A14. Monitoring and treatment of acute renal failure
Acute kidney injury (AKI) is a clinical syndrome which is characterised by an acute decrease kidney function (GFR) (over hours or days), as evidenced by elevated creatinine. There may also be accumulation of urinary waste products and oliguria/anuria, but not always. The cause may be prerenal, renal, or postrenal, but the most common causes are prerenal and acute tubular necrosis. AKI is a common problem in critically ill patients in the intensive care unit.
During the evaluation it’s important to determine whether it’s really acute or chronic, and to determine the underlying cause. Management includes treating the cause and correcting severe electrolyte disturbances. In some cases, renal replacement therapy may be required.
The condition is nowadays called acute kidney injury rather than acute renal failure.
Etiology
AKI is classified according to the underlying cause, whether it’s a prerenal cause, a renal cause, or a postrenal cause. However, there are usually multiple factors involved.
- Prerenal AKI
- Hypovolaemia/hypotension
- Decreased RBF (heart failure, renal artery stenosis)
- Abnormal kidney haemodynamics (sepsis, hepatorenal syndrome)
- Renal AKI
- Tubulointerstitial disorders
- Glomerulonephritis
- Thrombotic microangiopathies (TTP/HUS)
- Obstruction of tubules
- Myeloma proteins
- Crystals
- Postrenal AKI
Of these, the prerenal causes are the most common, followed by acute tubular necrosis.
Drugs which can cause AKI (by various mechanisms) are most commonly NSAIDs and RAAS inhibitors.
Chronic kidney disease is the strongest risk factor for AKI. If a person with CKD develops AKI, the condition is called acute-on-chronic AKI.
Clinical features
Oliguria is the most common symptom, but in many cases it’s asymptomatic. There may be symptoms of the underlying cause, or symptoms of uraemia.
Diagnosis and evaluation
In the evaluation of AKI, we use serum creatinine as a marker of kidney function (normal range 60 – 100 µmol/L); the estimated GFR (eGFR) can not be used, as it's estimated according to formulas which are made for chronic kidney disease. The definition of AKI requires either (1) an increase in serum creatinine by 27 µmol/L, or (2) an increase to more than 150% of baseline serum creatinine over 48 hours, or (3) a decrease in urine volume to < 3 mL/kg over 6 hours.
Treatment
Treating the underlying cause is essential, as well as correcting any severe electrolyte disorders.
If there is hypervolaemia, a loop diuretic may be used.
If there are indications for it, renal replacement therapy may be used. Renal replacement therapy (RRT) is indicated if:
- Oliguria or anuria
- Severe hyperkalaemia
- Severe acidosis
- Uraemic signs
- Drug overdose with dialysable drug
Prognosis
In many cases patients make a full recovery, but AKI can progress to chronic kidney disease as well. It might take months for kidney functions to recover completely, during which the patient may experience polyuria because the tubules need a long time to recover.