Abstract
Acute kidney injury (AKI) is defined by a sudden loss of excretory kidney function. AKI is part of a range of conditions summarized as acute kidney diseases and disorders (AKD), in which slow deterioration of kidney function or persistent kidney dysfunction is associated with an irreversible loss of kidney cells and nephrons, which can lead to chronic kidney disease (CKD). New biomarkers to identify injury before function loss await clinical implementation. AKI and AKD are a global concern. In low-income and middle-income countries, infections and hypovolaemic shock are the predominant causes of AKI. In high-income countries, AKI mostly occurs in elderly patients who are in hospital, and is related to sepsis, drugs or invasive procedures. Infection and trauma-related AKI and AKD are frequent in all regions. The large spectrum of AKI implies diverse pathophysiological mechanisms. AKI management in critical care settings is challenging, including appropriate volume control, nephrotoxic drug management, and the timing and type of kidney support. Fluid and electrolyte management are essential. As AKI can be lethal, kidney replacement therapy is frequently required. AKI has a poor prognosis in critically ill patients. Long-term consequences of AKI and AKD include CKD and cardiovascular morbidity. Thus, prevention and early detection of AKI are essential.
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Introduction
Acute kidney injury (AKI) describes a sudden loss of kidney function that is determined on the basis of increased serum creatinine levels (a marker of kidney excretory function) and reduced urinary output (oliguria) (a quantitative marker of urine production) and is limited to a duration of 7 days (Table 1)1. AKI is part of a variety of functional kidney conditions, which are summarized as acute kidney disease and disorders (AKD) and can range from mild and self-limiting to severe and persistent. AKD can occur without ever meeting the criterion of rapid onset of AKI, for example when kidney dysfunction evolves slowly1, or AKD can continue after an AKI event has ended, for example, when kidney dysfunction does not resolve or when structural damage to the kidney persists. By definition, AKD persisting for >3 months is referred to as chronic kidney disease (CKD). Of note, AKI and AKD frequently occur in patients with precedent CKD (Fig. 1).
As the diagnostic markers serum creatinine and urine output level measure loss of kidney function and not injury, AKI can be seen as a misnomer. In the absence of injury markers, individuals with episodes of transient volume depletion can meet the diagnostic criteria of AKI without injury being present. A few hours of volume depletion in an otherwise healthy human may have no long-term health implications. Similarly, renin–angiotensin system inhibitors or other drugs that affect glomerular filtration may result in small changes in serum creatinine levels that are not indicative of kidney injury2. However, AKI persisting despite volume therapy probably indicates structural damage to the kidney3.
Unfortunately, direct assessment of kidney damage, apart from biopsy, is not possible with existing technology; hence, numerous urinary biomarkers are in use or have been proposed as indicators of glomerular or tubular cell injury4. A consensus statement published in 2020 suggested that damage biomarkers should be integrated into the definition of AKI to augment its classification (Table 2)5. Importantly, both functional impairment (serum creatinine level elevation and/or urine output decline) and presence of biomarkers indicating structural damage are associated with marked increases in mortality in the appropriate clinical context, for example, in cases of critical illness in which they increase hospital mortality 3–7-fold6,7,8,9, whereas the same changes may not have long-term health implications in other settings, such as in marathon runners10. Given that the kidney provides life-sustaining functions, severe AKI can be lethal; hence, appropriate management including kidney replacement therapy (KRT), if needed, is essential.
In this Primer, we discuss the epidemiology of AKI in different economic settings, as well as the pathophysiology and diagnosis of AKI applied to a variety of settings, such as infections, sepsis, surgery, trauma, nephrotoxic medications, and heart disease, including its long-term consequences. Other causes of AKI or AKD, such as hepatorenal syndrome, glomerulonephritis, acute forms of glomerulonephritis or thrombotic microangiopathies (which can present as AKI), kidney transplantation or neonatal circumstances11,12,13,14, are not discussed in detail. We detail current approaches and cornerstones of AKI management, summarize how AKI and its long-term effects affect patients’ quality of life and highlight ongoing and future initiatives to improve care for patients with this disorder.
Epidemiology
Incidence
The global burden of AKI-related mortality exceeds by far that of breast cancer, heart failure or diabetes15, with mortality remaining high during the past 50 years. In general, the incidence of AKI is reported as either community-acquired or hospital-acquired AKI. In high-income countries (HIC), AKI is predominantly hospital-acquired, whereas community-acquired AKI is more common in lower-income settings15,16. These patterns apply to both adults and children globally. In HIC overall, patients with AKI tend to be older, have multiple comorbidities, and have access to dialysis and intensive care if needed17. Post-surgical or diagnostic interventions, or iatrogenic factors are the main causes of AKI in HIC18 (Box 1). However, in low-income settings, numerous community-acquired causes exist, such as sepsis, volume depletion, toxins (bites, remedies) and pregnancy19. Patients tend to be younger than those in HIC, access to care is more challenging and women are under-represented in the patient population.
A meta-analysis of 154 studies that defined AKI according to the 2012 Kidney Disease Improving Global Outcomes (KDIGO) classification compiled data of 3,585,911 people from mostly north of the Equator (84% HIC) and reported community-acquired AKI in 8.3% of ambulatory patients and in 20.0–31.7% of patients at various levels of in-hospital care20. Others report much lower incidences, which may relate to AKI definitions and local circumstances21. The average pooled mortality rate was 23% but reached 49.4% in those requiring KRT20.
