| Literature DB >> 15312219 |
Rinaldo Bellomo1, Claudio Ronco, John A Kellum, Ravindra L Mehta, Paul Palevsky.
Abstract
INTRODUCTION: There is no consensus definition of acute renal failure (ARF) in critically ill patients. More than 30 different definitions have been used in the literature, creating much confusion and making comparisons difficult. Similarly, strong debate exists on the validity and clinical relevance of animal models of ARF; on choices of fluid management and of end-points for trials of new interventions in this field; and on how information technology can be used to assist this process. Accordingly, we sought to review the available evidence, make recommendations and delineate key questions for future studies.Entities:
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Year: 2004 PMID: 15312219 PMCID: PMC522841 DOI: 10.1186/cc2872
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Crit Care ISSN: 1364-8535 Impact factor: 9.097
Figure 1Proposed classification scheme for acute renal failure (ARF). The classification system includes separate criteria for creatinine and urine output (UO). A patient can fulfill the criteria through changes in serum creatinine (SCreat) or changes in UO, or both. The criteria that lead to the worst possible classification should be used. Note that the F component of RIFLE (Risk of renal dysfunction, Injury to the kidney, Failure of kidney function, Loss of kidney function and End-stage kidney disease) is present even if the increase in SCreat is under threefold as long as the new SCreat is greater than 4.0 mg/dl (350 μmol/l) in the setting of an acute increase of at least 0.5 mg/dl (44 μmol/l). The designation RIFLE-FC should be used in this case to denote 'acute-on-chronic' disease. Similarly, when theRIFLE-F classification is achieved by UO criteria, a designation of RIFLE-FO should be used to denote oliguria. The shape of the figure denotes the fact that more patients (high sensitivity) will be included in the mild category, including some without actually having renal failure (less specificity). In contrast, at the bottom of the figure the criteria are strict and therefore specific, but some patients will be missed. *GFR = Glomerular Filtration Rate; ARF Acute Renal Failure
Estimated baseline creatinine
| Age (years) | Black males (mg/dl [μmol/l]) | Other males (mg/dl [μmol/l]) | Black females (mg/dl [μmol/l]) | Other females (mg/dl [μmol/l]) |
| 20–24 | 1.5 (133) | 1.3 (115) | 1.2 (106) | 1.0 (88) |
| 25–29 | 1.5 (133) | 1.2 (106) | 1.1 (97) | 1.0 (88) |
| 30–39 | 1.4 (124) | 1.2 (106) | 1.1 (97) | 0.9 (80) |
| 40–54 | 1.3 (115) | 1.1 (97) | 1.0 (88) | 0.9 (80) |
| 55–65 | 1.3 (115) | 1.1 (97) | 1.0 (88) | 0.8 (71) |
| >65 | 1.2 (106) | 1.0 (88) | 0.9 (80) | 0.8 (71) |
Estimated glomerular filtration rate = 75 (ml/min per 1.73 m2) = 186 × (serum creatinine [SCr]) - 1.154 × (age) - 0.203 × (0.742 if female) × (1.210 if black) = exp(5.228 - 1.154 × In [SCr]) - 0.203 × In(age) - (0.299 if female) + (0.192 if black).
Physiologic markers of renal function
| Specific for | Measurable | Acceptable?1 | Realistic/time-related?2 |
| GFR | PAH | No | No |
| Creatinine | Yes | Yes | |
| Creatinine clearance | 2-hour: yes | Yes | |
| 24-hour: yes | No | ||
| BUN | Yes | Yes | |
| Inulin clearance | Yes | No | |
| Iohexol/iopromide | Yes | Yes | |
| Iothalmate | Yes | Yes | |
| I131-MAG | Yes | No | |
| Cr52-EDTA | Yes | No | |
| Renal blood flow | Angiography | Yes | No |
| Indicator dilution (thermal or PAH) | Yes | No | |
| BOLD MRI | Yes | No | |
| Ultrasound | Yes | Yes | |
| Tubular function | Urine output | Yes | Yes |
| Input-output balance | Yes | Yes | |
| Urinalysis | Yes | Yes | |
| FeNa | Yes | Yes | |
| Osmolality | Yes | Yes | |
| Creatinine (U/P) | Yes | Yes | |
| Tubular proteins | No | No |
1The term 'acceptable' refers to the consensus view that each one of these tests represents a marker that reflects the function being measured with sufficient specificity and sensitivity for experimental and clinical use. 2The term 'realistic' refers to consensus of the current feasibility of using such markers in clinical practice. BOLD, blood oxygenation level dependent; BUN, blood urea nitrogen; MRI, magnetic resonance imaging; PAH, para-aminohippuric acid; U/P, urine/plasma.
Principles that should guide the development and study of animal models of acute renal failure
| General principles that must be applied to design of animal model | Additional issues that must be considered to optimize the model |
| Proper randomization of animals | Models should be chosen on the basis of their relevance to the clinical situation, and not merely by the reproducibility of the model |
| Similar baseline characteristics of the experimental groups | Physiological parameters known to affect kidney function or susceptibility to injury should be controlled for, measured and reported (temperature, blood pressure, fluid status, type of anaesthesia, etc.) |
| Concurrent appropriate controls | Appropriate preparation of tissue for valid pathological interpretation |
| Blinded assessment of outcome | Fundamental requirements for a model should include morphology, haemodynamics and function |
| Consideration and reporting of mortality | Outcomes should be measures at multiple time points |
| Numbers of animals studied should be appropriate to reproducibility of outcome measure | Noninvasive biomarkers for renal parenchymal cell injury should be developed |
| Models should be created that explicitly address comorbidities that are believed to predispose to acute renal failure and outcome in humans | |
| Experimental observations should be reproduced in other laboratories before they are generally accepted |
A comparison of leading animal models for the study of acute renal failure
| Model | Simple | Reproducible | Complete control over external factors | Graded response easily achieved | Tubular | Medullary | Inflammator y1 | Functional injury and pathology correlate | Matches human pathology | Matches clinical scenario | Clinical Relevance |
| Warm ischaemia2 | + | + | + | + | + | + | + | ± | |||
| Isolated perfused kidney | + | + | + | + | ± | ||||||
| Radio contrast | + | + | + | + | + | + | + | + | |||
| Combined insults | + | + | + | ± | ± | + | + | ||||
| Gentamicin | + | + | ± | ± | + | + | |||||
| Cisplatin3 | + | + | + | + | + | ± | |||||
| Glycerol4 | + | + | + | + | + | ||||||
| Myoglobin/haemaglobin | + | + | |||||||||
| Endotoxin | + | + | + | + | |||||||
| Bacterial infusion (iv) | + | + | + | ||||||||
| Bacterial infusion (ip) | + | + | + | ||||||||
| Caecal perforation | + | + | + | + |
In the first column a list of recognized models used for the study of acute renal failure is presented. Then, in each column, an evaluation is presented regarding whether a given model contains certain features. '+' Indicates the presence of a given feature; '±' indicates only the partial presence of that feature; and the absence of any sign indicates the lack of such a feature. For example, warm ischemia is simple but does not match the dominant clinical scenario and is of limited clinical relevance. 1Reproduces the type of injury seen in humans. 2Cold ischaemia is more clinically relevant to renal transplantation, but it is less well characterized. 3Clinical relevance is limited because less toxic alternatives are now available. 4Resembles clinical rhabdomyolysis.
Figure 2The cycle of patient care and sites of potential errors. Any step in this continuous cycle of assessing and caring for a patient can be a site of error, which may lead to patient harm.