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Vascular Injuries to the Kidneys

Vascular Injuries to the Kidneys-lecture 2013

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Vascular Injuries to the Kidneys-lecture 2013

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Page 1: Vascular Injuries to the Kidneys-lecture 2013

Vascular Injuries to the Kidneys

Page 2: Vascular Injuries to the Kidneys-lecture 2013

•Kidney filtering organ rich in blood supply

•Vascular injury could be…•Microvascular •Macrovascular

Page 3: Vascular Injuries to the Kidneys-lecture 2013

Macrovascular

• Renal Artery Stenosis• Atheroembolic renal

disease• Thromboembolic renal

disease• Renal Vein Thrombosis

Microvascular

•Malignant HTN• Hypertensive Nephrosclerosis• Thrombotic microangiopathy• Hemolytic-Uremic Syndrome (HUS)/

Thrombotic Thrombocytopenic Purpura (TTP)• Transplantation-Associated

Thrombotic Microangiopathy (Ta-Tma)• HIV-Related Tma• Radiation Nephropathy• Scleroderma (Progressive Systemic

Sclerosis)• Antiphospholipid Syndrome (Aps)• HELLP Syndrome• Sickle Cell Nephropathy

Page 4: Vascular Injuries to the Kidneys-lecture 2013

Macrovascularo Large-vessel renal artery occlusive disease can result

from o extrinsic compression of the vessel

o fibromuscular dysplasiaso atherosclerotic disease (most common)

o Any disorder that reduces perfusion pressure to the kidney can activate mechanisms to restore renal pressures at the expense of developing systemic

hypertension. o restoration of perfusion pressures can reverse these

pathways

Page 5: Vascular Injuries to the Kidneys-lecture 2013

• Renal artery stenosis • considered specifically treatable "secondary" cause of HTN

• Atherosclerotic renal artery stenosis (ARAS)• common (6.8% of a community-based sample >65 yo)• prevalence increases w/ age & w/ other vascular conditions • coronary artery disease (18–23%) &/or • peripheral aortic/lower extremity disease ( >30%)

• untreated, it progresses in 50% of cases over a 5-year period (sometimes to total occlusion) • Intensive treatment of arterial BP & statin therapy slow these

rates & improve clinical outcomes

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• Critical levels of stenosis lead to reduced perfusion pressure…• activates renin-angiotensin system• reduces sodium excretion• activates sympathetic adrenergic pathways

• Renovascular HTN treated w/ agents that block the renin-angiotensin system & other drugs that modify these pressor pathways• also treated w/ renal blood flow restoration by endovascular or

surgical revascularization

•most patients require continued antihypertensive therapy revascularization alone rarely lowers BP to normal

HTN

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Page 8: Vascular Injuries to the Kidneys-lecture 2013

• ARAS & systemic HTN: affect both poststenotic & contralateral kidneys reducing overall GFR in ARAS

• Ischemic nephropathy: when kidney function is threatened by large vessel disease

• Unlike FMD, ARAS develops in pts w/ other risk factors for atherosclerosis & commonly superimposed upon preexisting small vessel dse in the kidney d/t HTN, aging, & DM

• Nearly 85% of pts considered for renal revascularization have stage 3–5 CKD w/ GFR <60 mL/min per 1.73 m2. • The presence of ARAS is a strong predictor of morbidity- and

mortality-related cardiovascular events, independent of whether renal revascularization is undertaken.

Page 9: Vascular Injuries to the Kidneys-lecture 2013

• Diagnostic approaches to RAS depend on the specific issues to be addressed.

• Noninvasive characterization of the renal vasculature may be achieved by several techniques (Table 286-1).

• Activation of renin-angiotensin system is a key step in developing renovascular HTN, but it is transient.

• Renal artery velocities by Doppler UTZ >200 cm/s predict hemodynamically important lesions (> 60% vessel lumen occlusion)

• Renal resistive index has predictive value regarding the viability of the kidney operator- & institution- dependent

Page 10: Vascular Injuries to the Kidneys-lecture 2013

•Captopril-enhanced renography has a strong negative predictive value when entirely normal.

•Magnetic resonance angiography (MRA): less often used •gadolinium contrast associated w/ nephrogenic

systemic fibrosis

•Contrast-enhanced CT w/ vascular reconstruction: excellent vascular images & functional assessment (small risk of contrast toxicity)

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• FMD pts are younger females w/ otherwise normal vessels & long life expectancy• TX: respond well to percutaneous renal artery angioplasty

• For ARAS: If BP is controlled to goal levels & kidney function remains stable medical therapy w/ follow-up for disease progression is equally effective

•Medical therapy includes:• blockade of renin-angiotensin system, attainment of goal BPs,

cessation of tobacco, statins, & ASA

Page 12: Vascular Injuries to the Kidneys-lecture 2013

•Techniques of renal revascularization are improving.