In HIC, AKI is most prevalent in intensive care units (ICUs), where it occurs mostly in older patients in the context of multiorgan failure with high mortality. In this setting, AKI-related costs are very high, and prevention is difficult. The incidence of AKI in ICUs increased over the past decades in world regions with ageing populations20,22. In low- to middle-income countries (LMIC), AKI occurs mostly as a complication of a single disease with a pooled incidence and mortality rate of 21%, respectively; however, the pooled mortality rises to 42% in those with KDIGO stage 3 and to 46% in those requiring KRT23. Around 77% of AKI in LMIC is community-acquired, with dehydration being the most common cause, whereas community-acquired AKI accounts for 50% in HIC, with hypotension and shock being the main causes24. AKI in LMIC is considered largely preventable with public health initiatives, which need to be cost-effective, as care for patients with severe stages of AKI quickly becomes unaffordable22. Globally, the mean age of patients with AKI is 60 years but this declines with decreasing socioeconomic status to 50 years in LMIC. Independent of the socioeconomic status of the region, 60% of patients with AKI are men24, which may either relate to the limited access of women to healthcare or to sex-related risks for AKI in males25. Few ethnic variations have been reported. In Asia, the risk of AKI after cardiac surgery was higher in India and Malaysia than in China26. In the USA, the risk of pregnancy-related AKI was considerably higher in Black women than in white women27. Racial differences in the incidence of AKI exist and may involve multiple factors. A multivariate analysis of a US study cohort identified socioeconomic status to account for the higher risk of AKI in African American individuals than in white individuals28.
Risk factors
Risk factors for AKI include environmental, socioeconomic and/or cultural factors, as well as factors related to the process of care, acute exposures and patients themselves. Environmental factors include inadequate drinking and waste water systems, insufficient control of infectious diseases and insufficient health care systems23. Patient-related factors can be modifiable, for example, volume depletion, hypotension, anaemia, hypoxia and use of nephrotoxic drugs, or nonmodifiable, for example, chronic kidney, heart, liver or gastrointestinal disease, diabetes and severe infections and sepsis. Rarer causes include genetic predispositions to myoglobinuria, haemoglobinuria and urolithiasis23. Further important risk factors for AKI are severe diseases, acute infections, sepsis, malaria, severe trauma, hypovolaemia, old age, pre-existing CKD, acute organ failures, major surgeries (including cardiac surgery), being in the ICU with exposure to nephrotoxic drugs and opportunistic infections, chemotherapy for leukaemia or cancer, delayed graft function upon kidney transplantation, autoimmune disorders with rapid progressive kidney injury, cholesterol crystal embolism and urinary tract obstruction24. In HIC, despite severe AKI occurring more frequently in the context of hospital-related risk factors, such as major surgery, bleeding, septic shock or drug toxicity in older patients with multiple diseases, milder forms of AKI can also be community-acquired (Box 1)16,18,29,30,31. By contrast, in LMIC, community-acquired AKI affects younger, previously healthy individuals, with a relatively high prevalence of sepsis, obstetric complications or animal venom as causes18,32. In these settings, AKI may also be caused by HIV infection, hantavirus infection, malaria or dengue disease, if their prevalence is high18,30. COVID-19 is a risk factor for AKI in all world regions (Box 2).
Mechanisms/pathophysiology
Kidney physiology and kidney lifespan
The kidneys maintain homeostasis of body fluids, electrolytes, osmolality and pH, excrete metabolic waste products and secrete hormones and bioactive molecules. As AKI disrupts homeostasis, severe AKI is potentially lethal unless KRT maintains homeostasis until kidney function recovers. AKI in settings of multiorgan failure is frequently lethal despite KRT33.
The kidneys are composed of nephrons, small independent functional units with a glomerular part filtering fluid and small molecules from the blood and a single tubule that reabsorbs most filtered molecules and secretes metabolic waste products, concentrating the urine to 1–2 litres per day. The number of nephrons is set at birth and declines with age starting from around 25 years of age34. As metabolic activity also declines with age, healthy individuals at age 70 do well with only half of the original nephron number without adaptation35. However, low nephron endowment at birth or any nephron loss beyond that of normal ageing shortens kidney lifespan; hence, the incidence of CKD and kidney failure36 requiring KRT increases in the elderly population37. AKI and CKD are connected because AKI can cause irreversible loss of nephrons at any phase of life and, therefore, shorten kidney lifespan (Fig. 2)38. Thus, AKI is an important risk factor for CKD, especially in ageing populations.
Pathophysiology of kidney failure
Loss of kidney excretory function implies disturbances in the main function of the kidneys (maintaining homeostasis), for example, through excretion of metabolic waste products. Serum creatinine and urea nitrogen levels are often used as biomarkers of reduced kidney function, but their use skews awareness towards the kidneys’ excretory function1.
Fluid homeostasis is affected, as declining glomerular filtration rate (GFR) and activation of the renin-angiotensin system promote fluid retention, which presents as peripheral oedema, third-space effusions, and pulmonary congestion, especially in those with heart failure (Supplementary Box 1)39. In addition, as urinary output determines potassium excretion, hyperkalaemia is a common complication of severe AKI. When hyperkalaemia leads to electrocardiogram changes, AKI constitutes a medical emergency and warrants immediate intervention. Both hyponatraemia and hypernatraemia may occur when the kidney loses the capacity for urine concentration or dilution as needed. Impaired phosphate clearance leads to hyperphosphataemia.
AKI also affects acid–base homeostasis. A declining capacity for the excretion of fixed acids in patients with AKI causes tubular metabolic acidosis and respiratory compensation via an increased ventilatory drive40. Although a hyperchloraemic metabolic acidosis develops initially, widening of the anion gap is often seen as the result of accumulation of phosphate, sulfate and small organic anions in the bloodstream. A decline in the capacity to excrete metabolic waste products is indicated by azotaemia but implies disturbance of homeostasis of hundreds, if not thousands, of other metabolites that are not waste products, which all together account for symptoms of uraemia, such as fatigue, tremor or confusion.
