| Literature DB >> 27301374 |
Luis O Chavez1, Monica Leon2, Sharon Einav3,4, Joseph Varon5.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Rhabdomyolysis is a clinical syndrome that comprises destruction of skeletal muscle with outflow of intracellular muscle content into the bloodstream. There is a great heterogeneity in the literature regarding definition, epidemiology, and treatment. The aim of this systematic literature review was to summarize the current state of knowledge regarding the epidemiologic data, definition, and management of rhabdomyolysis.Entities:
Keywords: Acute kidney injury; Myoglobinuria; Myopathy; Rhabdomyolysis
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27301374 PMCID: PMC4908773 DOI: 10.1186/s13054-016-1314-5
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Crit Care ISSN: 1364-8535 Impact factor: 9.097
Fig. 1Flowchart for study selection
Studies with epidemiological data
| Article | Type of study | Type of patients | RM definition | Etiologies | Risk factors | Patients with RM | Comments |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Mannix et al. 2006 [ | RS | Pediatric patients in the ED | CK level >1000 IU/L | Viral myositis, trauma, connective tissue disease | NA | RM = 191 | Most common reported symptoms were muscle pain and fever. |
| Lagandre et al. 2006 [ | POS | 49 bariatric post-operative patients | CK level >1000 IU/L | NA | Surgical time >4 h, diabetes, BMI >40 kg/m2 | RM = 13 | Type of surgeries performed were gastric banding or bypass |
| De Oliveira et al. 2009 [ | POS | 22 bariatric post-operative patients | An increase >5× the upper limit of the normal CK level | NA | Prolonged surgical duration | RM = 17 | Clinical neuromuscular symptoms occurred in 45 % of patients |
| Linares et al. 2009 [ | RS | Hospitalized patients | CK levels >5000 IU/L | Recreational drugs and alcohol, trauma, compression, shock and statin use | NA | RM = 106 | The authors suggest that RM should be defined using CK levels above 10–25 times the upper limit of normal. AKI developed in 52 patients |
| Youssef et al. 2010 [ | POS | 23 bariatric post-operative patients | Post-operative CK levels >1000 IU/L | NA | BMI >56 kg/m2 | RM = 7 | Factors such as sex, age, and length of surgery were not good predictors of RM |
| Alpers et al. 2010 [ | RS | Patients in military training | Muscle pain, weakness, or swelling over <7 days with a CK >5× the upper limit of normal | Exertional RM | NA | RM = 177 | Authors comment that exertional RM is associated with lower incidence of AKI |
| Bache et al. 2011 [ | RS | 76 burn patients in the ICU | “Late-onset” RM: CK >1000 U/L, 1 week or more after burn episode | NA | Sepsis, nephrotoxic drugs, hypokalemia | “Late-onset” RM = 7 | Authors suggest measuring CK in all patients with the risk factors described in burn patients to initiate prompt treatment |
| Oshima 2011 [ | RS | Cases of drug-related RM | NA | Drug use | <10 year olds, weight less than 50 kg | RM = 8610 | Lipid lowering drugs were most frequently reported as the associated drugs |
| Herraez Garcia et al. 2012 [ | RS | Adult hospitalized patients | CK level of 5× upper limit (975 UI/L) | Trauma, sepsis, immobility | Elder patients and male sex | RM = 449 | No relationship was found between CK levels and AKI development or mortality |
| El-Abdellati et al. 2013 [ | RS | 1769 ICU patients | CK level >1000 U/L | Prolonged surgery, trauma, ischemia, infections | Surgical duration >6 h, resuscitation, compartment syndrome | RM = 342 | The authors found a correlation between CK levels and the development of AKI |
| Rodriguez et al. 2013 [ | RS | Acute-care hospital patients | Severe RM: >5000 IU/L | Immobilization, illicit drug abuse, infections, trauma | NA | Severe RM = 126 | More than half of the patients developed AKI. Variables associated with poor outcome were hypoalbuminemia, metabolic acidosis, and decreased prothrombin time |
| Chen et al. 2013 [ | RS | Pediatric patients in the ED | CK levels >1000 IU/ | Infection, trauma, exercise | NA | RM = 37 | Common symptoms were muscle pain and weakness. Dark urine reported in 5.4 % of patients |
| Talving et al. 2013 [ | RS | Pediatric trauma patients | NA | Trauma | NA | RM = 521 | AKI occurred in 70 patients. The authors concluded that a CK level ≥3000 was an independent risk factor for developing AKI |
| Grunau et al. 2014 [ | RS | Patients in the ED | CK levels >1000 U/L | Illicit drug use, infections, trauma | NA | RM = 400 | AKI developed in 151 patients; 18 patients required hemodialysis |