•Major complications (9%) • renal artery dissection, capsular perforation,

hemorrhage, & occasional atheroembolic disease

•Renal blood flow usually restored by endovascular stenting

• recovery of renal function is limited to 25% of cases, no change in 50%, some deterioration in others

•When HTN is refractory to effective therapy, revascularization offers real benefits.

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Page 14: Vascular Injuries to the Kidneys-lecture 2013

Atheroembolic Renal Disease•Arise as a result of cholesterol crystals breaking free of

atherosclerotic vascular plaque & lodging in downstream microvessels

•Most events follow angiographic procedures (coronary vessels)• incidence has been increasing w/ more vascular

procedures & longer life spans • suspected in >3% of ESRD, elderly & likely

underdiagnosed• common in males, w/ history of DM, HTN, & ischemic

cardiac disease• strongly associated w/ aortic aneurysmal disease &

renal artery stenosis

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•asso w/ precipitating events: angiography, vascular surgery, anticoagulation w/ heparin, thrombolytic therapy, or trauma

•Clinical manifestations develop b/n 1 & 14 days after an inciting event• fever, abdominal pain, & weight loss <1/2 of pts• cutaneous manifestations: livedo reticularis & localized

toe gangrene are more common •worsening HTN & deteriorating kidney function are

common •progressive renal failure can occur & require dialysis

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• Laboratory findings…• rising creatinine, eosinophilia (60–80%), elevated

sedimentation rate, & hypocomplementemia (15%)

•Definitive diagnosis: kidney biopsy •microvessel occlusion w/ cholesterol crystals that

leave a "cleft" in the vessel•Diagnosis of exclusion

•Treatment…No effective therapy is available. Withdrawal of anticoagulation is recommended. Statin therapy may improve outcome.

Page 17: Vascular Injuries to the Kidneys-lecture 2013

Thromboembolic Renal Disease• can lead to declining renal function & HTN•difficult to diagnose & often overlooked (esp in elderly)

•Causes: local vessel abnormalities (local dissection, trauma, or

inflammatory vasculitis) hypercoagulability conditions (rare)distant embolic events (from left atrium in patients w/

AF or fat emboli from traumatized tissue --- large bone fractures)

Cardiac sources (vegetations from subacute bacterial endocarditis)

venous circulation if RL shunting occurs (through a patent foramen ovale)

Page 18: Vascular Injuries to the Kidneys-lecture 2013

• Acute arterial thrombosis• flank pain, fever, leukocytosis, nausea, & vomiting

• If kidney infarction results LDH rise to extreme levels

• both kidneys affected decline in renal function w/ a drop in urine output • single kidney involved minor renal function changes

• HTN related to sudden release of renin from ischemic tissue can develop rapidly, so long as some viable tissue in the "peri-infarct" border zone remains.

• Diagnosis of renal infarction may be established by vascular imaging with MR, CT angiography, or arteriography

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•Options for interventions of newly detected arterial occlusion:• surgical reconstruction, anticoagulation, thrombolytic

therapy, endovascular procedures, & supportive care (antihypertensive therapy)

•Depends upon the patient's overall condition, precipitating factors, magnitude of renal tissue & function at risk, & likelihood of recurrent events in the future

•Depending upon the precipitating event, surgical or thrombolytic therapies can sometimes restore kidney viability.

Page 20: Vascular Injuries to the Kidneys-lecture 2013

Malignant HTN• rapidly progressive BP elevations w/ target organ injury

(retinal hemorrhages, encephalopathy, & declining kidney function)

• If untreated, pts w/ target organ injury (papilledema & declining kidney function) mortality rates >50% over 6–12 months "malignant"

•Pathology: “fibroid necrosis” & “onionskin” lesion

•most common in patients w/ treated hypertension that neglect to take meds, or who use vasospastic drugs (cocaine)

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• Labs: rising serum creatinine, occ’lly hematuria & proteinuria, evidence of hemolysis (anemia, schistocytes, reticulocytosis) & changes associated w/ kidney failure