Importantly, kidney failure affects most organ systems of the body (Fig. 3). Many of the AKI-related uraemic toxins originate from the intestinal microbiota, such as indoxyl sulfate or p-cresyl sulfate. The microbiota itself undergoes shifts in its composition, owing to AKI and the accompanying acidosis, azotaemia, intestinal ischaemia, and other alterations of the intestinal microenvironments, which affects the microbiota’s secretome and metabolites needed for normal human physiology41,42,43. The lungs are affected by hyperpnoea to compensate for metabolic acidosis, hypervolaemia, cytokines, oxidative stress and cytotoxic elements of necrotic cell debris (released by parenchymal necrosis in the kidneys, causing microvascular injury, and eventually acute respiratory distress syndrome)44,45. AKI affects cardiac function via acidosis, hyperkalaemia, uraemic toxins, hypervolaemia, hypertension, and systemic inflammation46. Uraemic encephalopathy also involves systemic oxidative stress responses41,47.
Kidney injury and recovery
The term AKI, as defined, ascribes a decline in kidney excretory function and frequently (but not always) also tissue injury. Volume depletion, haemorrhagic shock, and heart failure with reduced ejection fraction, hepatorenal syndrome, venous congestion or hypercalcaemia can cause potentially reversible hypoperfusion of the kidney that transiently reduces GFR without parenchymal injury (Box 1, Fig. 4), but as ischaemia persists ischaemic tubular injury may turn into tubule necrosis48. Nephrotoxic drugs and radiocontrast agents contribute to AKI in hospitalized patients and are also common causes of community-acquired AKI49,50. Multiple mechanisms are involved but most drugs can be classified into six main categories. First, some drugs, most notably chemotherapeutics (such as cisplatin) and antimicrobials (such as amphotericin or aminoglycosides), have direct chemical nephrotoxicity. Drugs that are cleared via the kidneys, such as vancomycin, are particularly problematic because drug-induced kidney dysfunction can lead to accumulation of the drug and its metabolites, further amplifying the toxicity51. Second, some agents are nephrotoxic via immune-mediated mechanisms, leading to allergic tubulointerstitial nephritis, which can be difficult to diagnose owing to a lack of overt signs52. Third, some drugs, most notably angiotensin-converting enzyme (ACE) inhibitors and angiotensin receptor blockers, can cause a decrease in GFR by affecting intrarenal haemodynamics53. Drugs with haemodynamic effects on kidney perfusion can protect nephrons from hyperfiltration-related progression to CKD, although a substantial and persistent decline of kidney perfusion may lead to ischaemic acute tubular necrosis (ATN)54,55. Fourth, when drug metabolites crystallize inside the kidney tubules, they can cause intrarenal obstruction of urinary flow and kidney injury56. Fifth, the mechanism of action of some drugs can contribute to AKI, such as failure intrarenal haemorrhage associated with oral anticoagulants or acute urate nephropathy associated with uricosuric drugs. Finally, the renal excretion of some drugs or drug metabolites competes with creatinine at the same tubular transporter, mimicking AKI, although other functions of the kidney remain unaffected.
Many other triggers can cause ATN (Box 1), but combinations of triggers are common, especially in ICU settings. Human data are scarce but animal models suggest that ATN is not a passive process but instead involves different forms of regulated necrosis, such as necroptosis and ferroptosis, that can synchronize tubular cell death along entire tubule segments and spares glomeruli57,58. The necrotic tubular cells can form casts and obstruct the lumen of tubules59. Tubule necrosis involves the release of danger signals that activate Toll-like and other pattern recognition receptors on resident immune cells in the kidney interstitium, namely MHCII+F4/80Hi conventional dendritic cells in mice60; however, little is known about the immune cell dynamics in human AKI. Activation of these cells triggers the influx of neutrophils in the early injury phase and M1 macrophages and other myeloid cells in the late injury phase, which all contribute to a local inflammatory response that accelerates tubule necrosis, an auto-amplification loop referred to as necroinflammation61,62. Unless the nephrotoxic trigger persists, as in persistent ischaemia, toxin exposure or alloimmunity, numerous counter-regulators support a resolution of necroinflammation, which is a requirement to launch healing responses.
The capacity to replace lost tubular cells is restricted to a subset of immature tubular cells (renal progenitors) scattered along the nephron that retain the capacity to replace single epithelial cells and, in some instances, to regenerate entire tubule segments63,64,65. Complete loss of these progenitors disrupts regeneration of an affected tubule segment, which can result in irreversible loss of the nephron (Fig. 4). The number of irreversibly lost nephrons in an AKI episode determines the long-term prognosis of kidney function63.
Nephron loss is difficult to appreciate in clinical practice because, even after persistent AKD, kidney function frequently recovers to some extent2,66,67. However, recovery of kidney function does not necessarily represent regeneration, as functional capacity can be augmented by polyploidization of tubular epithelial cells in unaffected nephrons (compensatory hypertrophy)63. This evolutionarily conserved mechanism enables life-saving increased functional outputs of differentiated parenchymal cells in organs with limited cell turnover. In the injured kidneys, processes such as dedifferentiation and mitotic events during which cells no longer contribute to functional performance would be incompatible with maintaining kidney function in the phase where this is most needed to assure survival68. However, in severe forms of ATN, polyploidization and progenitor proliferation cannot sustain a sufficient residual function, and severe ATN is lethal unless KRT is used to cover the time until a life-sustaining level of kidney function recovers.
Long-term consequences of AKI or AKD
The adaptations that occur in response to the irreversible loss of kidney cells or entire nephrons may ensure short-term survival but they have considerable trade-offs that affect long-term outcomes after an AKI or AKD episode (Fig. 4)68,69,70.
