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Acute Kidney Injury
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Formerly known as acute renal failure, acute kidney injury (AKI) is a reversible rapid reduction in glomerular filtration rate (GFR) or kidney function, resulting in an increase in serum blood urea nitrogen (BUN), creatinine, and metabolic waste products (Okusa & Rosner, 2023). If left untreated, AKI can lead to reduced urine output, fluid retention, volume overload, and ultimately irreversible loss of kidney cells and nephrons leading to chronic kidney disease.
Definition (KDIGO, 2012)
The Kidney Disease: Improving Global Outcomes (KDIGO) organization defines AKI as
any of the following:
- Increase in serum creatinine (SCr) by greater than or equal to 0.3 mg/dL (25.6 µmol/L) within 48 hours
- Increase in SCr greater than or equal to 1.5 times baseline, which is known or presumed to have occurred within the prior 7 days
- Urine volume less than 0.5 mL/kg/hour for 6 hours
Classifications of Acute Kidney Injury
(Lippincott Advisor, 2024) |
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Prerenal |
Intrarenal
(Intinsic) |
Postrenal |
Pathophysiology |
Decreased blood flow to kidneys (decreased renal perfusion) |
Structural injury that causes vessel constriction within the kidney |
Blockage along the urinary tract obstructing urine outflow from the kidney |
Causes |
- Absolute decrease in circulating volume (Banasik, 2022)
- vomiting, diarrhea
- hemorrhage
- burns
- dehydration
- Relative decrease in circulating volume
- Systemic vasodilation and hypotension caused by sepsis, anaphylaxis, anesthesia, drug overdose
- Third spacing and edema
- Decreased cardiac output
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- Tubular
- Ischemic: acute tubular necrosis, prolonged prerenal failure, transfusion reaction, Rhabdomyolosis
- Nephrotoxic: prolonged post renal failure, medications (NSAIDS, certain antibiotics, cytotoxic chemotherapeutics, heroin, amphetamines), heavy metals, snake and insect venom, radiographic contrast media.
- Glomerular
- Interstitial
- Allergic interstitial nephritis
- Acute pyelonephritis
- Vascular
- Vasculitis
- Emoboli
- Nephrosclerosis (from chronic hypertension, hypertensive urgencies and emergencies)
- Coagulation defect
- Leukemia, lymphoma
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- Renal calculi
- Emboli
- Prostate enlargement
- Genetic anatomic narrowing
- Intra-abdominal tumors
- Urinary tract strictures
- Kinked or obstructed indwelling urinary catheters
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Contrast-induced AKI (CI-AKI) (KDIGO, 2012; Rudnick & Davenport, 2024)
CI-AKI [which may also be referred to as contrast-induced nephropathy (CIN)] may occur in patients who receive iodinated radiocontrast for procedures. Patients should be screened for risk factors such as impaired renal function, advanced age, diabetes, hypertension, congestive heart failure, chronic kidney disease, volume depletion, hemodynamic instability, concurrent nephrotoxic medication use and use of large volume and/or high osmolality contrast agents.
For patients at high risk, the following prevention measures are recommended:
- Verify that contrast material is necessary.
- Consider alternative methods of imaging studies that do not require the use of contrast.
- Use low- or iso- osmolarcontrast medium through an intravenous (IV) route at the lowest dose possible.
- IV fluids (isotonic sodium chloride or sodium bicarbonate) are generally initiated in high-risk patient unless patient is hypervolemic or on hemodialysis despite the lack of evidence to support this strategy as being of benefit (with the exception of patients undergoing coronary angiography).
- Withhold potentially nephrotoxic, non-critical medications for a minimum of 38 hours prior to contrast administration.
For patients not at risk for CI-AKI, these prevention measures are not recommended with the exception of verifying the need for contrast material.