Brunner & Suddarth's Textbook of Medical-Surgical Nursing 14e (Hinkle 2017) - Fluid and Electrolytes: Balance and Disturbance Related

Review Brunner & Suddarth's Textbook of Medical-Surgical Nursing 14e (Hinkle 2017) - Fluid and Electrolytes: Balance and Disturbance related questions and content

You are the nurse caring for a 77-year-old male patient who has been involved in a motor vehicle accident. You and your colleague note that the patients labs indicate minimally elevated serum creatinine levels, which your colleague dismisses. What can this increase in creatinine indicate in older adults?

  • A. Substantially reduced renal function
  • B. Acute kidney injury
  • C. Decreased cardiac output
  • D. Alterations in ratio of body fluids to muscle mass
Correct Answer: A

Rationale: Normal physiologic changes of aging, including reduced cardiac, renal, and respiratory function, and reserve and alterations in the ratio of body fluids to muscle mass, may alter the responses of elderly people to fluid and electrolyte changes and acidbase disturbances. Renal function declines with age, as do muscle mass and daily exogenous creatinine production, excretion. Therefore, a high-normal or minimally elevated blood serum creatinine value, may be used to substantially reduce renal function in older adults. An acute indication of injury would likely cause a more significant increase of serum creatinine.