Irreversible nephron loss, fibrosis and CKD
Depending on the severity of AKI, few, many or most nephrons remain irreversibly destroyed and lost, which implies post-AKI CKD and a reduction of kidney lifespan66,71. Albuminuria following AKI is a clinical indicator of CKD, even if GFR seems fully recovered72. The effect of AKI on kidney lifespan is most evident in older adults in whom AKI-related nephron loss adds to age-related nephron loss and, frequently, to precedent CKD owing to previous injuries or chronic nephropathies, referred to as AKI on CKD73. Thus, as ATN implies nephron loss, the severity of ATN determines the effect on kidney lifespan66. In extreme cases, severe ATN can result in kidney failure with a need for persistent KRT.
Hypertension, cardiovascular disease and stroke
Survivors of AKI may face hypertension, which can be a sign of subclinical CKD. A retrospective cohort study identified a 22% increase in the risk of presenting with a blood pressure of >140/90 mmHg in those who had AKI compared with individuals who did not experience AKI after adjustments for demographic factors, precedent health status and cardiovascular risk factors74. Post-AKI CKD is associated with increased cardiovascular and cerebrovascular morbidity and mortality70,75,76. A meta-analysis including 254,150 adults (55,150 with AKI) found that AKI increased the risk of subsequent heart failure by 58%, myocardial infarction by 40% and stroke by 15%77. Whether this increase relates to an effect on the cardiovascular system during the AKI episode or to the increase in risk owing to post-AKI CKD is not clear.
Mortality
Survivors of AKI face an increased post-hospitalization mortality. A meta-analysis of 110 studies that used the KDIGO definition of AKI found an AKI-related mortality of 23%20. In an analysis of >5 million patients discharged from hospital, mortality within 90 days was 35% in those with AKI and 13% in those without AKI78. Longer-term mortality among patients with AKI may also be increased. In a study in patients who underwent cardiac surgery, increase in mortality risk was independent of kidney function recovery at the time of hospital discharge and started only 4–5 years after surgery79. A systematic review including 47,017 patients who had been discharged from hospital reported 8.9 deaths per 100 person-years in those who had AKI compared with 4.3 deaths per 100 patient-years in those without AKI80. The most common causes of death after a hospitalization with AKI are cardiovascular disease (28%) and cancer (28%), with respective standardized mortality ratios nearly six-fold and eight-fold higher than those in the general population70. Cancers were mostly haematological and genitourinary.
An AKI episode implies a risk for subsequent development of kidney cancer and an AKI episode following partial nephrectomy for kidney cancer increases the risk of cancer reoccurrence81, probably because kidney injury induces DNA damage and a clonal expansion of mutated cells during the repair phase82. Indeed, renal progenitors that confer tubule regeneration upon ischaemic ATN can turn into tumour stem cells and set off monoclonal lesions in a papillary renal cell adenoma−carcinoma sequence81,83. Kidney injuries to other nephron segments cause other types of kidney cancer81. Thus, kidney cancer is a long-term trade-off for kidney regeneration that supports short-term survival during ATN68.
Diagnosis, screening and prevention
Unlike myocardial infarction and other acute organ failures, AKI does not present with immediate onset of alarming symptoms such as chest pain, dyspnoea, palsy or blindness; hence, diagnosis requires specific technical assessments. The best overall index of kidney function is the GFR, but direct GFR measurement is difficult. Usually, the GFR is estimated by using serum levels of endogenous filtration markers, such as creatinine. Several studies have demonstrated that small increases of serum creatinine are associated with worse outcomes of AKI84,85. In addition, urine output is a sensitive parameter of kidney function and a biomarker of tubular injury86. However, the relationship between urine output, GFR and tubular injury is very complex.
Diagnostic and classification criteria
Adults
Evidence exists that suggests that an acute and small impairment of kidney function, manifested by changes of blood chemistry and urine output, is associated with a worse outcome of AKI84,85,87. In contrast to the old term acute renal failure, the Risk, Injury, Failure, Loss of kidney function, and End-stage kidney disease (RIFLE) and Acute Kidney Injury Network (AKIN) classifications provided updated definitions of AKI that encompass the complete spectrum of the syndrome from small increases of serum creatinine to requirement of KRT. The RIFLE and AKIN classifications have three severity grades based on changes of serum creatinine level or urine output, and the worse of these two criteria is used to define the grade. RIFLE and AKIN thus introduced a conceptual framework for how to diagnose and stage AKI, but further modifications were needed to meet the clinical complexity of AKI, especially outside ICUs or hospital care.
The 2012 KDIGO guideline defined the diagnostic criteria for AKI and AKD1. Unlike earlier recommendations, the KDIGO criteria no longer require adequate fluid resuscitation to be performed and urinary obstruction excluded before using the criteria. In particular, patients with CKD are predisposed to develop AKI, because CKD is an independent risk factor for AKI88,89,90,91,92. However, the diagnosis of AKI in patients with CKD is difficult, because these patients have impaired kidney function and the percentage changes in serum creatinine level after AKI are in part confounded by baseline kidney function93. Only larger absolute rises in creatinine levels indicate an independent association with mortality94. However, AKI in patients with CKD conveys serious risks, which is acknowledged by defining any rise of serum creatinine to >4 mg/dl as AKI stage 31.
The KDIGO criteria use a decline in urine output but reducing urinary output is also a physiological mechanism in response to reduced fluid intake or fluid losses, for example. by sweating, which readily responds to fluid intake and usually does not imply tubule injury. Injured tubules no longer respond to diuretics owing to the loss of the required sodium transporters; hence, a single bolus of a loop diuretic not followed by a substantial increase of urinary output, referred to as the furosemide stress test, indicates tubule injury95. In fact, the occurrence of AKI is considerably higher with abnormal urine output and serum creatinine levels compared with abnormal serum creatinine levels alone (62.1% versus 17.7%)96,97.
