| Literature DB >> 33097033 |
Anam Asad1, James O Burton1,2,3, Daniel S March4,5.
Abstract
Acute kidney injury (AKI) is a known risk factor for chronic kidney disease (CKD) and end stage kidney disease (ESKD). The progression from AKI to CKD, despite being well recognised, is not completely understood, although sustained inflammation and fibrosis are implicated. A therapeutic intervention targeting the post AKI stage could reduce the progression to CKD, which has high levels of associated morbidity and mortality. Exercise has known anti-inflammatory effects with animal AKI models demonstrating its use as a therapeutic agent in abrogating renal injury. This suggests the use of an exercise rehabilitation programme in AKI patients following discharge could attenuate renal damage and improve long term patient outcomes. In this review article we outline considerations for future clinical studies of exercise in the AKI population.Entities:
Keywords: Acute kidney injury; Exercise; Kidney disease; Rehabilitation; Therapy
Year: 2020 PMID: 33097033 PMCID: PMC7585193 DOI: 10.1186/s12882-020-02098-9
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Nephrol ISSN: 1471-2369 Impact factor: 2.388
Human Trials of therapies for either treatment or prevention of AKI
| Author, year | Therapeutic Agent | Proposed Mechanism of therapeutic agent | AKI patients | Therapeutic Agent administration as treatment of prevention of AKI | Outcome |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| McCullough [ | Alpha Melanocyte Stimulating Hormone | Anti-inflammatory cytokine | Ischaemia/Reperfusion due to cardiac surgery | Prevention | ↔ incidence of AKI ↔ NGAL ↔ Urine IL 18 ↔ Urine KIM-1 |
| Swaminathan [ | Mesenchymal Stem Cells | Paracrine and endocrine effects | Ischaemia/Reperfusion due to cardiac surgery | Treatment | ↔ time to recovery of kidney function ↔ dialysis requirement ↔ mortality |
| Bagshaw [ | Low Dose Furosemide | Reduces renal oxygen demand therefore alleviating oxidative stress | ICU admission with AKI | Treatment | ↔ worsening of AKI ↔ kidney recovery ↔ RRT use ↔ mortality |
| Pickkers [ | Alkaline Phosphatase | Attenuation of inflammatory response | Sepsis | Treatment | ↔ endogenous creatinine clearance ↑ RRT requirement ↔ kidney injury biomarkers |
| Kitzler et al. [ | Vitamin E and N-acetylcysteine | Vitamin E – antioxidative NAC – free radical scavenger | CKD stages 1–4 patients undergoing elective CT hence at risk of contrast induced AKI | Prevention | No patients developed contrast induced AKI ↔ change in creatinine clearance ↔ eGFR |
| Amendola [ | Goal- directed therapy | Maximises oxygen delivery and cardiac output to prevent tissue hypoxia. Correction of volume deficits and optimisation of haemodynamic status | Patients with early AKI in critical care | Treatment | ↔ serum creatinine levels ↔ RRT requirement ↔ AKI beyond 72 h ↔ length of hospital stay |
| Ghaemian [ | Remote Ischaemic Preconditioning | Release of mediators which attenuate kidney damage following brief induction of ischaemia followed by reperfusion. | Patients with CKD undergoing coronary angiography or angioplasty therefore at risk of contrast induced AKI | Prevention | ↔ serum cystatin C ↔ incidence of contrast induced AKI ↔ serum creatinine |
| Amini [ | Selenium, Vitamin C and N-Acetylcysteine | Antioxidants therefore prevent anti-oxidative stress | Patients undergoing off-pump coronary artery bypass graft surgery | Prevention | ↔ incidence of AKI ↔ time of AKI occurrence ↔ severity of AKI ↔ duration of AKI ↔ length of hospital stay ↔ in hospital mortality |
Animal AKI models
| Author, year | Animals | Training programme | Method of inducing AKI | Pre or Post Exercise training? | Results |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| de Lima [ | Male Wistar Rats | 4-week training programme (5 days a week) | Ischaemia-reperfusion injury | Post | ↓blood urea, ↓urinary protein, ↓plasma creatinine, ↓apoptosis, ↓tubular injury, ↓tubular cells degenerative injury, ↑cell regeneration. |
