APPROACH TO THE PATIENT WITH RENAL DISEASE
The patient with renal disease often comes to die attention of a physician because of mild, nonspecific signs and symptoms but may also present with severe, life-threatening manifestations of renal dysfunction. Certain signs and symptoms should alert the physician to the possibility that renal disease is present. Complaints of flank pain, dysuria, gross hematuria, or the passage of a renal stone are directly referable to the urinary tract. Other findings such as hypertension, edema, congestive heart failure, or constitutional symptoms of lethargy, anorexia, or pruritus are nonspecific but may reflect the impact of reduced renal function on other organ systems. The approach to the patient with suspected renal disease begins with a careful history and physical examination. Table 31-1 outlines some of the important features of the history and physical examination that should not be overlooked. A particular renal syndrome such as chronic renal failure, glomerulonephritis, urinary tract infection, or urinary tract obstruction is often suggested by the constellation of presenting signs and symptoms. This initial impression can then be used in the formulation of a differential diagnosis and in the design of a diagnostic evaluation.
- Radionuclide Imaging
- Blood Chemistries
- NORMAL INTESTINAL PHYSIOLOGY
- Diet
- Alterations in Drug Doses in Patients with Renal Failure
- CHARACTERISTICS OF ABDOMINAL PAIN
- Determination of Kidney Anatomy and Renal Blood Flow
- PHYSICAL EXAMINATION
- CARCINOMA OF THE PANCREAS - Clinical Manifestations
- CARCINOMA OF THE PANCREAS - Definition
- Miscellaneous
- CHROMIC PANCREATITIS
- CARCINOMA OF THE PANCREAS - Diagnosis
- Lower GI Bleeding
- POSTCAPILLARY PULMONARY HYPERTENSION
- PATHOGENESIS OF RESPIRATORY TRACT INFECTION
- ARTERIOSCLEROSIS OBLITERANS
- VENTRICULAR RHYTHM DISTURBANCES
- DC CARDIOVERSION AND DEFIBRILLATION
- Restrictive Cardiomyopathy
- Elimination of Waste Products of Metabolism and Drugs
- CLINICAL MANIFESTATIONS
- Comprehensive Health-care Program for Children in Foster Care
- CLASSIFICATION AND PATHOPHYSIOLOGY
- DRUG-ASSOCIATED RENAL INJURY
- Diagnosis
- CLINICAL MANIFESTATIONS OF MALABSORPTION
- GENERAL SURGERY IN THE PATIENT WITH HEART DISEASE
- New Eligibility System
- CIRCULATORY PHYSIOLOGY
- Proliferative Glomerulonephritis
- Vitamin Dresistant Rickets
- PULMONARY HEART DISEASE
- Pathogenic Mechanisms - Mechanism of Injury
- EMBOLIC DISEASE