Children
The different AKI definitions were developed for average-sized adults. After 2 years of age, kidney growth results in a GFR equivalent to that of adults when adjusted for body surface area98,99, but the serum creatinine criterion is difficult to apply to smaller paediatric patients, because they have a lower muscle mass that does not achieve high serum creatinine values. Thus, the paediatric RIFLE (pRIFLE) criteria were developed, which stage AKI by the rise in creatinine levels, fall in GFR, or decrease in urine output100,101 The KDIGO guidelines1 also refer to the pRIFLE criteria for the definition of AKI in children. However, the definition should only be used in children >1 month of age. The practical value of pRIFLE was shown in a trial including 103 patients (median age 4.5 years)102.
Screening and risk assessment with biomarkers
Around half of the patients with stage 1 AKI have elevated biomarkers and histologic abnormalities on kidney biopsy, whereas most of the patients with stage 3 AKI have both96,103. Serum creatinine levels and urine output are two functional biomarkers that have several limitations1. Urine output has a low specificity because this parameter can be influenced by several factors, including hypovolaemia and the use of diuretics. By contrast, serum creatinine level has low sensitivity in previously healthy kidneys, because the serum creatinine levels increase only if at least 50% of the functional nephrons are lost. In patients with low baseline GFR, minor changes in kidney function can already meet the threshold of an increase of serum creatinine of 0.3 mg/dl, that is, AKI.
Novel biomarkers were not included in the 2012 KDIGO guidelines1. AKI biomarkers indicate different aspects of AKI and can be broadly divided into functional or damage biomarkers (Supplementary Box 2)104,105,106. Although biomarkers, such as IL-18 or kidney injury molecule 1 (KIM-1), are available and most of them have a very good predictive value, limitations exist, including poor predictive performance when the timing of the kidney insult is unknown; hence, they are implemented only inconsistently in clinical practice107,108,109.
In contrast to functional biomarkers, damage biomarkers might be able to identify patients at high risk for AKI (Fig. 5). However, these damage biomarkers should not be used in all patients regardless of their AKI risk profile, because their sensitivity would be low. The concept of renal angina, analogous to troponin measurement in patients with coronary angina, was introduced in 2010 and recommends that biomarkers should be measured only in patients at risk and with a specific clinical condition (for example, sepsis or major surgery)110. Measuring damage biomarkers in these patients substantially improves their positive predictive value110.
Different biomarkers relate to various pathophysiological processes mediating AKI5 and might help in detecting AKI earlier. These markers will be critical in developing targeted therapies and designing clinical trials for patients with AKI. Four biomarkers that can be measured at the bedside by using point-of-care devices may be particularly useful in daily practice. Cystatin C levels are probably redundant to creatinine levels. Several neutrophil-gelatinase-associated lipocalin (NGAL) isoforms are released by the kidney and by immune cells111. In the urine of healthy individuals, the concentration of NGAL is very low. After an insult, NGAL plasma and urine levels increase considerably, suggesting a role of NGAL for the kidneys that is analogous to that of troponin for the heart112. NGAL has been shown to have very high sensitivity and specificity for predicting AKI in children undergoing congenital heart surgery113. However, other studies in patients with different comorbidities found a limited predictive performance of NGAL, potentially because immune cell-derived NGAL may not necessarily imply AKI104,114. The explanations for these contradictory results include poor performance of the standard markers of urine output and serum creatinine levels, preexisting comorbidities and timing of biomarker assessment, because NGAL has a good predictive value only in patients with previously normal kidney function115. Thus, NGAL can be used in patients with normal kidney function and a well described insult and in patients with precedent CKD116,117.
Unbiased screening for urinary biomarkers that can predict subsequent AKI revealed cell cycle arrest markers as top candidates118. Indeed, cell cycle arrest of kidney tubular epithelial cells is involved in the pathogenesis of AKI119. However, the predictive performance was only moderate in some studies120,121. Once the kidney experiences stress, tubular epithelial cells arrest in the G1 phase to avoid and recover from damage122. As cell stress is one of the first events during AKI, metalloproteinase inhibitor 2 (TIMP2) and insulin-like growth factor-binding protein 7 (IGFBP7) are detectable in urine very early during development of AKI118,123. Several trials have shown that urinary TIMP2 and IGFBP7 levels predict the development of AKI, kidney recovery and mortality118,123,124,125. In a multicentre observational trial in critically ill patients, combined TIMP2 and IGFBP7 measurement showed very good performance in predicting moderate to severe AKI (area under the curve (AUC) of 0.80), and considerably improved risk stratification when added to a clinical model126,127. In addition, TIMP2 and IGFBP7 showed very good predictive value in diagnosing AKI associated with cardiac surgery123. Of note, these biomarkers can also be used to predict adverse long-term outcomes, because their early measurement in the setting of critical illness may identify patients with AKI at increased risk of death or KRT in the following 9 months125. Further studies demonstrated an additional benefit of using these biomarkers in conjunction with the functional criteria of serum creatinine and urine output, as their combination improves the prediction of worse outcomes126,127.
Importantly, kidney damage without any loss of function, that is subclinical AKI, also affects outcomes128,129. Thus, the Acute Disease Quality Initiative (ADQI) group proposed an extended definition of AKI, which includes functional and damage biomarkers (Table 2)5. Before using this new definition in daily clinical practice, further research is needed to evaluate whether elevation in biomarkers without any changes in urine output or serum creatinine is associated with worse kidney and patient outcomes.
Other methods of measuring kidney function
To date, no validated method exists for continuously measuring GFR in critically ill patients. However, one study published in 1994 demonstrated that such monitoring is feasible130,131. Ongoing attempts to overcome practical obstacles may eventually implement this method in clinical practice130. Rapid kidney function assessment can be achieved by collecting urine and a repeated blood sample to determine creatinine clearance, which can also be reliably performed in the case of oliguria132,133. Creatinine clearance has been shown to diagnose impairment of kidney function earlier than plasma creatinine rise133.
