| Literature DB >> 21694939 |
Ali Akcay1, Kultigin Turkmen, DongWon Lee, Charles L Edelstein.
Abstract
Acute kidney injury (AKI) is an independent risk factor for morbidity and mortality. This review provides essential information for the diagnosis and management of AKI. Blood urea nitrogen and serum creatinine are used for the diagnosis of AKI. The review also focuses on recent studies on the diagnosis of AKI using the RIFLE (R-renal risk, I-injury, F-failure, L-loss of kidney function, E-end stage kidney disease) and Acute Kidney Injury Network criteria, and serum and urine AKI biomarkers. Dialysis is the only Food and Drug Administration-approved therapy for AKI. Recent studies on the dose of dialysis in AKI are reviewed. 2010 Halvorson et al, publisher and licensee Dove Medical Press Ltd.Entities:
Keywords: acute kidney injury; biomarkers; interleukin-18
Year: 2010 PMID: 21694939 PMCID: PMC3108768 DOI: 10.2147/IJNRD.S8641
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Nephrol Renovasc Dis ISSN: 1178-7058
RIFLE and AKIN criteria for diagnosis of AKI
| R-Risk | Creatinine increase × 1.5 or GFR loss > 25% | 0.5 < mL/kg/hour × >6 hours |
| I-Injury | Creatinine increase × 2 or GFR loss > 50% | 0.5 < mL/kg/hour × >12 hours |
| F-Failure | Creatinine increase × 3 or GFR loss > 75% or creatinine increase >4 mg/dL (acute increase >0.5 mg/dL) | 0.3 < mL/kg/hour × >24 hours or anuria >12 hours |
| L-Loss | Persistent loss of kidney function >4 weeks | |
| E-ESKD | ESKD > 3 months | |
| 1 | Creatinine increase × 1.5 or creatinine increase >0.3 mg/dL | 0.5 < mL/kg/hour × >6 hours |
| 2 | Creatinine increase × 2 | 0.5 < mL/kg/hour × >12 hours |
| 3 | Creatinine increase × 3 or creatinine increase >4 mg/dL (acute increase >0.5 mg/dL) | 0.3 < mL/kg/hour × >24 hours or anuria >12 hours |
Conditions causing prerenal azotemia
| Hemorrhage |
| Gastrointestinal losses |
| Third space |
| Burns |
| Peritonitis |
| Muscle trauma |
| Renal fluid losses |
| Overdiuresis |
| Congestive heart failure |
| Cardiogenic shock |
| Acute myocardial infarction |
| Pericardial tamponade |
| Massive pulmonary embolism |
| Gram-negative bacteremia |
| Antihypertensive medications |
| Anaphylaxis |
| Cirrhosis |
| Anesthesia |
| Surgery |
| Hepatorenal syndrome |
| Prostaglandin inhibitors |
| NSAIDs |
| Renal vasoconstricting drugs |
| Cyclosporin |
Conditions causing postrenal azotemia
| Valves |
| Stricture |
| Prostatic hypertrophy |
| Bladder carcinoma |
| Bladder infection |
| Functional |
| Autonomic neuropathy |
| Alpha adrenergic blockers |
| Intraureteral |
| Sulphonamide, uric acid, acyclovir, anti-retroviral agent crystals |
| Blood clots |
| Stones |
| Necrotizing papillitis |
| Extraureteral |
| Tumor of cervix, prostate, bladder |
| Endometriosis |
| Periureteral fibrosis |
| Accidental ureteral ligation |
| Pelvic abscess or hematoma |
Conditions that cause parenchymal (intrinsic) AKI
| Large vessels |
| Bilateral renal artery stenosis |
| Bilateral renal vein thrombosis |
| Operative arterial cross clamping |
| Small vessels |
| Vasculitis |
| Atheroembolic disease |
| Thrombotic microangiopathies |
| Hemolytic uremic syndrome |
| Thrombotic thrombocytopenic purpura |
| Scleroderma renal crisis |
| Malignant hypertension |
| Hemolysis, elevated liver enzymes and low platelets syndrome (HELLP) |
| Diseases with linear immune complex deposition |
| Goodpasture’s syndrome |
| Diseases with granular immune complex deposition |
| Acute postinfectious glomerulonephritis |
| Lupus nephritis |
| Infective endocarditis |
