Chronic kidney disease in type 2 diabetes: introduction

Published on August 31, 2023   41 min

A selection of talks on Gastroenterology & Nephrology

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0:00
Hello, I'm Professor Merlin Thomas from the Department of Diabetes here at Melbourne's Monash University, and it's my pleasure to be talking to you today about chronic kidney disease in type 2 diabetes. As you well know, chronic kidney disease is a very common occurrence across the globe. Most of those cases of chronic kidney disease are due to diabetes. Diabetes is on the rise and so is chronic kidney disease. Understanding why diabetes causes the damage that it does and how it progresses to result in impaired kidney function and other comorbidities associated with renal disease will be covered in this talk.
0:44
Just an overview of this talk to begin with. This talk is going to cover, first of all, what is diabetic kidney disease. Then, second, how common it is to have kidney disease in people with diabetes. We're then going to look at how diabetes actually causes kidney disease and the underlying pathophysiological mechanisms. Fourthly, we're going to actually look at the pathological damage that diabetes does to the kidney. Finally, we're going to explore why that damage is so important for the lives and the outcomes of patients with type 2 diabetes in particular.
1:24
Chronic kidney disease is not something that you can easily pick up in patients with diabetes. In other words, it's not a clinical diagnosis. Not like heart failure or cough or pneumonia. Most people with chronic kidney disease don't know that they have it. They have few signs or no symptoms at all. In fact, many of them completely ignore their kidneys or think their kidneys are working just fine because they continue to make urine, but, in fact, you need to be able to understand that patients with chronic kidney disease need to be identified by measurements of their kidney function. Most easily done by estimating their glomerular filtration rate. When their glomerular filtration rate is below a level of 60 ml/min/1.73 m^2 or, if you like, two standard deviations below the mean of what a normal GFR should be. Then, their GFR is abnormally low. Equally in individuals with an elevated urinary albumin that implies that the kidney function is abnormal. Generally, we don't use the term diabetic kidney disease outside of when we talk about pathology because in the clinical setting, It is almost impossible to determine whether someone has got damage due to diabetes or the comorbidity associated with their diabetes, like hypertension, obesity, and atherosclerotic disease.
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Chronic kidney disease in type 2 diabetes: introduction

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