Acute kidney injury: Difference between revisions
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==Definition== |
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* |
*An inability of the kidneys to maintain body homeostasis, usually defined by an acute increase in creatinine |
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== |
==AKIN Stage== |
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{| class="wikitable" |
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{| |
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! |
!Stage |
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! |
!Serum creatinine |
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! |
!Or, urine output |
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|- |
|- |
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|1 |
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|Creatinine increase β₯26.5 umol/L or 1.5-2 times baseline |
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|<0.5ml/kg/h for 6h |
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|- |
|- |
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|2 |
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|Creatinine increase 2-3 times baseline |
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|<0.5ml/kg/h for 12h |
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|- |
|- |
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|3 |
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|Creatinine increase >3 times baseline, or creatinine β₯354 umol/L increased by at least 44 umol/L, or need for dialysis |
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|<0.3ml/kg/h for 24h |
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|} |
|} |
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== |
==Differential Diagnosis== |
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* |
*Pre-renal: decreased renal perfusion |
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** |
**Hypovolemia |
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** |
**Blood loss |
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** |
**Shock |
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** |
**Sepsis |
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** |
**Heart failure |
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** |
**Vomiting and diarrhea |
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* |
*Renal/intrinsic |
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** |
**Glomerulonephritis (GN): glomerular damage |
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*** |
***Primary |
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**** |
****Minimal change (in children) |
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**** |
****Membranous (in adults) |
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**** |
****Focal sclerosing (in HIV patients) |
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*** |
***Secondary |
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**** |
****Focal sclerosing or diffuse (in diabetic patients) |
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**** |
****Lupus, multiple myeloma, and amyloidosis |
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** |
**Acute tubular necrosis (ATN): tubular damage |
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*** |
***Ischemia from prerenal disease |
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*** |
***Toxins |
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*** |
***Drugs |
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**** |
****Aminoglycosides |
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**** |
****Amphotericin |
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**** |
****Cisplatin |
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*** |
***Pigments: hemoglobin, myoglobin |
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*** |
***Proteins: immunoglobulin light chains (e.g. multiple myeloma) |
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*** |
***Crystals |
||
**** |
****Uric acid |
||
**** |
****Acyclovir |
||
**** |
****Methotrexate |
||
**** |
****Indinavir |
||
**** |
****Oral NaPO4 |
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*** |
***Contrast-induced |
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** |
**Acute interstitial nephritis (AIN): interstitial damage |
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*** |
***Allergic |
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**** |
****Antibiotics: beta-lactams, sulfas |
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**** |
****NSAIDs |
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**** |
****PPIs |
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*** |
***Infective |
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**** |
****Pyelonephritis |
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**** |
****Legionellosis |
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*** |
***Infiltration |
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**** |
****Sarcoidosis |
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**** |
****Lymphoma |
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**** |
****Leukemia |
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*** |
***Autoimmune |
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**** |
****SjΓΆgren's syndrome |
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**** |
****TINU syndrome |
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**** |
****IgG4 disease |
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**** |
****Systemic lupus erythematosis (SLE) |
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*** |
***Small vessel disease |
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**** |
****Cholesterol emboli |
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**** |
****Thrombotic microangiopathy |
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***** |