| Francescato [ | Male Wistar Rats | 4-week (5 days a week; combination of easy and moderate aerobic training | Cisplatin | Post | ↓Plasma creatinine, ↓urinary volume, ↓sodium and potassium fractional excretion, ↑urine osmolality, ↓lesions, ↓macrophages, ↓ vimentin, α-sma expression, ↓vascular endothelial growth factor, ↑Nitric oxide |
| Miyagi [ | C57Bl6 male mice | 6-week training programme | Cisplatin | Post | ↓Serum creatinine, ↔apoptosis, ↓TNF-α, ↓IL-10, ↑IL-6, ↔Nrf2, ↑ HO-1. |
| Miyagi [ | C57Bl6 male mice, | 6-week training programme | Cisplatin | Post | ↓Serum creatinine, ↓Kim-1, ↑CD4 + CD69+, ↓CD4 + CD25+, IL-10↓, TNF↓ |
| Oliveira [ | Male Wistar Rats | 30 days of moderate treadmill running (60 min/day for 5 days a week). | Gentamicin (100 mg/kg/day) for 10 days | Pre | ↑Urinary, ↓plasma lipid peroxidation, ↓urinary lipid peroxidation, ↓kidney lipid peroxidation, ↑anti-oxidants (catalase & glutathione). |
| Sossdorf [ | C57BL/6 N male mice | 6 weeks of treadmill running | Sepsis | Pre | ↓ creatinine, ↓ BUN, ↓IL-10, ↓ TNF -α, ↓ monocyte chemoattractant protein-1, ↓ NGAL, ↓histological tubular damage |
| Zeynali [ | Male Wistar Rats | 8-week treadmill training programme (one hour per day/five days per week) | Cisplatin | Post and During | ↓Serum blood urea nitrogen, ↓serum creatinine, ↓kidney tissue damage, ↓kidney weight, ↓kidney nitrite, ↓serum nitrite ↓kidney malondialdehyde, ↓serum malondialdehyde |
Fig. 1Mechanisms of exercise induced renal protection The different mechanisms through which exercise offers renal protection in AKI animal models. Exercise induces a series of changes within the body (rounded box), ultimately offering renal protection through three main mechanisms (circled)
Fig. 2Outcomes for future clinical trials. Figure adapted from the Standardised Outcomes in Nephrology (SONG) core outcomes sets [74]. This figure highlights outcomes of critical importance to people with CKD, which may be used as endpoints in a trial designed to test the effectiveness of exercise interventions following an episode of AKI
Barriers and enablers to current exercise rehabilitation programmes [80–85]
| Theme | Barriers | Enablers |
|---|---|---|
| Referral to programme | Oversight of patient’s eligibility. | Good relationship between health care practitioner and the patient allows the patient to have understanding of the relevance, importance and benefits of referral to the programme. Automated referral system. |
| Geographical Factors | Long travel times. Difficulties in accessing transport, especially in rural areas where there is limited public transport available. High costs associated with travel. | Nearby facilities with short travel times. Good support from family and friends who offer assistance with transport. |
| Psychosocial Factors | Negative health attitude, low level of motivation, underlying mental health issues. Lack of support from friends and family. Lower socioeconomic status resulting in financial strain hence unwilling to take time off work. Patients overwhelmed with information during their hospital stay, contributing to an overall sense of helplessness and low motivation. Linguistic and cultural differences. Unclear of benefits of the programme, poor understanding or disbelief in the positive outcomes. Feeling of embarrassment taking part in such a programme. Patient illness. | Motivation to improve health and feel better. Encouragement from others. Programmes offering psychological support. |
| Supervised Programme | Lack of staff. Lack of resources. Higher costs (compared to home based). Timings of the programme restricted to weekday working hours. | Presences of programme facilitator during exercise acts as a motivator and reassures patients. Patients held accountable to attend. Group programmes allow participants to interact and share experiences. |
| Home Based Programme | Reduced intensity of programme. Less support available to patients from health care professionals. Reduced patient adherence and progression. Reduced patient accountability. | Increased flexibility. No transport issues. Potentially lower costs (compared to supervised). |