How do the prerenal, intrinsic, and postrenal types of acute kidney injury differ in etiology, prognosis, clinical manifestations, and management?

Biomedical Instrumentation Systems
1st Edition
ISBN:9781133478294
Author:Chatterjee
Publisher:Chatterjee
Chapter10: Instrumentation In Extracorporeal Circulation And Cardiac Assist Devices
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How do the prerenal, intrinsic, and postrenal types of acute kidney injury differ in etiology, prognosis, clinical manifestations, and management?

Expert Solution
Step 1

Pre-renal, in which a decrease in GFR is caused by a decrease in renal blood flow.

Intrinsic/intra-renal illness occurs when a disease process damages the kidney itself.

A process downstream of the kidney hinders urine drainage (urinary tract obstruction) in the post-renal stage.

Step 2

*Acute kidney damage can be classified into three types: prerenal, which is caused by diminished renal perfusion, typically due to volume depletion, intrinsic renal, which is caused by a process within the kidneys, and postrenal, which is caused by insufficient urine outflow distal to the kidneys.

*causes:

Prerenal:

Sunken eyes, dry skin, poor skin flexibility, dry mouth and eyes, quick heart rate, and tipsiness or unsteadiness upon standing or sitting up are all signs of serious lack of hydration.

Intrinsic:

*Muscle aches and pains, as well as compartment syndrome

*Edema of the periorbital, sacrum, and lower extremities; rash; oropharyngeal/nasal ulcers
*Livedo reticularis, funduscopic examination indicating malignant hypertension,
*Pyrexia, stomach bruits 

Post renal:

Prostate hypertrophy, bladder distention, and pelvic bulk

Management:

Assuring adequate renal perfusion by attaining and maintaining hemodynamic stability while avoiding hypovolemia is critical to therapy. Clinical assessment of intravascular volume status and prevention of volume overload may be challenging in some patients, in which case monitoring central venous pressures in an intensive care unit may be beneficial.

When intravascular volume loss necessitates fluid resuscitation, isotonic solutions are recommended to hyperoncotic solutions.

A mean arterial pressure of greater than 65 mm Hg is an acceptable target, which may necessitate the use of vasopressors in individuals with persistent hypotension.

Renal-dose dopamine is no longer indicated since it is linked to poorer results in patients with acute renal damage. Positive inotropes, as well as afterload and preload reduction, can be used to improve cardiac function as needed.

Calcium gluconate is not required in patients with no electrocardiographic signs of hyperkalemia, however sodium polystyrene sulfonate (Kayexalate) can be administered to progressively lower potassium levels, and loop diuretics can be used in those who respond to diuretics. Potassium intake should be limited in the diet.

The most common reason for using diuretics is to treat volume overload. Intravenous loop diuretics, given as a bolus or as a continuous infusion, can help with this. However, in the absence of volume overload, diuretics do not improve morbidity, mortality, or renal outcomes and should not be used to prevent or treat acute kidney injury.

Iodinated contrast medium and gadolinium should be avoided, and non-contrast studies should be used if imaging is required.

Antibiotics, proper nutrition, mechanical breathing, glycemic control, and anaemia therapy are examples of supportive therapies that should be pursued based on conventional management standards.

Treatment with pulse steroids, cytotoxic therapy, or a combination of the two may be considered in individuals with fast-developing glomerulonephritis, usually after a kidney biopsy confirms the diagnosis.

In some patients, conservative care will not be enough to control the metabolic effects of acute kidney injury, and renal replacement therapy will be required. Refractory hyperkalemia, volume overload that is resistant to medical treatment, uremic pericarditis or pleuritis, uremic encephalopathy, intractable acidosis, and certain poisonings and intoxications are all reasons to start renal replacement therapy (e.g., ethylene glycol, lithium).

Prognosis:

Acute kidney injury patients are more prone to acquire chronic kidney disease later in life. They're also more likely to develop end-stage renal disease and die young. Acute kidney injury patients should be closely monitored for the development or progression of chronic renal disease.

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