Preoperative Evaluation of Patients with Renal Dysfunction
🎯 Goals of Preoperative Evaluation
- Assess the severity and type of renal impairment (AKI vs CKD)
- Evaluate end-organ effects of uremia
- Optimize fluid, electrolyte, and acid-base status
- Adjust medication dosing and plan for nephrotoxic agents
- Plan dialysis timing if required
- Anticipate anesthesia-related complications
🔬 1. Detailed History
|
Focus Area |
What to Ask / Look For |
|
Cause of renal dysfunction |
Diabetes, hypertension, glomerulonephritis, obstructive uropathy |
|
Dialysis history |
Hemodialysis (HD) vs Peritoneal dialysis (PD), last session, vascular access, dry weight |
|
Uremic symptoms |
Nausea, vomiting, pruritus, fatigue, confusion, anorexia |
|
Volume status |
Thirst, orthopnea, pedal edema, weight gain/loss |
|
Comorbidities |
Cardiovascular disease (common), DM, anemia, bone disease |
|
Medications |
Nephrotoxics (NSAIDs, aminoglycosides), ACE/ARBs, diuretics, insulin |
🧍♂️ 2. Physical Examination
- Volume status
- Dry mucosa, low JVP → hypovolemia
- Edema, raised JVP, rales → fluid overload
- Cardiovascular
- Pericardial rub (uremic pericarditis)
- BP: Hypertension is common; hypotension in volume-depleted
- Neurological
- Confusion, lethargy, seizures (uremic encephalopathy)
- Signs of anemia – Pallor, fatigue
- Signs of bone disease – Bone tenderness, deformities (in advanced CKD)
🧪 3. Laboratory Evaluation
|
Test |
Interpretation & Importance |
|
Serum Creatinine & BUN |
For GFR estimation; BUN > 60 mg/dL → uremic symptoms |
|
eGFR (CKD-EPI) |
Classify CKD stages (G1–G5) |
|
Electrolytes |
Hyperkalemia, hyponatremia, hyperphosphatemia |
|
Calcium & Phosphate |
↓ Ca²⁺, ↑ PO₄³⁻ common in CKD |
|
ABG |
Metabolic acidosis (non-anion gap or high anion gap) |
|
CBC |
Anemia (normocytic, normochromic), platelets for bleeding risk |
|
LFTs, glucose |
Assess for comorbidities |
|
Coagulation profile |
Uremia-induced platelet dysfunction, INR if liver disease |
|
ECG |
Look for peaked T-waves, arrhythmias (hyperkalemia) |
|
CXR |
Pulmonary edema, pleural effusion in fluid overload |
|
ECHO |
LVH, systolic/diastolic dysfunction, pericardial effusion |
🧫 4. Classification of CKD (Based on KDIGO Guidelines)
|
Stage |
eGFR (mL/min/1.73 m²) |
Clinical Implication |
|
G1 |
≥ 90 |
Normal or high GFR, but other evidence of CKD |
|
G2 |
60–89 |
Mild ↓ GFR |
|
G3a |
45–59 |
Moderate ↓ |
|
G3b |
30–44 |
Moderate-severe ↓ |
|
G4 |
15–29 |
Severe ↓ |
|
G5 |
< 15 |
Kidney failure (often dialysis-dependent) |
💊 5. Medication Review & Adjustments
|
Drug Type |
Adjustment Needed |
|
Nephrotoxic drugs |
Avoid NSAIDs, aminoglycosides, contrast agents |
|
Water-soluble opioids |
Prefer fentanyl/remifentanil over morphine |
|
Muscle relaxants |
Cisatracurium preferred (organ-independent) |
|
Sedatives |
Midazolam may accumulate; titrate carefully |
|
Insulin/oral antidiabetics |
Reduce dose (↓ renal clearance) |
|
Antihypertensives |
Hold ACEi/ARBs on surgery day to avoid hypotension |
🫀 6. Cardiovascular Risk Assessment
CKD is a cardiovascular risk equivalent.
- ECG and ECHO mandatory if reduced EF, valvular disease suspected
- Consider stress testing or cardiology clearance in moderate-high risk
- Optimize BP preoperatively (target: < 140/90 mmHg)
🧃 7. Volume & Electrolyte Optimization
- Hyperkalemia
- Treat if K⁺ > 5.5 mEq/L or ECG changes
- Insulin + glucose, calcium gluconate, salbutamol, dialysis
- Acidosis
- NaHCO₃ if severe (< 7.2); avoid overcorrection
- Fluid status
- Avoid both overload and hypovolemia
- Use balanced crystalloids (Plasma-Lyte or NS cautiously)
🩸 8. Hematologic Evaluation
- Anemia common in CKD
- Hb < 10 g/dL → Consider ESA, iron, blood transfusion
- Platelet dysfunction due to uremia
- Risk of bleeding despite normal platelet count
- DDAVP (0.3 mcg/kg) can be given pre-op if bleeding risk
- Avoid regional anesthesia if uremic bleeding risk persists
🧼 9. Dialysis Planning
|
Dialysis Status |
Recommendation |
|
On maintenance HD |
Dialyze within 24 hrs pre-op (preferably same day) |
|
Peritoneal dialysis |
Drain abdomen before GA; watch for hypercarbia, aspiration |
|
Not on dialysis yet |
Consider nephrology consult if GFR < 15 mL/min/1.73 m² |
Monitor:
- Dry weight
- Electrolytes (especially K⁺, Na⁺)
- Volume status
🚫 Red Flags Needing Optimization Before Elective Surgery
✅ K⁺ > 5.5 mEq/L
✅ Severe metabolic acidosis (pH < 7.2)
✅ Pulmonary edema / CHF
✅ Active uremic symptoms (encephalopathy, pericarditis)
✅ Severe anemia (Hb < 8 g/dL)
✅ Coagulopathy not corrected