•African-American males are more likely affected•Genetic polymorphisms (MYH9) predispose to subtle

focal sclerosing glomerular disease

•Antihypertensive therapy: mainstay of Tx•effective BP reduction manifestations of vascular

injury including microangiopathic hemolysis & renal dysfunction can improve over time

Page 22: Vascular Injuries to the Kidneys-lecture 2013

Hypertensive Nephrosclerosis•Term used for a large portion of pts reaching ESRD w/o a

specific etiologic diagnosis

•Pathology: afferent arteriolar thickening w/ deposition of homogeneous eosinophilic material (hyaline arteriolosclerosis) asso w/ narrowing of vascular lumina

•Clinical manifestations: retinal vessel changes asso w/ HTN (arteriolar narrowing, crossing changes), LVH & elevated BP

•Antihypertensive therapy does NOT alter the course of kidney dysfunction

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Thrombotic Microangiopathy (TMA)• refers to injured endothelial cells that are thickened,

swollen, or detached mainly from arterioles & capillaries

•partial or complete occlusion by platelet & hyaline thrombi integral to the histopathology

•histologic result of microangiopathic hemolytic anemia (MAHA) consumes platelets & RBCs, characterized by thrombocytopenia and schistocytes

•Kidneys characterized by swelling of the endocapillary cells (endotheliosis), fibrin thrombi, platelet plugs, arterial intimal fibrosis, & membranoproliferative changes

Page 24: Vascular Injuries to the Kidneys-lecture 2013

Hemolytic-Uremic Syndrome (HUS)•4 variants

•D+ HUS•most common variant •associated w/ bacterial gastroenteritis•affects young children (<5 years)•>80% are preceded w/in a week by diarrhea (bloody)•GI symptoms: abdominal pain, cramping, & vomiting•Fever is ABSENT. •Neurologic symptoms are common (lethargy,

encephalopathy, seizures, even cerebral infarction) •pathogenic agent: shiga toxin/verotoxin (E.coli &

Shigella dysenteriae)

Page 25: Vascular Injuries to the Kidneys-lecture 2013

•STEC strain 0157:H7: most common shiga-toxigenic E. coli in US & Europe• shiga toxin enters the circulation binds to PMNs &

preferentially localizes in the kidney damages endothelial cells results in platelet aggregation initiates microangiopathic process

Streptococcus pneumoniae•another bacterium associated w/ HUS•produces neuraminidase cleaves N-acetyl neuraminic

acid moieties that cover the Thomsen-Friedenreich antigen on platelets & endothelial cells•Exposure of this normally cryptic antigen to preformed

IgM results in severe MAHA.

Page 26: Vascular Injuries to the Kidneys-lecture 2013

Atypical HUS (aHUS) • caused by congenital complement dysregulation• low C3 levels (characteristic of alternative pathway activation) •most common cause: deficiency of factor H• Factor H competes with factor B prevent formation of C3b,Bb &

acts as cofactor for factor I degrades C3b

Deficient for CHFR protein and factor H autoantibody–positive (DEAP) HUS • autoantibody is formed against factor H• deletion of 84-kb fragment of chromosome encoding for CFHR1 &

CFHR3• autoantibody blocks binding of factor H to C3b & surface-bound C3

convertase

Page 27: Vascular Injuries to the Kidneys-lecture 2013

Thrombotic Thrombocytopenic Purpura (TTP) • pentad (hemolytic anemia, thrombocytopenia, neurologic

symptoms, fever, & renal failure)• Classic TTP is differentiated from HUS by neurologic involvement. • absence or marked decreased activity in ADAMTS13 specific for

vWF (not universally present)• Even complete absence of ADAMTS13 alone does not produce

TTP. • initiated by additional trigger (infection, surgery, pancreatitis, or

pregnancy) •median age: 40 years• Higher frequency among blacks (incidence >9x higher)•Women: 3x incidence • Untreated TTP mortality rate >90%

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Acquired or Idiopathic TTP•Classic form•usually follows an infection, malignancy, or intense

inflammatory reaction (pancreatitis)•occurs w/ ADAMTS13 deficiency or its activity • result of an autoantibody(IgG or IgM) increase

clearance of ADAMTS13 or inhibit its activity

Upshaw-Schulman •hereditary form w/ congenital deficiency of ADAMTS13 • characterized by MAHA & thrombocytopenia• can start in the 1st weeks of life