| Immunoglobulin A (IgA) glomerulonephritis |
| Henoch-Schonlein purpura |
| Membranoproliferative glomerulonephritis |
| Cryoglobulinemia |
| Diseases with few immune deposits (“Pauci-immune”) |
| Wegener’s granulomatosis |
| Polyarteritis nodosa |
| Idiopathic crescentic glomerulonephritis |
| Churg-Strauss syndrome |
| Acute allergic interstitial nephritis |
| Antibiotics |
| Beta-lactam antibiotics (penicillins, methicillin, cephalosporins) |
| Rifampicin |
| Sulphonamides |
| Erythromycin |
| Ciprofloxacin |
| Diuretics (furosemide, thiazides, chlorthalidone) |
| Nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (NSAIDs) |
| Anticonvulsant drugs (phenytoin, carbamazepine) |
| Allopurinol |
| Interstitial nephritis associated with infection, granuloma, crystals |
| Streptococcal |
| Staphylococcal |
| Diphtheria |
| Leptospirosis |
| Brucellosis |
| Legionnaire’s disease |
| Toxoplasmosis |
| Infectious mononucleosis |
| |
| Tuberculosis |
| Sarcoidosis |
| Acute uric acid nephropathy eg, tumor lysis syndrome |
| Hypercalcemia |
| Melamine toxicity |
| Renal ischemia (50% of cases) |
| Shock |
| Complications of surgery |
| Hemorrhage |
| Trauma |
| Gram-negative bacteremia |
| Pancreatitis |
| Pregnancy (postpartum hemorrhage, abruptio placenta, septic abortion) |
| Nephrotoxic drugs (35% of cases) |
| Antibiotics (aminoglycosides, amphotericin, pentamidine, foscarnet, acyclovir) |
| Antineoplastics (cisplatin, methotrexate) |
| Iodine-containing x-ray contrast |
| Organic solvents (carbon tetrachloride) |
| Ethylene glycol (antifreeze) |
| Anesthetics (enflurane) |
| Acute phosphate nephropathy |
| Endogenous toxins |
| Myoglobin due to rhabdomyolysis |
| Hemoglobin (incompatible blood transfusion, acute falciparum malaria) |
| Uric acid (acute uric acid nephropathy) |
Scoring system of AKI severity based on number of granular casts and RTE cells in urinary sediment
| ≥ | |||
|---|---|---|---|
| 0 (0 points) | 0 | 1 | 2 |
| 1 to 5 (1 point) | 1 | 2 | 3 |
| ≥6 (2 points) | 2 | 3 | 4 |
Notes: Values denote total points awarded. A urine sediment score of greater than or equal to three versus zero was a significant predictor of worsening of AKI (progressing to a higher AKIN stage [Table 1], dialysis, or death).47 Reproduced from Perazella et al.47
Abbreviations: HPF, high-powered field; LPF, low-powered field; RTE, renal tubular epithelial.
Urine findings in prerenal azotemia and intrinsic AKI
| Urine sodium (UNa), mEq/L | <20 | >40 |
| Urine osmolality, mOsm/kg H2O | >500 | <400 |
| Urine to plasma urea nitrogen | >8 | <3 |
| Urine to plasma creatinine | >40 | <20 |
| Fractional excretion of filtered sodium | <1 | >1 |
| Urinary sediment | Bland | “Muddy” brown granular casts, cellular debris, tubular epithelial cells |
Dose of dialysis in AKI
| 425 patients; single center | Dose of CVVH | Ultrafiltration at 35 or 45 mL/hour/kg better patient survival than 20 mL/hour/kg | |
| 160 patients; single center | Daily or alternate day hemodialysis | Daily hemodialysis better patient survival than alternate day hemodialysis | |
| 206 patients; single center | Increase in dialysis dose by adding CVVHDF to CVVH | CVVH + CVVHDF better patient survival than CVVH alone | |
| ATN study; 1,124 patients multicenter | 3/week HD (Kt/V > 1.2 per HD) or CVVH 20 mL/hour/kg versus 6/week HD or CVVH 35 mL/hour/kg | Patient survival was the same intensive versus conventional dialysis | |
| RENAL study; 1,508 patients | CVVH at 25 mL/hour/kg versus 40 mL/hour/kg | Mortality at 90 days the same in intensive versus conventional dose of CVVH |