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Outline
Case Study Objectives
- Analyze and interpret clinical data and patient assessments to identify signs and symptoms of acute kidney injury (AKI) in a real-life patient scenario.
- Apply critical thinking skills to recognize the physiological mechanisms contributing to the development of AKI, considering factors such as dehydration, contrast dye exposure, and prolonged NPO status.
- Evaluate the appropriate nursing actions and interventions required at various stages of AKI management, including fluid resuscitation, diuretic therapy, and ongoing assessment.
- Anticipate and suggest potential preventive measures for AKI, emphasizing the importance of pre- and post-contrast scan IV fluid administration in vulnerable patients.
- Understand the significance of monitoring laboratory values, such as BUN, creatinine, GFR, and electrolytes, to assess kidney function and guide treatment decisions in AKI cases.
By actively engaging with this acute kidney injury case study, nursing students will enhance their clinical reasoning skills and gain valuable insights into the assessment, management, and prevention of AKI in real-world healthcare scenarios.
Kidney Injury Case Study
Ms. Barkley is a thin, frail 64-year-old female presenting from a nursing home for acute abdominal pain, nausea, and vomiting x 2 days. She receives a CT scan with IV contrast. Findings show no acute bleeding, but a possible small bowel obstruction. She is admitted for bowel rest, with the following written orders from the provider:
- Continuous Telemetry
- Strict I&O measurements
- Keep SpO2 > 92%
- Keep NPO (strict)
- Hydrocodone/Acetaminophen 5-325 mg PO q6h PRN moderate to severe pain
- Ondansetron 4mg PRN nausea
She is admitted to the unit at the beginning of shift, and the UAP reports the following vital signs:
HR 103
RR 16
BP 118/68
SpO2 96%
Pain 6/10
Which order would you question or request clarification for? Why?
- The Ondansetron order is incomplete. There is no route or frequency ordered
What additional nursing assessments need to be performed?
- Assess abdomen – inspect, auscultate, palpate and percuss. Assess for tenderness over specific areas, feel for masses, and look for guarding.
- Listen to heart and lung sounds to ensure no cardiac involvement
- Assess pain with a detailed pain assessment so that pain can be treated appropriately
- Assess skin – the patient has had nausea/vomiting for 2 days, there may be some dehydration – check for tenting.
At the end of the 12-hour shift, vital signs are as follows:
HR 96 RR 22
BP 147/80 SpO2 93%
Pain 3/10
The nurse recognizes that the patient has not voided all day and assists the patient to the bathroom. The patient voids 200 mL dark, concentrated urine.
What nursing action(s) should be implemented at this time? Who should this information be passed on to?
- Document the output, notify the provider of the decreased urine output
- This information needs to be passed onto the oncoming nurse so that he or she can closely monitor the patient’s urine output.
What diagnostic tests would you expect the provider to order? Why?
- Expect an order for a Basic Metabolic Panel or a Renal Function panel
- It seems like her kidneys aren’t making urine as they should, or she may be severely dehydrated. A chemistry panel can tell us more information about the source of decreased urine output.
Provider orders a 500 mL bolus of Normal Saline (0.9%) IV over 1 hour and a renal function panel, which is drawn promptly by the nurse. After 6 hours, Ms. Barkley still has had no further urine output. A bladder scan shows approximately 60 mL of urine in the bladder. A head-to-toe assessment now reveals crackles in Ms. Barkley’s lungs and her SpO2 is 89%
The renal function panel has resulted:
BUN 56 mg/dL
Na 132 mg/dL
Cr 3.6 mg/dL
Ca 7.7 mg/dL
GFR 47 mL/min/m2
Phos 4.8 mg/dL
K 5.5 mEq/L
Mg 1.4 mg/dL
What nursing action(s) should be implemented at this time?
- Administer O2 2 lpm via nasal cannula (to keep sats > 92%)
- Notify provider of lab results, especially BUN/Cr, GFR, and Potassium – as these indicate there is kidney involvement.
What orders should be anticipated from the provider?
- The patient may need more fluids, she’s been vomiting for 2 days and NPO for another 12 hours with no IV fluids.
- The patient may require diuretics to remove the excess fluid from her lungs and to determine the level of function of her kidneys
What is going on physiologically with Ms. Barkley at this time? Explain what contributed to the development of this condition
- Ms. Barkley seems to have developed an acute kidney injury or acute kidney failure.
- The likely contributors are the severe dehydration coupled with the IV contrast and 12+ hours of being NPO and having no IV fluids. This caused a low-flow state to the kidneys (pre-renal) as well as possible damage to the kidneys themselves because of the contrast (intra-renal).
The provider orders to give 1L bolus of Normal Saline (0.9%) over 1 hour, then 125 mL/hr of Normal Saline continuously. The provider also orders a one-time dose of 40 mg Furosemide IV push and to re-check the Renal Function Panel in 6 hours. Ms. Barkley diuresis approximately 600 mL in 2 hours and her lungs now sound clear to auscultation.
Over the next two days, Ms. Barkley’s hourly urine output begins to improve and her BUN, Creatinine, and GFR return to normal ranges. Her small bowel obstruction resolves on its own and she is able to begin taking PO food and fluids.
What could have been done, if anything, to prevent Acute Kidney Injury for Ms. Barkley?
- The best option would have been to give Ms. Barkley IV fluids before and after her contrast scan, and to make sure she had maintenance IV fluids infusing while she was NPO.
- Depending on the patient’s kidney function, it isn’t always preventable, but in this case, it seems there was more that could have been done.
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