Prevention
In LMIC, preventing volume depletion alone is believed to already have a major effect on the incidence of AKI23,134. Apart from preventing volume depletion and avoiding nephrotoxin exposure or overdosing, new biomarkers can identify patients at high risk of AKI (Supplementary Box 2). This approach can be used to stratify patient populations and implement different measures to prevent the development of AKI. Implementation of the ‘KDIGO bundle’ — consisting of optimization of volume status and haemodynamics, avoidance of nephrotoxic drugs, and prevention of hyperglycaemia, in patients at high risk of AKI as identified by biomarkers — can prevent AKI after cardiac surgery135. In a quality initiative programme, the implementation of supportive measures in biomarker-positive patients reduced the rate of moderate and severe AKI after cardiac surgery136, and the occurrence of AKI in patients undergoing abdominal surgery137. Despite these data, only about 5% of high-risk patients receive these supportive measures138.
Management
Management of AKI is often not optimal. An audit in the UK in 2009 found that >50% of patients were managed poorly, and 43% of AKI cases were recognized late or not at all8. Alerts in the electronic medical record have shown limited, if any, success9. However, when large enough sample sizes are considered, electronic alerts have measurable effects on the duration of hospitalization and on survival139. Because AKI is not a disease but rather a loose collection of syndromes, the first step in managing AKI is to determine its cause and recognizing prerenal causes (hypovolaemia) or postrenal causes (outflow obstruction) (Box 1). Further work-up will be influenced by the patient’s clinical context, location and history. In addition to identification and treatment of the likely AKI causes, general management considerations apply.
Volume status
Volume depletion itself impairs kidney function but does not damage the kidney unless it is severe and sustained (Fig. 6)2. However, volume depletion may contribute to various causes of AKI and attention to fluid status is a cornerstone of therapy140. Patients presenting with AKI from the community can be volume depleted, as can patients in hospital who receive diuretics or experience fluid losses from wounds or drains. Severe dehydration should never occur in a patient in hospital; however, remedying dehydration by providing inappropriate amounts of fluids without proper assessment of patients with AKI can result in fluid overload, which can have considerable harmful effects39. Patients needing intravenous fluid resuscitation should be under direct supervision of a physician and treatment benefits from guidance by haemodynamic monitoring39. Furthermore, a sudden need for fluid resuscitation requires a work-up to determine its cause (for example, occult haemorrhage or sepsis). Of note, patients can develop oliguria from AKI and then develop fluid overload by injudicious administration of intravenous fluids in addition to the fluids they receive for medications and through nutritional support141. Importantly, fluid overload has been identified as an important cause of AKI, because venous congestion can compromise perfusion and cause direct damage to the kidney parenchyma.
Haemodynamic management
Management of blood pressure and cardiac function in the setting of conditions in which AKI arises (for example, septic shock or cardiac surgery) is complex and includes context-specific considerations, depending on the type of circulatory shock the patient experiences140,142. However, some general principles apply to haemodynamic management in patients with AKI (Fig. 6). In normal conditions, organs, including the kidneys, are adequately perfused at a mean arterial pressure (MAP) of 65 mmHg143. Studies investigating whether increased MAP targets should be used for patients in the ICU had mixed results143,144,145. Patients with severe (and perhaps poorly controlled) hypertension may benefit from a higher MAP when in shock, but no fixed target can be recommended143. Some findings suggest individualizing blood pressure management by adjusting the MAP targets based on the typical blood pressure of the patient146. Similarly, patients with increased venous pressure (for example, owing to right-sided heart failure) may not achieve adequate perfusion pressure of the kidney at a MAP of 65 mmHg. In addition, intra-abdominal hypertension is especially problematic for kidney perfusion because it can affect both arterial flow and venous pressure147. Thus, clinicians must individualize the care of patients, sometimes trying a higher MAP in select cases. Optimizing volume status while simultaneously treating vasomotor paralysis with vasopressors is critical (Fig. 6). Studies using functional haemodynamic monitoring to guide haemodynamic management have shown promise in both cardiac surgery and sepsis148. Noradrenaline is the first-line choice as a vasopressor for vasodilatory shock149. Other agents are generally reserved for refractory shock or for specific conditions and none of the agents is universally more ‘kidney-friendly’. Angiotensin II may have advantages in some individuals who have an angiotensin II deficiency150, and corticosteroids are generally recommended as an adjunct therapy in patients with severe septic shock.
Nephrotoxic drugs and agents
Risk for AKI increases with the number of nephrotoxic drugs used and all potentially nephrotoxic agents that can be stopped should be discontinued5,50. Indispensable agents should only be used as long as needed and only at required doses. Careful monitoring of drug concentrations is also mandatory if possible (for example, for vancomycin). Arterial radiocontrast agents should be limited to situations where the therapeutic benefit outweighs the risk and should be used at the lowest volume possible, for example, omitting the ventriculography part of cardiac catheterization unless absolutely necessary. Finally, fluids containing non-physiologic ratios of sodium and chloride may worsen AKI151,152. Balanced electrolyte solutions, such as lactated Ringer’s solution, are preferable in most patients.