Page 29: Vascular Injuries to the Kidneys-lecture 2013

Drug-induced TTP/TMA• complication of chemotherapeutic agents, immunosuppressive

agents, antiplatelet agents, & quinine • 2 mechanisms are responsible for drug-induced TMA• Endothelial damage dose-dependent

chemotherapeutic agents (mitomycin C, gemcitabine, etc.) & immunosuppressive agents (cyclosporine, tacrolimus, sirolimus)

• Induction of autoantibodies• Ticlopidine Suppress ADAMTS13 activity form autoantibody • Quinine autoantibodies against granulocytes, lymphocytes,

endothelial cells & platelet glycoprotein IbB/IX or IIb/IIIa complexes• Common in women

Page 30: Vascular Injuries to the Kidneys-lecture 2013

Treatment…•Autoantibody-mediated TTP & DEAP HUS: plasma exchange or

plasmapheresis (remove autoantibodies & replaces ADAMTS13) • Congenital TTP: Plasma infusion• Plasma exchange if larger volumes of plasma are needed

• TTP due to drug-induced autoantibodies responds well to plasma exchange (drugs that cause endothelial damage may not)•D+ HUS: supportive measures (Plasma exchange is not

effective)• aHUS: plasma infusion/exchange may be beneficial•Neuraminidase-associated HUS: Antibiotics & washed RBCs. • Plasma & WB should be avoided contain IgM w/c would

exacerbate the MAHA

Page 31: Vascular Injuries to the Kidneys-lecture 2013

Transplantation-Associated Thrombotic Microangiopathy (Ta-Tma)• develop after hematopoietic stem cell transplantation (HSCT)

8.2% • Etiologic factors :conditioning regimens, immunosuppression,

infections, & graft-versus-host disease• Other risk factors: female sex, age, & HLA-mismatched donor grafts• occurs w/in first 100 days after HSCT• high mortality rate (75% in 3 months)• Plasma exchange is beneficial in <50% • Calciuria inhibitors should be discontinued & substitute w/

daclizumab [antibody to IL-2receptor] • Rituximab & defibrotide may be helpful

• . Table 286-3 lists definitions of TA-TMA currently used for clinical trials. A firm diagnosis may be difficult because thrombocytopenia, anemia, and renal insufficiency are common in the posttransplant period.

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Page 33: Vascular Injuries to the Kidneys-lecture 2013

HIV-Related Tma

•seen in advanced AIDS & low CD4 count•Occasionally the 1st manifestation of HIV infection•(+) MAHA thrombocytopenia & renal failure are suggestive •Renal biopsy is required to establish the diagnosis •median platelet count: 77,000/L (10,000 to 160,000/L) •CMV coinfection may be a risk factor

•Tx: Plasma exchange + antiviral therapy

Page 34: Vascular Injuries to the Kidneys-lecture 2013

Radiation Nephropathy

•kidney 1 of the most radiosensitive organs• injury can result w/ as little as 4–5 Gy exposure •characterized by renal insufficiency, proteinuria & HTN•usually presenting >6 months after radiation

•Renal biopsy classic TMA in the kidney w/ damage to glomerular, tubular, & vascular cells

•Tx: No specific therapy is available

Page 35: Vascular Injuries to the Kidneys-lecture 2013

Scleroderma (Progressive Systemic Sclerosis)• affects the kidney 52% of subjects on follow-up [19%=

scleroderma renal crisis (SRC)]

• SRC • occurs in diffuse systemic sclerosis (12% vs. 2% in limited systemic

sclerosis)•most severe manifestation• characterized by accelerated HTN, rapid decline in renal function,

nephrotic proteinuria, & hematuria • Retinopathy & encephalopathy may accompany HTN• Salt & water retention w/ microvascular injury can lead to

pulmonary edema. • Other manifestations: myocarditis, pericarditis & arrhythmias

poor prognosis.

Page 36: Vascular Injuries to the Kidneys-lecture 2013

• Renal lesion in SRC: arcuate artery intimal & medial proliferation w/ luminal narrowing onionskinning Histologically indistinguishable from malignant HTN Fibrinoid necrosis & thrombosis: common

•Mortality rate: 30% at 3 years• 2/3 w/ SRC require dialysis [1/2 will recover renal function

(median time = 1 year)]•Anti-U3-RNP: identify young patients at risk for SRC •Anticentromere antibody (ACA): (-) predictor of SRC• Renal biopsy recommended for atypical renal involvement

(esp. if HTN is absent)

• TX: ACE inhibition 1st-line therapy •Goal: reduce systolic BP by 20 mmHg & diastolic by 10

mmHg q24 hours until BP is normal

Page 37: Vascular Injuries to the Kidneys-lecture 2013

Antiphospholipid Syndrome (Aps)

