Title: Acute Renal Failure in ICU
1Acute Renal Failure in ICU
2Definition of ARF
- Serum creatinine (Scr), absolutely increase of
0.5-1.0 mg/dl, a relative increase of 25-100
over 24 hr - Normal 0.6-1.5 mg/dl
- Mortality 30-50
3Manifestations
- Accumulation of nitrogenous waste BUN/Cr
- Oliguria U/O lt 400-500 ml/day, may or may not
present
4Risk Factors for AKD
- Hypovolemia
-
- Hypotension
- Sepsis
- Frequently as part of multiple organ failure
- Pre-existing renal, hepatic, or cardiac
dysfunction - Diabetes mellitus
-
- Exposure to nephrotoxins
- Aminoglycosides, amphotericin, immunosuppressive
agents, nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs,
angiotensin converting enzyme inhibitors,
intravenous contrast media - Two or more risk factors are usually present.
5Sepsis
- ARF19 in sepsis, 23 in severe sepsis, 51 in
septic shock - Mortality 74.5
- Hypoperfusion and compromised blood flow ?ARF
- Early goal-directed therapy for low BP,
intravascular volume, ScvO2, decrease mortality - Daily dialysis shorten duration of ARF
6Hepatorenal syndrome
- Profound renal vasoconstriction
- Type 1 rapid and profound deterioration,
extremely high mortality - Type 2 insidious onset
- Therapy mesenteric vasoconstrictors (midorine,
octreotide, terlipressin), NAC - Transjugular intrahepatic portosystemic shunt
(TIPS) - Liver transplantation
7Types of Acute Kidney Dysfunction
- Pre-renal (40 - 80)
- renal artery disease
- systemic hypotension
- Dehydration
- Intra-renal (10 - 50)
- acute tubular necrosis
- interstitial nephritis
- Post-renal (lt 10)
- obstruction
Significant overlap
8Diagnosis
9Management of Radiocontrast nephropathy
- Hydration NaHCO3 more effective than NaCl
- N-Acetylcysteine (NAC) antioxidant
- Diuretics
- Vasodilators Fenoldopam
- Dialysis
10Prevention of AKDGoals of therapy are to prevent
AKD or need for RRT
- Effective
- Hydration
- Prevent hypotension
- Avoid nephrotoxins
- Unknown
- N-acetylcysteine
- Sodium Bicarbonate
- Prophylactic Hemofiltration
- Ineffective/harmful
- Diuretics
- Dopamine
- Other renal vasoactive drugs
- DA-1 agonists
- PDE inhibitors
- Ca blockers
- Adenosine antagonists
- Natriuretic peptides
Kellum JA, Leblanc M, Venkatraman, R. Clinical
Evidence. 2004111094-118.
11Risks of Low-dose Dopamine
- Bowel mucosal ischemia
- Pro-arrhythmic
- Hypo-pituitarism (inhibition of TSH release from
the pituitary) - Immune suppression (inhibition of T-cell
lymphocyte function) - Bad medicine
12Treatment of AKDGoals of therapy are to prevent
death, reduce complications, hasten/permit renal
recovery
- Effective
- Hemodialysis
- Biocompatible membranes
- More dialysis
- Unknown
- CRRT vs. IHD
- Earlier dialysis
- Ineffective/harmful
- Diuretics
- Dopamine
Diuretics are never a treatment for oliguria
but are sometimes required for management of
volume overload.
Kellum JA, Leblanc M, Venkatraman, R. Clinical
Evidence. 2004 111094-118.
13Treatment Diuretics
- Diuretics Effects on outcome (large
observational studies) - 4-center, retrospective analysis of patients
referred for nephrology consults (1989 - 1995 n
552) - With adjustments for co-variates and propensity
score, diuretic use was associated with - Significantly increased risk of death or
non-recovery of renal function (odds ratio 1.77
95 CI 1.14 - 2.76) - Mehta et al. JAMA. 20022882547-53.
- 52-center, prospective inception cohort of ICU
patients (n 1743) - No differences in mortality, or renal recovery,
even after adjustment for the same co-variates
and propensity score - Odds ratio 1.22 (p 0.15)
- However, no benefit associated with diuretics
either! - Uchino et al. Crit Care Med. 2004321669 77.
14Nephrotoxins
- Aminoglycosides once-daily dosing, used lt 5
days, decrease toxicity - Amphotericin B 30 toxicity
- Acyclovir crystal nephropathy (15-45),
intravascular volume replacement, increasing
urinary flow, slow infusion
15Indications for acute dialysis (AEIOU)
- Acidosis
- Electrolytes hyperkalemia
- Intoxication
- Overload (pulmonary edema)
- Uremia (altered mental status, seizures,
pericarditis)
16Renal replacement therapy
- Peritoneal dialysis
- Hemodialysis
- Continuous renal replacement therapy (for
hemodynamic unstable patients)
17Management of the complications of ARF
- Volume overload
- Hyponatremia
- Metabolic acidosis
- Hyperkalemia
- Hypermagnesemia
- Hyperphosphatemia
- Anemia
- Encephalopathy
- Decreased drug elimination
- Uremic pericarditis
- Bleeding abnormalities
- Infectious complication
- Nutritional support
18Conclusions/Recommendations
- For Treatment of AKD in the ICU
- Avoid further injury from nephrotoxins,
hypotension, and dehydration. - - Grades B - D for various options
- Dont use dopamine or other vasoactive drugs.
- - Grade A
- Avoid diuretics.
- - Grade D
- Use biocompatable membranes.
- - Avoid cuprophane (Grade A -)
- - Avoid all cellulosic membranes (Grade C)
- Use 35 ml/kg/min for CRRT and possibly daily
dialysis for IRRT. - - Grade B
- Use CRRT?
- - Grade D
19Case 1
- 53 y/o male, poorly controlled H/T, fever and
cough for 2 days, CXR RLL infiltrate, BP 88/54 - Cr 1.5 mg/dl, BUN 42
- U/O 20-30 ml/hr
- After fluid challenge, BP 110/60
20Case 1
- U/O lt 0.5 ml/kg/hr
- UCr 50 mg/dL, FeNa 0.5, prerenal disease
- BUN/Cr 40/1.8, BUN/Cr gt20
- BP 90/55
- Lactate 2.7, SvO2 72, CVP 14
- Levophed infusion, activated protein C
21Case 1
- Next day, Cr 2, BP improves
- Complete recovery
22Case 2
- 64 y/o female, H/T, TVD, EF 20, 80 kg
- Undergo CABG
- Postop U/O 30-40 ml/hr, Cr 1.5 ? 2.0 mg/dl,
- C.I. 2.2, on epinephrine and dobutamine infusion
- Diagnosis ATN
23Case 2
- Next day, Cr 3.0, BUN 65, U/O 300 ml/day, I/O
11L, 90 kg, edema - Lasix no response, Cr 4.0, CVVH
- Next 5 days, 8L fluids removed, cardiac function
improved, intermittent HD - 1 week later, renal function improved
- 1 month later, Cr normal