Stage-based management of AKI
The 2012 KDIGO AKI guideline emphasizes the importance of AKI staging as a guide to management (Fig. 7)1. Prognosis is strongly correlated with peak AKI stage and the duration of AKI (transient versus persistent) such that the urgency and invasiveness of diagnostic and therapeutic actions increases with AKI stage96. However, AKI stages must be interpreted in the context of baseline kidney function. For patients with previous normal kidney function and stage 1 AKI, management mainly involves rapid identification of the likely cause of AKI and avoidance of secondary insults. Depending on baseline GFR, adjusting drug dosage usually becomes clinically important at stage 2 AKI. Retained solutes are rarely of concern at stage 1 and stage 2 AKI unless the patient has clinically relevant underlying CKD. However, sodium excretion and fluid regulation may already be impaired and careful attention to volume input and output is recommended39. At stage 3 AKI, disruption of acid–base balance and electrolyte levels and accumulation of uraemic toxins may cause symptoms153. For example, patients may develop tachypnoea not only from fluid overload but also from metabolic acidosis. Acidosis will also shift potassium out of cells, further aggravating hyperkalaemia. Even relatively moderate uraemia may worsen platelet function and increase the risk of bleeding. Appropriate medical management of these conditions is effective in most patients1 (Supplementary Fig. 1). In particular, judicious use of loop diuretics can be quite effective in augmenting sodium, potassium and fluid excretion154. However, when medical management is ineffective or if disruptions are life-threatening, KRT will be required.
At all stages of AKI, discontinuation of all potentially nephrotoxic medication as soon as possible is recommended, as all medications cause or contribute to AKI in most cases and are likely to be the most modifiable risk factors for AKI50. Importantly, not all drugs that affect kidney function are nephrotoxic but any drug that reduces renal function can complicate AKI and lead to adverse effects140. Thus, limiting exposure to such drugs as much as possible is imperative. Volume management and haemodynamic monitoring are also required at all stages of AKI. Avoidance of hyperglycaemia is important because the filtered glucose increases tubular reabsorption workload and oxidative stress, a process that sensitizes the kidney tubule to injury155. However, intensive insulin therapy often has adverse effects and management guidelines recommend maintaining blood glucose concentration at 110–149 mg/dl (6.1–8.3 mmol/l)1. Finally, when in stage 3 AKI KRT becomes necessary, guidelines recommend avoiding the subclavian vein for KRT access, because this may lead to central vein stenosis and jeopardize subsequent permanent access156,157.
We note that evidence is accumulating that AKI leads to an increased risk of infection158,159. In experimental models, neutrophil function becomes impaired as early as stage 1 AKI160, and uraemic toxins such as resistin may contribute to immune dysfunction161. Thus, patients with AKI should be monitored closely for sepsis.
An important and unanswered question is whether different forms of AKI can be treated with targeted approaches based on their underlying cause. This strategy is possible for obstructive uropathy or atypical haemolytic uraemic syndrome, but other forms of AKI often have an undefined cause. Achieving a molecular signature with specific biomarkers for different forms of AKI is a task for future research5. According to current knowledge, risk factors and risk modifiers — such as drugs, contrast media, low cardiac output conditions and congestion — should be reduced or eliminated. Even if the cause of the AKI episode can be recognized, this awareness might come too late to prevent initiation of the final common pathway of tubular toxicity, ischaemia and inflammation. Hence, it is essential to use the best available and new biomarkers to recognize initial AKI phases (stage 1S; Table 2) and to apply protective measures and risk mitigation to avoid worsening of the condition. Finally, even when AKI has fully developed (stage 2 and stage 3 AKI), identifying patients who might progress to AKD or even CKD is important140. In these patients, specific biomarkers may help with planning the allocation of resources and in identifying patients in whom antifibrotic agents can be used and blockade of endothelial–mesenchymal transition processes in the kidney tissue can be attempted5.
Management across the trajectory of AKI
In most patients with AKI who receive medical attention and in whom the injury is either self-limited (for example, surgery) or the underlying cause has been corrected (for example, nephrotoxic drug discontinued or infection treated), kidney function begins to improve within 24–48 hours162. However, in 25–35% of patients, AKI persists for ≥72 hours163. These patients have considerably worse outcomes. Thus, persistent AKI should prompt clinicians to revisit their working diagnosis as to the cause of AKI (Box 1) and re-evaluate the general management principles140. For example, a patient who develops AKI following cardiac surgery should have volume status, haemodynamics, and medication list carefully reviewed, and any problems corrected. For most of these patients, this approach will be effective. However, if AKI persists, the clinician should check these points again to ensure that nothing was missed. For clinicians who have little experience in the care of patients with AKI, this might also involve consultation with a nephrologist140.
Recurrent or relapsing AKI is common, especially in patients in the ICU67. Whether recurrence is caused by distinct insults or relapsing kidney dysfunction owing to evolution of the injury from a single insult varies. In general, it is best to assume that recurrence is potentially due to a new cause that needs to be identified. Management of AKD without AKI is similar to that of AKD with AKI. However, these patients will often be identified in the community and a causative event is often not obvious. Risk factors and causes of AKD without AKI are poorly understood. Unless AKD resolves rapidly, management will also begin to include recommendations for CKD management140.
Recovery following AKI is best assessed after hospital discharge but follow-up monitoring of these patients has been historically poor164. Patients may be discharged with unstable kidney function and are, therefore, at an increased risk of drug-associated adverse events, given that most receive renally excreted drugs. Both treatment failures from underdosing in patients whose kidney function improves and toxic effects from overdosing in those whose kidney function worsens are common causes for hospital readmission. Thus, patients should be seen promptly by a nephrologist following hospital discharge to assess kidney function140. Finally, even patients who seem to have completely recovered following AKI or AKD may be at an increased risk of subsequent kidney injury for an unknown period. A prudent course is to be cautious with reinstitution of potentially nephrotoxic drugs and to monitor patients closely for 3–6 months after AKI or AKD recovery140.
