16 - RE - Acute Kidney Injury
16 - RE - Acute Kidney Injury
16 - RE - Acute Kidney Injury
A. Prerenal
B. Intrarenal
Prolonged renal • pigment nephropathy (associated with the breakdown of blood cells
ischemia containing pigments that in turn occlude kidney structures)
• Myoglobinuria (trauma, crush injury, burns)
• Hemoglobinuria (transfusion reaction, hemolytic anemia)
Nephrotoxic • Aminoglycosides antibiotics (gentamicin, tobramycin)
agents • Radiopaque contrast media
• Heavy metals (lead, mercury)
• Solvents and chemicals (carbon tetrachloride, arsenic)
• NSAIDs
• ACE inhibitors
Infectious • Acute pyelonephritis
processes • Acute gastroenteritis
C. Postrenal
Initiation It begins with the initial insult and ends when oliguria develops.
Oliguria The oliguria period is accompanied by an increase in the serum
concentration of substances usually excreted by the kidneys (uric
acid, urea, creatinine).
In this phase uremic symptoms first appear and life-threatening
conditions such as hyperkalemia develop.
Diuresis The diuresis period is marked by a gradual increase in urine output,
period which signals that glomerular filtration has started to recover.
Recovery The recovery period signals the improvement of renal function and
period may take 3-12 months. Lab values return to normal level. Although
a permanent 1%-3% reduction in the GFR is common.
Symptoms of ARF
• Decrease urine output (70%) • Pruritus
• Edema, especially lower extremity • Anemia
• Mental changes • Tachypenic
• Heart failure • Cool, pale and moist skin
• Nausea and vomiting
Diagnosis
• Medical and medication histories, physical examination, assessment of
laboratory values, and, if needed, imaging studies are important in the diagnosis
of ARF.
• Urine:
o Urine electrolytes and creatinine urine to calculate fractional excretion of
sodium (FeNa)
o Urine eosinophils
o Urine sediment: casts, cells, protein
o Urine osmolality
Preventing ARF
• Provide adequate hydration to patients at risk of dehydration:
o surgical patients before, during and after surgery.
o Patients undergoing intensive diagnostic studies requiring fluid restrictions
and contrast agents
o Patients with neoplastic disorders of metabolism and those receiving
chemotherapy
• Prevent and treat shock promptly with blood and fluid replacement.
• Monitor CV and arterial pressures and hourly urine output of critically ill
patients to detect the onset of renal failure as early as possible.
• Treat hypotension promptly.
• Continually assess renal function when appropriate.
• Take precautions to ensure that the appropriate blood is administered to the
correct patient in order to avoid severe transfusion reactions, which can
precipitate renal failure.
• Prevent and treat infections promptly. Infections can produce progressive renal
damage.
• Pay special attention to wounds, burns and other precursors of sepsis
• To prevent infections from ascending in the urinary tract, give meticulous care
to patients with indwelling catheters. Remove catheter ASAP.
• To prevent toxic drug effects, closely monitor dosage, duration of use, and blood
levels of all medications metabolized or excreted by the kidneys.
• Inadequate evidence exists to support use of N-acetylcysteine and ascorbic
acid as antioxidants for prevention of contrast-induced nephropathy or
contrast-induced acute kidney injury (CI-AKI). Study with these two agents
demonstrated no benefit.
University of Anbar - College of Pharmacy
Applied Therapeutics I – Acute Kidney Injury 6
Medical Management:
Goals of Treatment:
Short-term goals include
• minimizing the degree of insult to the kidney.
• Reducing extrarenal complications, and expediting recovery of renal function.
• Restoration of renal function to preARF baseline is the ultimate goal.
Pharmacologic therapy
Management of hyperkalemia
• Hyperkalemia is the most life-threatening of changes that occur in renal failure,
the elevated K levels may be reduced by administering cation-exchange resins
(sodium polystyrene sulfonate) orally or by retention enema. It works by
exchanging sodium ions for potassium ions in the intestinal tract.
• Sorbitol may be administered in combination with sodium polystyrene
sulfonate to induce diarrhea type effect (induce water loss in the GIT)
• If hemodynamically unstable, IV dextrose 50%, insulin and calcium
replacement may be administered to shift potassium back into the cells.
University of Anbar - College of Pharmacy
Applied Therapeutics I – Acute Kidney Injury 7
Vasodilators
The vasodilator therapy may improve renal perfusion and reduce renal damage.
However, strong evidence in support of this approach is lacking.
Nutritional Therapy
• Dietary proteins are individualized to provide the maximum benefit. Caloric
requirements are met with high-carbohydrate meals, because carbohydrates
have a protein sparing effect.
• Foods and fluids containing potassium or phosphorous such as banana, citrus
fruits and juices, coffee are restricted.