Renal tubular acidosis
From IDWiki
Definition
- Group of diseases characterized by non-anion gap metabolic acidosis and preserved renal function
Types
Type I: hypokalemic distal
- Caused by defects in distal tubular H+ secretion
- Hypokalemia, positive urine anion gap, urine pH >5.5
- Etiology
- Hereditary
- Genetic: sickle cell; Fabry disease; Wilson disease; elliptocytosis
- Medullary cystic kidney disease
- Autoimmune: Sjögren syndrome, systemic lupus erythematosus
- Nephrocalcinosis/hypercaliuria
- Dysproteinemias: amyloidosis, cryoglobulinemia, hypergammaglobulinemia
- Drugs: amphotericin B, lithium, analgesic abuse
- Tubulointerstitial disease: reflux nephropathy, obstrctive uropathy, kidney transplant rejection
Type II: proximal
- Caused by proximal tubular bicarbonate reabsorption
- Hypokalemia, negative urine anion gap, urine pH variable
- Etiology
- Primary (hereditary or sporadic)
- Hereditary carbonic anhydrase deficiency
- Fanconi syndrome
Type IV: hyperkalemic distal
- Caused by impaired ammoniagenesis, often caused by hypoaldosteronism
- Hyperkalemia, positive urine anion gap, urine pH <5.5
- Etiology
- Primary aldosterone deficiency (Addison disease)
- Hyporeninemic hypoaldosteronism
- Acute glomerulonephritis
- Chronic nephropathy
- Diabetes (most common cause)
- Systemic lupus erythematosus
- AIDS
- Aldosterone resistance:
- Tubulointerstitial disease: urinary obstruction, sickle cell disease, medullary cystic kidney disease, and kidney transplant rejection
- Drugs: ACE inhibitors, cyclooxygenase inhibitors, trimethoprim, heparin
- Mixed proximal/distal
- Carbonic anhydrase mutations
- Drugs: topiramate
Risk Factors
- Type IV: diabetes
Investigations
- Serum electrolytes
- Normal anion gap metabolic acidosis
- Hyperkalemia (type IV)
- Urine anion gap: UNa + UK - UCl
- If positive, suggests presence of ammonium
- If kidneys are responding properly, the UAG should be negative
- If defect in acid excretion, UAG should be positive
- Urine pH
Type 1 | Type 2 | Type 4 | |
---|---|---|---|
Acidosis | Severe | Moderate | Mild |
Serum K | ↓ / ↑* | ↓ | ↑ |
Serum HCO |
Variable | 10-20 | >17 |
Urine pH | >5.3 | <5.3 | <5.3 |
Urine AG | + | ± | + |
- a hyperkalemic Type 1 RTA is possible with urinary obstruction, sickle cell, lupus, and renal transplant