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I don't think we ever really got a lecture on the pathophys (at least not yet) of electrolyte changes in renal failure. The way I've been thinking about it is that if the kidney is generally actively secretes something, serum concentration will go up in RF, and if a solute is generally actively reabsorbed, serum concentration will go down in RF. This works for potassium (hyperkalemia), organic acids (metabolic acidosis), etc., but apparently, according to qbank anyway, you get hypernatremia in RF as well. I'm hoping that we're going to cover this in more detail this coming semester, but in the meantime, does anyone have a good explanation or a link to a good explanation of the pathophysiology of serum changes in acute and chronic renal failure?
Thanks a bunch!
Edit: new smiley?
Thanks a bunch!
Edit: new smiley?
