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Acute renal failure

Acute renal failure (ARF) is a rapid loss of renal function due to damage to the kidneys, resulting in retention of nitrogenous (urea and creatinine) and non-nitrogenous waste products that are normally excreted by the kidney. Depending on the severity and duration of the renal dysfunction, this accumulation is accompanied by metabolic disturbances, such as metabolic acidosis (acidification of the blood) and hyperkalaemia (elevated potassium levels), changes in body fluid balance, and effects on many other organ systems. more...

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It can be characterised by oliguria or anuria (decrease or cessation of urine production), although nonoliguric ARF may occur. It is a serious disease and treated as a medical emergency.

Causes

Renal failure, whether chronic or acute, is usually categorised according to pre-renal, renal and post-renal causes:

  • Pre-renal (causes in the blood supply):
    • hypotension (decreased blood supply), usually from shock or dehydration and fluid loss, heart attack
    • vascular problems, such as atheroembolic disease and renal vein thrombosis (which in part may be secondary to loss of coagulation factors due to renal dysfunction)
  • Renal (damage to the kidney itself):
    • infection
    • toxins or medication (e.g. some NSAIDs, aminoglycoside antibiotics, amphotericin B, iodinated contrast, lithium)
    • rhabdomyolysis (breakdown of muscle tissue) - the resultant release of myoglobin in the blood affects the kidney; it can be caused by injury (especially crush injury and extensive blunt trauma), statins, MDMA (ecstasy) and some other drugs
    • hemolysis (breakdown of red blood cells) - the hemoglobin damages the tubules; it may be caused by various conditions such as sickle-cell disease, and lupus erythematosus
    • multiple myeloma, either due to hypercalcemia or "cast nephropathy" (multiple myeloma can also cause chronic renal failure by a different mechanism)
    • Acute glomerulonephritis which may due to a variety of causes, such as anti glomerular basement membrane disease/Goodpasture's syndrome, Wegener's granulomatosis or acute lupus nephritis with systemic lupus erythematosus
  • Post-renal (causes in the urinary tract):
    • urinary retention (as a side-effect of medication or due to benign prostatic hypertrophy, kidney stones)
    • pyelonephritis
    • obstruction due to abdominal malignancy (e.g. ovarian cancer, colorectal cancer)

Diagnosis

Renal failure is generally diagnosed either when creatinine or blood urea nitrogen tests are markedly elevated in an ill patient, especially when oliguria is present. Previous measurements of renal function may offer comparison, which is especially important if a patient is known to have chronic renal failure as well. If the cause is not apparent, a large amount of blood tests and examination of a urine specimen is typically performed to elucidate the cause of acute renal failure, medical ultrasonography of the renal tract is essential to rule out obstruction of the urinary tract.

Consensus criteria for the diagnosis of ARF are:

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Diuretics in patients with acute renal failure may be harmful - Tips from Other Journals
From American Family Physician, 3/15/03 by Caroline Wellbery

Diuretics are frequently given to treat acute oliguric renal failure, but the response to diuretics in this setting may actually be a marker for severe disease rather than a valid response to therapy. Mehta and colleagues hypothesize that the use of diuretics for treatment of acute renal failure is associated with increased mortality, increased hospital stay, and nonrecovery of renal function caused by a direct toxic effect or as an indirect effect secondary to a delay in dialysis.

Acute renal failure was defined by an increased blood urea nitrogen level (40 mg per dL or higher [14.3 mmol per L or higher]) or a sustained rise in serum creatinine (1 mg per dL [88.4 [micro]mol per L] or more). The main outcome measure was all-cause hospital mortality, with the combined end point of mortality or nonrecovery of renal function and lengths of intensive care unit and hospital stay. The authors defined characteristics of patients with acute renal failure taking diuretics and calculated propensity scores to predict the likelihood of diuretic use based on the listed characteristics.

Of 552 patients, 294 (53 percent) died in the hospital, with 56 (19) of these patients recovering renal function before death. Of the 258 surviving patients (47 percent), 17 (7 percent) were dependent on dialysis after discharge. Diuretic use was associated with a 68 percent increase in in-hospital mortality and a 77 percent increase in the odds of death or nonrecovery of renal function. There was no difference in hospital length of stay when diuretics were used on the first day of consultation. However, subsequent use of diuretics was associated with significantly longer lengths of stay (median difference, four to 10 days). The median time from consultation to first dialysis was also significantly prolonged among patients given diuretics (median difference, one to two days).

While there was no difference in these findings with single versus combination diuretic use, patients given higher-dose equivalents (arbitrarily set at a per milliliter ratio greater than or equal to 1) had higher odds of death or nonrecovery than nonusers of diuretics. Patients with a lower dose equivalent experienced no increase in risk.

In this study, diuretic use was significantly associated with in-hospital mortality and nonrecovery of renal function, even after adjustment for nonrandom treatment assignment using propensity scores as a guide. The increased risk related primarily to patients who were relatively resistant to diuretics, with blood urea nitrogen levels rising faster in these patients than in diuretic-responsive patients. The authors conclude that widespread use of high-dose diuretics in critically ill patients with acute renal failure should be discouraged.

2002;288:2547-53.

COPYRIGHT 2003 American Academy of Family Physicians
COPYRIGHT 2003 Gale Group

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