*****HUS/TTP |
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***** |
*****DIC |
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***** |
*****Preeclampsia |
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***** |
*****Anti-phospholipid syndrome (APS) |
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***** |
*****Malignant hypertension |
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***** |
*****Scleroderma renal crisis |
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* |
*Post-renal (obstructive) |
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** |
**Bladder neck |
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*** |
***BPH or prostate cancer (in men) |
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*** |
***Cervical cancer (in women) |
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** |
**Neurogenic bladder |
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*** |
***Anticholinergics |
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** |
**Ureteral (bilateral) |
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*** |
***Malignancy |
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*** |
***LAN |
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*** |
***Retroperitoneal fibrosis |
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*** |
***Nephrolithiasis |
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== |
==Clinical Manifestations== |
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=== |
===Clinical clues of etiology=== |
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{| class="wikitable" |
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{| |
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! |
!Type |
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! |
!History |
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! |
!Examination |
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|- |
|- |
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|Prerenal |
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|Volume loss (e.g. vomiting, diarrhea, diuretics, hemorrhage, burns)<br />Thirst and reduced fluid intake<br />Heart failure or cirrhosis |
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|Weight loss, orthostatic hypotension and tachycardiac, poor skin turgor, signs of heart failure or liver failure |
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|- |
|- |
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|Intrinsic renal |
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| |
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| |
| |
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|- |
|- |
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|ATN |
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|History of nephrotoxic medications, hypotension, trauma or myalgias suggestion rhabdo, CT contrast |
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|Muscle tenderness, compartment syndrome, volume status |
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|- |
|- |
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|GN |
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|Lupus, systemic sclerosis, rash, arthritis, uveitis, weight loss, fatigue, HCV infection, HIV infection, hematuria, foamy urine, cough, sinusitis, hemoptysis |
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|Periorbital, sacral, and lower-extremity edema; rash; oral or nasal ulcers |
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|- |
|- |
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|AIN |
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|Medication use (antiiotics, PPIs), rash, arthralgias, fever, infection |
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|Fever, drug rash |
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|- |
|- |
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|Vascular |
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|Nephrotic syndrome, trauma, flank pain, anticoagulation, vascular surgery |
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|Livedo reticularis, fundoscopy showing malignant hypertension, abdominal bruits |
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|- |
|- |
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|Post-renal |
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|Urinary urgency or hesitancy, gross hematuria, polyuria, stones, medications, cancer |
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|Bladder distension, pelvic mass, prostate enlargement |
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|} |
|} |
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'''Source:''' Rahman M, Shad F, and Smith MC. [https://www.aafp.org/afp/2012/1001/p631.html Acute kidney injury: A guide to diagnosis and management]. ''Am Fam Physician''. 2012;86(7):631-639. |
'''Source:''' Rahman M, Shad F, and Smith MC. [https://www.aafp.org/afp/2012/1001/p631.html Acute kidney injury: A guide to diagnosis and management]. ''Am Fam Physician''. 2012;86(7):631-639. |
||
== |
==Investigations== |
||
* |
*Laboratory |
||
** |
**Urinalysis and microscopy |
||
*** |
***Granular casts (from heme), suggesting ATN |
||
*** |
***Red blood cell casts, suggesting GN |
||
** |
**Urine sodium |
||
*** |
***<10mmol/L suggests pre-renal, unless diuresed |
||
** |
**Urea to creatinine ratio |
||
*** |
***Increased ratio suggests pre-renal cause |
||
** |
**Extended electrolytes |
||
* |
*Renal ultrasound, for possible obstruction |
||
=== |
===Fractional excretion of sodium (FENa)=== |
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$FENa = \frac{U_{Na} \div U_{Cr}}{S_{Na} \div S_{Cr}} = \frac{U_{Na} \times S_{Cr}}{S_{Na} \times U_{Cr}}$ |
<nowiki>$FENa = \frac{U_{Na} \div U_{Cr}}{S_{Na} \div S_{Cr}} = \frac{U_{Na} \times S_{Cr}}{S_{Na} \times U_{Cr}}$</nowiki> |
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{| class="wikitable" |
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{| |
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! |
