Polyuria Flashcards

1
Q

What is the difference between polyuria and urinary frequency

A

Both involve passing urine more often than before

Polyuria = abnormally large volumes passed
Urinary frequency = reduced/normal volume

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2
Q

What are the ddx for polyuria

A
T1DM/T2DM
Diuretics
HF
Hypercalcaemia
Hyperthyroidism
Primary polydipsia
Hypokalaemia
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3
Q

How can chronic renal failure and hypercalcaemia cause polyuria?

How can steroids and Cushings syndrome induce diabetes mellitus

A

CRF and hypercalcaemia induces nephrogenic diabetes insipidus

Steroids and Cushing’s syndrome induces diabetes mellitus

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4
Q

What diagnosis does nocturia make LESS likely

A

Primary polydipsia

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5
Q

Fatigue, weight loss and recurrent infections are all features of?

A

Diabetes mellitus

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6
Q

What may lower urinary tract symptoms (LUTS) - frequency, urgency, hesitancy, terminal dribbling and incomplete voiding indicate?

A

Pathology of bladder or outflow tract (e.g. prostatism in men, detrusor instability/prolapse in women)

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7
Q

Pain, frequency, change in urine colour and smell all indicate what?

A

UTI.

UTIs would cause increased urinary frequency, but NOT polyuria

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8
Q

In elderly patients, what is a common cause of polyuria?

A

History of cancer or bone metastasis, as this increases likelihood of hypercalcaemia which can cause polyuria

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9
Q

Patients with a history of psychiatric disorders may be more likely to have what?

A

Primary polydipsia

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10
Q

Which drug given in bipolar disorder can cause nephrogenic diabetes insipidus

A

Lithium

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11
Q

Which investigations should be done in someone with polyuria

A
  1. Capillary blood glucose
  2. Urinalysis - exclude UTI (UTIs give urinary frequency not polyuria), glucosuria and ketonuria are signs of DM
  3. Fasting plasma glucose (if cap blood glucose is high)
  4. Urine osmolality - high urine osmolality = kidney failing to reabsorb solutes. low urine osmolality = kidney failing to reabsorb water (ADH deficient)
  5. Electrolytes - primary polydipsia = low serum sodium. In all other pathologies, serum sodium will be high
  6. Urine, creatinine and eGFR
  7. Serum calcium - hypercalcaemia is a cause of polyuria
  8. TFTs - hyperthyroidism causes polyuria
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12
Q

What is diabetes insipidus?

A

Problem with the ADH pathway means that kidneys don’t concentrate urine and the patient passes lots of urine as a result

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13
Q

What are the different types of diabetes insipidus

A
  1. Cranial/central - reduced/absent ADH secretion due to HPG axis defect. Causes are head trauma, pituitary tumours, craniopharyngiomas or metastases, surgery, vascular lesions and meningitis.
  2. Nephrogenic - kidneys become less sensitive to ADH - so don’t respond to the signals to concentrate urine. Causes include renal damage (low potassium, high Ca, Li, pyelonephritis, hydronephrosis)
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14
Q

How do you distinguish between cranial and nephrogenic diabetes?

A

Do the water deprivation test

Give desmopressin (ADH analogue) - if cranial diabetes insipidus - the urine will be able to be concentrated. If nephrogenic diabetes insipidus, the urine will still be dilute

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15
Q

In someone with polyuria who has normal plasma glucose and normal urine osmolality, what is the likely diagnosis?

A

Solute diuresis e.g. due to drugs or contrast agent

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16
Q

How do you manage cranial diabetes insipidus?

A
  1. Fluid intake
  2. Investigate underlying cause - e.g. MRI head to look for pituitary tumour
  3. Replacement ADH
17
Q

Which medications are used in nephrogenic insipidus?

A

Chlorpropamide, carbamazepine

18
Q

Young age, polydipsia, polyuria, weight loss and recurrent infections all point to what diagnosis?

A

T1DM

19
Q

DKA cannot occur in which form of diabetes

A

T2DM

20
Q

What is kussmaul breathing and what causes it

A

Rapid deep inspiration - it can be caused by DKA

21
Q

Patients with polyuria, constipation, fatigue, back pain, normocytic anaemia and renal impairments may be due to what malignant cause

A

Hypercalcaemia due to bone malignancy

If suspected, do serum calcium.

Hypercalcaemia means arrange: ALP, serum and urine electrophoresis (look for paraprotein found in multiple myeloma), lumbar radiograph

22
Q

HHS is a complication of which condition

A

T2DM

Severe hyperglycaemia in absence of ketosis