low erythropoietin, bleeding risks, bone disease, even reproductive changes. For nursing students, remember to connect elevated BUN and creatinine with declining GFR, and ask about subtle symptoms: âHave you felt itchier? More tired? Less hungry?â Sometimes those little things are the only clues CKD is getting worse.
Chapter 6
James A. Bond
Medications are tricky in kidney diseaseâdosingâs a constant challenge. Many drugs, like NSAIDs or ACE inhibitors, are nephrotoxic or need renal dosing. I canât count the number of times Iâve seen an elderly patientâs AKI worsened because they didnât know which meds to avoid. It takes both teaching and vigilance. And with CKD, you need to think about epoetin alfa for anemia, phosphate binders for bone disease, careful use of antihypertensives.
Loretta Swift
And the diet sideâoh, it gets complicated! Youâve got to adjust sodium, potassium, phosphate, and protein depending on the stage. Pre-dialysis? Low protein. On hemodialysis? Need more. Phosphate restriction means watching dairy and meats. And with so many processed foods, hidden sodium is everywhereâwe literally go through food labels together, I always say, âIf the sodiumâs above 200mg per serving, letâs leave it on the shelf.â Fluid restrictionâs another monster, especially for those used to chugging water. I teach patients tricks, like chewing gum or freezing grapes, to manage thirst without blowing their weight targets.
James A. Bond
Thatâs such practical advice. Itâs a constant balancing actâkeeping nutrition up while protecting whatâs left of the kidneys. Having a dietitian on board is a must, really.
Chapter 7
Loretta Swift
So, bringing it all togetherâitâs about what nurses can do for these patients, right? Key nursing diagnoses youâll see: fluid and electrolyte imbalance, risk for infection, impaired skin integrity, anxiety, and always, always patient teaching. Teaching isnât just about spitting out factsâitâs helping patients recognize swelling, fatigue, mood changes. âCall me if you gain two kilos in a week!â or âLetâs talk about whatâs in that energy drink.â
James A. Bond
And, for those prepping for examsâhereâs my favourite tip: get really clear on AKI versus CKD. Look for sudden versus gradual onset, lab patterns, and reversibility. If they ask, âWhich patient is most likely to recover?ââitâs the AKI one, usually. Remember, infection is the top cause of death in AKI, but cardiovascular disease is the killer in CKD. Distinguishing those will save you points.
Loretta Swift
Exactly. And donât forget the emotional side. Supporting patients through denial, fear, or grief is just as important as the technical stuff. Sometimes a friendly, âHey, youâre not alone. Weâve got a plan,â means the world.
James A. Bond
Well said, Loretta. This stuff can feel overwhelming, but itâs all about breaking it down for yourself and your patients. And on that note, shall we wrap, Loretta?
Loretta Swift
Yeah, letâs leave it there for today. Thanks for tuning in to NSG4052 Renal. Weâll be back to tackle more real-world renal scenarios and keep you sharp for that next examâor your next shift. James, always a pleasure chatting with you.
James A. Bond
The pleasureâs all mine, Loretta. Take care, everyoneâuntil next time, stay curious and keep caring.
About the podcast
Content review for weeks 7, 8, 9 Renal disorders and related conditions.