!FENa |
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! |
!Etiology |
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|- |
|- |
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|<1% |
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|Pre-renal |
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|- |
|- |
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|1 to 4%<br /> >2% |
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|Intrinsic renal<br /> Acute tubular necrosis (ATN) |
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|- |
|- |
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|>4% |
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|Post-obstructive |
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|} |
|} |
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== |
==Management== |
||
* |
*Treatment depends on etiology |
||
** |
**Prerenal: Fluid challenge |
||
** |
**Renal: Stop nephrotoxic medications |
||
** |
**Post-renal: Nephrostomy tubes |
||
* |
*Dialysis if |
||
** |
**Acidosis |
||
** |
**Electrolyte imbalance (K+) |
||
** |
**Intoxication (drugs, alcohols) |
||
** |
**Overloaded fluid (heart failure) |
||
** |
**Uremia (pericarditis, neurological symptoms) |
||
== |
==Prognosis== |
||
* |
*Increased risk of developing CKD with |
||
** |
**Increasing age |
||
** |
**Female sex |
||
** |
**AKIN stage |
||
** |
**Absolute increase in serum creatinine |
||
** |
**Albuminuria |
||
[[Category:Nephrology]] |
[[Category:Nephrology]] |
Revision as of 21:19, 10 August 2020
Definition
- An inability of the kidneys to maintain body homeostasis, usually defined by an acute increase in creatinine
AKIN Stage
Stage | Serum creatinine | Or, urine output |
---|---|---|
1 | Creatinine increase β₯26.5 umol/L or 1.5-2 times baseline | <0.5ml/kg/h for 6h |
2 | Creatinine increase 2-3 times baseline | <0.5ml/kg/h for 12h |
3 | Creatinine increase >3 times baseline, or creatinine β₯354 umol/L increased by at least 44 umol/L, or need for dialysis | <0.3ml/kg/h for 24h |
Differential Diagnosis
- Pre-renal: decreased renal perfusion
- Hypovolemia
- Blood loss
- Shock
- Sepsis
- Heart failure
- Vomiting and diarrhea
- Renal/intrinsic
- Glomerulonephritis (GN): glomerular damage
- Primary
- Minimal change (in children)
- Membranous (in adults)
- Focal sclerosing (in HIV patients)
- Secondary
- Focal sclerosing or diffuse (in diabetic patients)
- Lupus, multiple myeloma, and amyloidosis
- Primary
- Acute tubular necrosis (ATN): tubular damage
- Ischemia from prerenal disease
- Toxins
- Drugs
- Aminoglycosides
- Amphotericin
- Cisplatin
- Pigments: hemoglobin, myoglobin
- Proteins: immunoglobulin light chains (e.g. multiple myeloma)
- Crystals
- Uric acid
- Acyclovir
- Methotrexate
- Indinavir
- Oral NaPO4
- Contrast-induced
- Acute interstitial nephritis (AIN): interstitial damage
- Allergic
- Antibiotics: beta-lactams, sulfas
- NSAIDs
- PPIs
- Infective
- Pyelonephritis
- Legionellosis
- Infiltration
- Sarcoidosis
- Lymphoma
- Leukemia
- Autoimmune
- SjΓΆgren's syndrome
- TINU syndrome
- IgG4 disease
- Systemic lupus erythematosis (SLE)
- Small vessel disease
- Cholesterol emboli
- Thrombotic microangiopathy
- HUS/TTP
- DIC
- Preeclampsia
- Anti-phospholipid syndrome (APS)
- Malignant hypertension
- Scleroderma renal crisis
- Allergic
- Glomerulonephritis (GN): glomerular damage
- Post-renal (obstructive)
- Bladder neck
- BPH or prostate cancer (in men)
- Cervical cancer (in women)
- Neurogenic bladder
- Anticholinergics
- Ureteral (bilateral)
- Malignancy
- LAN
- Retroperitoneal fibrosis
- Nephrolithiasis
- Bladder neck
Clinical Manifestations
Clinical clues of etiology
Type | History | Examination |
---|---|---|
Prerenal | Volume loss (e.g. vomiting, diarrhea, diuretics, hemorrhage, burns) Thirst and reduced fluid intake Heart failure or cirrhosis |
Weight loss, orthostatic hypotension and tachycardiac, poor skin turgor, signs of heart failure or liver failure |
Intrinsic renal | ||
ATN | History of nephrotoxic medications, hypotension, trauma or myalgias suggestion rhabdo, CT contrast | Muscle tenderness, compartment syndrome, volume status |
GN | Lupus, systemic sclerosis, rash, arthritis, uveitis, weight loss, fatigue, HCV infection, HIV infection, hematuria, foamy urine, cough, sinusitis, hemoptysis | Periorbital, sacral, and lower-extremity edema; rash; oral or nasal ulcers |
AIN | Medication use (antiiotics, PPIs), rash, arthralgias, fever, infection | Fever, drug rash |
Vascular | Nephrotic syndrome, trauma, flank pain, anticoagulation, vascular surgery | Livedo reticularis, fundoscopy showing malignant hypertension, abdominal bruits |
Post-renal | Urinary urgency or hesitancy, gross hematuria, polyuria, stones, medications, cancer | Bladder distension, pelvic mass, prostate enlargement |
Source: Rahman M, Shad F, and Smith MC. Acute kidney injury: A guide to diagnosis and management. Am Fam Physician. 2012;86(7):631-639.
Investigations
- Laboratory
- Urinalysis and microscopy
- Granular casts (from heme), suggesting ATN
- Red blood cell casts, suggesting GN
- Urine sodium
- <10mmol/L suggests pre-renal, unless diuresed
- Urea to creatinine ratio
- Increased ratio suggests pre-renal cause
- Extended electrolytes
- Urinalysis and microscopy
- Renal ultrasound, for possible obstruction
Fractional excretion of sodium (FENa)
$FENa = \frac{U_{Na} \div U_{Cr}}{S_{Na} \div S_{Cr}} = \frac{U_{Na} \times S_{Cr}}{S_{Na} \times U_{Cr}}$
FENa | Etiology |
---|---|
<1% | Pre-renal |
1 to 4% >2% |
Intrinsic renal Acute tubular necrosis (ATN) |
>4% | Post-obstructive |
Management
- Treatment depends on etiology
- Prerenal: Fluid challenge
- Renal: Stop nephrotoxic medications
- Post-renal: Nephrostomy tubes
- Dialysis if
- Acidosis
- Electrolyte imbalance (K+)
- Intoxication (drugs, alcohols)
- Overloaded fluid (heart failure)
- Uremia (pericarditis, neurological symptoms)
Prognosis
- Increased risk of developing CKD with
- Increasing age
- Female sex
- AKIN stage
- Absolute increase in serum creatinine
- Albuminuria