| Literature DB >> 36012420 |
Yu-Ming Chang1, Yu-Ting Chou2, Wei-Chih Kan3,4, Chih-Chung Shiao1,5.
Abstract
Although sepsis and acute kidney injury (AKI) have a bidirectional interplay, the pathophysiological mechanisms between AKI and sepsis are not clarified and worthy of a comprehensive and updated review. The primary pathophysiology of sepsis-associated AKI (SA-AKI) includes inflammatory cascade, macrovascular and microvascular dysfunction, cell cycle arrest, and apoptosis. The pathophysiology of sepsis following AKI contains fluid overload, hyperinflammatory state, immunosuppression, and infection associated with kidney replacement therapy and catheter cannulation. The preventive strategies for SA-AKI are non-specific, mainly focusing on infection control and preventing further kidney insults. On the other hand, the preventive strategies for sepsis following AKI might focus on decreasing some metabolites, cytokines, or molecules harmful to our immunity, supplementing vitamin D3 for its immunomodulation effect, and avoiding fluid overload and unnecessary catheter cannulation. To date, several limitations persistently prohibit the understanding of the bidirectional pathophysiologies. Conducting studies, such as the Kidney Precision Medicine Project, to investigate human kidney tissue and establishing parameters or scores better to determine the occurrence timing of sepsis and AKI and the definition of SA-AKI might be the prospects to unveil the mystery and improve the prognoses of AKI patients.Entities:
Keywords: acute kidney injury; infection; pathophysiology; sepsis; sepsis-associated acute kidney injury
Mesh:
Year: 2022 PMID: 36012420 PMCID: PMC9408949 DOI: 10.3390/ijms23169159
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Mol Sci ISSN: 1422-0067 Impact factor: 6.208
Figure 1Pathophysiology of AKI following sepsis. Abbreviations: DAMPs, damage-associated molecular patterns; PAMPs, pathogen-associated molecular patterns.
Figure 2Pathophysiology of sepsis following AKI.
Figure 3Pathophysiology of immunosuppression following AKI. Abbreviations: EPO, erythropoietin; FGF-23, fibroblast growth factor-23; PTH, parathyroid hormone; Vit-D, vitamin D.
Potentially preventive strategies for SA-AKI.
| Strategies | Remarks |
|---|---|
| Prompt and proper antibiotics administration | Treatment of infection and sepsis |
| Vasopressor keeping a mean arterial blood pressure > 65 mmHg (norepinephrine preferred) | Maintain renal perfusion and autoregulation |
| Balanced crystalloid fluid administration | Avoidance of chloride overload. With benefit on major kidney adverse events |
| Avoidance of nephrotoxic agents | e.g., some antibiotics and contrast media |
| Application of the KDIGO bundle (?) | Effects under evaluation |
| High awareness of abdominal compartment syndrome | High intra- abdominal pressure is a deteriorating factor of SA-AKI |
Abbreviations: SA-AKI, sepsis-associated acute kidney injury; KDIGO, Kidney Disease Improving Global Outcomes.
Potentially preventive strategies for sepsis following AKI.
| Strategies | Remarks |
|---|---|
| Probiotics and short chain fatty acid supplementation | Decrease gut-microbiota-derived metabolites and their immunosuppressive effects |
| AST-120 administration | |
| Vitamin D supplementation | Immunomodulation effect |
| Avoidance of fluid overload | Decrease tissue edema and infection risk |
| Avoidance of unnecessary catheter cannulation | Decrease bloodstream infection risk |
| KRT strategies | Hemofiltration and hemoadsorption for removing some cytokines and molecules that are harmful to immunity |
Abbreviations: KRT, kidney replacement therapy.