| van Staa et al. 2014 [ | RS | 641,703 statin users | CK levels 10× the upper limit of normal | Statin drug use | Drug–drug interaction | Reported with RM = 59 | The incidence of RM in this cohort of statin users was very low |
| Pariser et al. 2015 [ | RS | 1,016,074 patients with a major urologic surgery | NA | NA | Diabetes, chronic kidney disease, obesity, bleeding, age and male sex | RM = 870 | Surgeries associated with RM were nephrectomy (radical or partial) and radical cystectomy |
Abbreviations: AKI acute kidney injury, BMI body mass index, CK creatine kinase, ED emergency department, ICU intensive care unit, NA not available, POS prospective observational study, RM rhabdomyolysis, RS retrospective study
Studies included with treatment details
| Article | Type of study | Population | IV fluid | Bicarbonate/mannitol | Rate of AKI and need for RRT |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Altintepe et al. 2007 [ | CS |
| Fluid type used 5 % dextrose and 0.45 NS. | 40 mEq NaHCO3 and 50 mL of 20 % mannitol mixed with 1 L of IV fluid (0.45 % NaCl and 5 % dextrose) | 2 patients (28.6 %) developed AKI |
| Cho et al. 2007 [ | PS |
| Fluid therapy consisted of lactated Ringer’s solution (13 patients) versus NS (15 patients) (the authors concluded that LR was more useful than NS) | Bicarbonate was used to achieve urine pH ≥6.5 in the patients with NS IV fluid | No patient developed AKI |
| Talaie et al. 2008 [ | RS |
| Fluid therapy given 1–8 L in the first 24 h (mean IV fluid 3.2 L/24 h) | Bicarbonate was given to 115 patients | 30 patients (28.6 %) developed AKI |
| Zepeda-Orozco et al. 2008 [ | RS |
| 36 % of the patients received saline infusion (20 mL/kg) in the first 24 h | 79 % of patients received sodium bicarbonate IV fluid | 11 patients (39.2) developed AKI |
| Sanadgol et al. 2009 [ | CS |
| 0.45 % NS | 15 mEqL NaHC03 mixed with IV fluid | 8 patients (25.8 %) developed AKI |
| Iraj et al. 2011 [ | PS |
| Authors recommend >6 L/day in severe RM and ≥3 L/day IV fluid in moderate RM to decrease the incidence of AKI | NA | 134 patients (21 %) developed AKI |
Abbreviations: AKI acute kidney injury, CS case series, IV intravenous, NA not available, NS normal saline, PS prospective study, RM rhabdomyolysis, RRT renal replacement therapy, RS retrospective study
Rhabdomyolysis etiology classification [2, 25–27, 44]
| Type | Cause | Examples |
|---|---|---|
| Acquired | Trauma | “Crush syndrome” |
| Exertion | Intense muscle activity, energy depletion, electrolyte imbalance | |
| Ischemia | Immobilization, compression, thrombosis | |
| Illicit drugs | Cocaine, heroin, LSD | |
| Alcohol | Acute or chronic consumption | |
| Drugs | Dose-dependent, multiple interactions | |
| Infections | Bacterial, viral, parasitic | |
| Extreme temperatures | Hyperthermia, hypothermia, neuroleptic malignant syndrome | |
| Endocrinopathies | Hyper/hypo-thyroidism, diabetic complications | |
| Toxins | Spider bites, wasp stings, snake venom | |
| Inherited | Metabolic myopathies | Glycogen storage, fatty acid, mitochondrial disorders |
| Structural myopathies | Dystrophinopathy, dysferlinopathy | |
| Channel related gene mutations | RYR1 gene mutation, SCN4A gene mutation | |
| Others | Lipin-1 gene mutation, sickle-cell disease, “benign exertional rhabdomyolysis” |
Fig. 2Injury mechanisms of rhabdomyolysis. (1) Energy (ATP) depletion inhibits Na+/K+ ATPase function, thus increasing intracellular sodium. (2) The 2Na+/Ca2+ exchanger increases intracellular calcium. (3) Ca2+ ATPase is not able to pump out intracellular calcium due to energy depletion. (4) Intracellular calcium activates proteases such as phospholipase 2 (PLA2), which destroy structural components of the cell membrane, allowing the entrance of more calcium. (5) Calcium overload disrupts mitochondrial integrity and induces apoptosis leading to muscle cell necrosis
Fig. 3Acute kidney injury in rhabdomyolysis. Enzymes*: creatine kinase, aldolase, lactate dehydrogenase. After muscle destruction, myoglobin and enzymes released into the circulation damage capillaries, leading to leakage and edema. Hypovolemia and the decrease in renal bood flow is associated with acute kidney injury. Myoglobin cytotoxicity affects the kidney by lipid peroxidation and production of reactive oxygen species. Tubular obstruction by myoglobin is also associated with AKI