•vascular compartment w/in the kidney: main site of renal involvement •Arteriosclerosis in the arcuate & intralobular arteries are

common• In intralobular arteries (+) fibrous intimal hyperplasia

(intimal thickening sec. to intense myofibroblastic intimal cellular proliferation w/ extracellular matrix deposition) + onionskinning

•Renal biopsy: (+) TMA but (-) signs of MAHA & platelet consumption •TMA is especially common in catastrophic variant of APS

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•Can involve large vessels•Renal vein thrombosis can occur (suspected in pts w/

lupus anticoagulant LA + nephrotic range proteinuria) •Can progress to ESRD •Hypertension is common

•Treatment (APS):lifelong anticoagulationGlucocorticoids may be beneficial in accelerated HTNImmunosuppression & plasma exchange: helpful for

catastrophic episodes (but do not reduce recurrent thrombosis

Page 39: Vascular Injuries to the Kidneys-lecture 2013

HELLP Syndrome•hemolysis, elevated liver enzymes, low platelets •dangerous complication of pregnancy (0.5–0.9% of all

pregnancies; 10–20% w/ severe preeclampsia)•mortality rate: b/n 7.4 & 34%•3rd trimester, 10% before week 27 & 30% postpartum•nearly 20% are not preceded by preeclampsia•Renal failure in 1/2 of patients (etiology is not well

understood)•Renal histo findings= TMA w/ endothelial cell swelling &

occlusion of capillary lumens ; (-) luminal thrombi • shares many features w/ other forms of MAHA •both aHUS & TTP flares can be triggered by pregnancy•Aps patients have a higher risk for HELLP

Page 40: Vascular Injuries to the Kidneys-lecture 2013

Diagnosis…•A history of MAHA episodes before pregnancy is

helpful. •Reduced serum levels of ADAMTS13 (30–60%) •Some suggest LDH to AST ratio for diagnosis•Antithrombin III decreased in HELLP but not in TTP•d-dimer elevated in HELLP but not in TTP

Treatment…Glucocorticoids may decrease inflammatory markersPlasma exchange: considered if hemolysis is refractory

to glucocorticoids &/or delivery (esp if TTP is not ruled out)

Page 41: Vascular Injuries to the Kidneys-lecture 2013

Sickle Cell Nephropathy• result from occlusion of vasa recta in the renal medulla• The low partial pressure of oxygen and high osmolarity predispose

to hemoglobin S polymerization & RBC sickling.

• Sequelae hyposthenuria, hematuria, & papillary necrosis • Kidney’s response: increase blood flow & GFR mediated by

prostaglandins• SCD pts have greater GFR reduction by NSAIDS

• (+) enlarged glomeruli• Intracapillary fragmentation and phagocytosis of sickled

erythrocytes responsible for membranoproliferative glomerulonephritis-like lesion• (+) Proteinuria (20–30%)

Page 42: Vascular Injuries to the Kidneys-lecture 2013

•ACE inhibitors reduce proteinuria ((data lacks on prevention of renal failure)•SCD pts are more prone to acute renal failure•The cause reflects microvascular occlusion asso w/ nontraumatic rhabdomyolysis, high fever, infection, & generalized sickling

•(+) Chronic kidney disease in 12–20% •HTN is uncommon

Page 43: Vascular Injuries to the Kidneys-lecture 2013

Renal Vein Thrombosis (RVT)•May present w/ flank pain, tenderness, hematuria, rapid

decline in renal function, & proteinuria OR it can be silent• Left renal vein is more common; 2/3 are bilateral• Etiologies divided into 3 broad categories:

endothelial damage - Homocystinuria, endovascular intervention, & surgery

venous stasis - dehydration- compression & kinking renal veins from retroperitoneal processes {retroperitoneal fibrosis & abdominal neoplasms}

hypercoagulable states - Aps, proteins C & S, antithrombin deficiency, factor V Leiden, disseminated malignancy, & OCPs

Page 44: Vascular Injuries to the Kidneys-lecture 2013

•Diagnostic screening: Doppler ultrasound (more sensitive than UTZ alone) •CT angiography: most sensitive test (nearly 100%

sensitive)•MR angiography: more expensive & requires sedation in

pedia pts.

Treatment…•Anticoagulation & tx for the underlying cause•Endovascular thrombolysis: severe cases•Nephrectomy: life-threatening complications•Vena caval filters: prevent migration of the thrombi