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Scientific Reviews

Pathophysiology of septic acute kidney injury: What do we really know?

Wan, Li MD; Bagshaw, Sean M. MD, MSc; Langenberg, Christoph MD; Saotome, Takao MD; May, Clive PhD; Bellomo, Rinaldo MD, FRACP

Author Information

From the Departments of Intensive Care and Medicine, Austin Hospital, Melbourne, Australia (LW, SMB, RB); Division of Critical Care Medicine, University of Alberta, Edmonton, Alberta, Canada (SMB); and Howard Florey Institute, University of Melbourne, Melbourne, Australia (CL, TS, CM).

The authors have not disclosed any potential conflicts of interest.

For information regarding this article, E-mail:[email protected]

Critical Care Medicine36(4):p S198-S203, April 2008. |DOI:10.1097/CCM.0b013e318168ccd5

Abstract

Septic acute kidney injury accounts for close to 50% of all cases of acute kidney injury in the intensive care unit and, in its various forms, affects between 15% and 20% of intensive care unit patients. However, there is little we really know about its pathophysiology. Although hemodynamic factors might play a role in the loss of glomerular filtration rate, they may not act through the induction of renal ischemia. Septic acute renal failure may, at least in patients with a hyperdynamic circulation, represent a unique form of acute renal failure: hyperemic acute renal failure. Measurements of renal blood flow in septic humans are now needed to resolve this pivotal pathophysiological question. Whatever may happen to renal blood flow during septic acute kidney injury in humans, the evidence available suggests that urinalysis fails to provide useful diagnostic or prognostic information in this setting. In addition, nonhemodynamic mechanisms of cell injury are likely to be at work. These mechanisms are likely due to a combination of immunologic, toxic, and inflammatory factors that may affect the microvasculature and the tubular cells. Among these mechanisms, apoptosis may turn out to be important. It is possible that, as evidence accumulates, the paradigms currently used to explain acute renal failure in sepsis will shift from ischemia and vasoconstriction to hyperemia and vasodilation and from acute tubular necrosis to acute tubular apoptosis or simply tubular cell dysfunction or exfoliation. If this were to happen, our therapeutic approaches would also be profoundly altered.

© 2008 by the Society of Critical Care Medicine and Lippincott Williams & Wilkins

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Critical Care Medicine36(4):S198-S203, April 2008.
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