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| Uremia Classification and external resources |
|
| Urea | |
| ICD-10 | R39.2 |
| ICD-9 | 585-586, 788.9 |
| DiseasesDB | 26060 |
| eMedicine | med/2341 |
| MeSH | D014511 |
Uremia is a term used to loosely describe the illness accompanying kidney failure (also called renal failure). In kidney failure, urea and other waste products, which are normally excreted into the urine, are retained in the blood. Early symptoms include anorexia and lethargy, and late symptoms can include decreased mental acuity and coma. It is usually diagnosed in kidney dialysis patients when the glomerular filtration rate, a measure of kidney function, is below 50% of normal.[1]
Azotemia is another word that refers to high levels of urea, but is used primarily when the abnormality can be measured chemically but is not yet so severe as to produce symptoms. Uremia can also result in fibrinous pericarditis. There are many dysfunctions caused by uremia affecting many systems of the body, such as blood (lower levels of erythropoietin), sex (lower levels of testosterone/estrogen) and bones (osteoporosis and metastatic calcifications).
Causes
Besides renal failure, the level of urea in the blood can also be increased by:
- increased production of urea in the liver, due to:
- high protein diet
- increased protein breakdown (surgery, infection, trauma, cancer)
- gastrointestinal bleeding
- drugs (e.g. tetracyclines and corticosteroids)
- decreased elimination of urea, due to:
- decreased blood flow through kidney (e.g. hypotension, cardiac failure)
- urinary outflow obstruction
- dehydration
- chronic infection of the kidney, such as chronic pyelonephritis
References
- ^ Meyer TW and Hostetter, TH (2007). "Uremia". N Engl J Med 357 (13): 1316. doi:. PMID 17898101. Full text.
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Wikipedia content modification information:
- This page was last modified on 12 October 2008, at 02:23.
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