Kidney replacement therapy
KRT and support have considerably evolved over the years, making application of extracorporeal therapies safer and easier. Controversies still exist on timing of initiation and selection of patients, often owing to heterogeneity of the studied populations140,165. The ADQI group has recommended an approach that matches the demand of blood purification with the kidney’s capacity on a day-to-day basis; however, how to assess demand and capacity are not standardized5,140. Furthermore, interdisciplinary evaluation may further refine the criteria for initiation. In a patient-centred evaluation of the need to initiate KRT based on principles of precision medicine, life-threatening conditions are not the only indications and prevention of clinical complications should also be considered.
Peritoneal dialysis has been used for many years and is still used in regions where access to more sophisticated techniques is limited or these are not available166,167,168,169. In all other circumstances, extracorporeal techniques are preferred. In the absence of evidence supporting specific techniques, modality selection should be based on a pathophysiological rationale170. In patients whose condition is unstable and in those who are critically ill, continuous KRT is often preferred170. Once the patient is discharged from the ICU, intermittent techniques, such as sustained low efficiency dialysis or daily intermittent haemodialysis, can be safely used. Continuous veno-venous haemofiltration, continuous veno-venous haemodialysis or continuous veno-venous haemodiafiltration are used according to centre experience and personnel training rather than evidence-based difference between the techniques170. Beyond KRT, different membranes and additional devices, such as adsorbers, are available to expand blood purification to other circulating mediators of critical illness, although the scientific evidence for reducing mortality or other meaningful clinical outcomes are scarce. For example, high cut-off membranes enable removal of large molecules, such as free antibody light chains or myoglobin171. In patients with sepsis-associated AKI, a conceptual model has been proposed of sequential extracorporeal therapy with early removal of endotoxin by polymyxin-B haemoperfusion followed by removal of cytokines and pro-inflammatory and anti-inflammatory mediators by sorbent devices172. Subsequently, different configurations of the extracorporeal circuit may enable support of not only the kidney but also the heart, the lungs and the liver172. The best time point to start KRT in patients who are critically ill remains controversial because, in part, relevant trials have had conflicting results regarding kidney outcomes173,174,175. Indeed, best practice in KRT may differ in many ways, especially in specific populations.
Children and especially neonates with a body weight <4 kg have high mortality in the case of AKI and may require dedicated KRT technology. A specific device called CARPEDIEM (Cardio Renal Paediatric Dialysis Emergency Machine) has been approved for continuous KRT in paediatric patients weighing 2.5–10 kg who are critically ill176. Use of this platform has simplified application of KRT in neonates, which may contribute to a 50% survival at ICU discharge in settings where the system is regularly applied177.
Quality of life
Data on the quality of life of patients with AKI during the ICU phase of the disease, at which point many patients receive narcotics during ventilation support, are lacking. AKI-specific aspects would also be difficult to assess given the frequent complexity of medical conditions. Available studies focus on the long-term effects of AKI on the health-related quality of life (HRQL) and functional status of survivors of critical illness. The 36-Item Short Form Health Survey (SF-36) and the EuroQol EQ-5D are the most frequently used HRQL instruments in this context. Most studies consistently show that survivors of AKI have substantially reduced HRQL compared with survivors of a critical illness without AKI or with the general population178,179; this result has also been found in children180. HRQL was lower in patients who required KRT for severe AKI than in those who did not require KRT and was largely driven by physical impairments181, for example, limited energy, diminished mobility, difficulty with ambulation or otherwise decreased physical fitness178. 20–40% of AKI survivors had a new disability in at least one of the activities of daily living and only 28–69% of AKI survivors who were employed before their critical illness were able to return to work178,182,183.
Long-term HRQL also relates to whether patients experience kidney function recovery or remain dialysis dependent. Quality of life is impaired in both groups, but one study found it to be substantially lower in those that remained on dialysis184. However, in many patients with AKI, HRQL had already been impaired at baseline and the difference in HRQL before and after AKI may be small178, which would be consistent with the observation that elderly and frail individuals are particularly susceptible to AKI185. The ethics of offering KRT to these patients in such a setting can be complex, involving predictions of benefits and harms, and projections of retrospective judgements. Interestingly, most AKI survivors (71.4–98.5%) were satisfied with the care they had received and would agree to undergo the same treatment again, including KRT178. Indeed, at 1 year after AKI requiring dialysis, 81.8% of survivors would accept readmission to an ICU if necessary186, but this number declined to 71.4% after 4 years.
Outlook
Improvements in AKI diagnosis and treatment remain unmet medical needs. From a diagnostic perspective, implementing a kidney injury marker into clinical practice, compared with the current kidney function-based approach (which actually indicates acute kidney failure) remains a priority5. Measurement of serum creatinine levels does not enable the early diagnosis of AKI that is necessary to improve patient outcomes. In addition, creatinine assessment does not clarify to what extent subclinical AKI episodes contribute to the shortening of kidney lifespan and to CKD, and to the increased prevalence of hypertension, cardiovascular and cancer risk. Recommendations from the 23rd consensus conference of the ADQI suggest that combining AKI definitions based on serum creatinine and urinary output with kidney injury biomarkers would improve the precision of AKI course prognostication5. To what extent novel biomarkers can help to improve short-term and long-term outcomes remains to be demonstrated in prospective trials.
New tools for kidney imaging can assist in defining AKI or specific causes of AKI187,188. In addition, measurement of GFR with suitable tracers or even online recording of GFR may be able to capture the dynamic changes of kidney function better in selected patients and these methods should be investigated189.
From a therapeutic perspective, drugs that can reduce tubular necrosis and save nephrons would be optimal to reduce the risk of death in the acute phase of AKI and to avoid development of CKD. Use of some experimental compounds improved short-term outcomes of AKI. For example, recombinant alkaline phosphatase improved creatinine clearance on day 28 in a small trial in patients with severe sepsis or septic shock190. However, these results did not repeat in a larger trial in 301 patients with sepsis-related AKI191. Development of more potent agents requires the filling of crucial gaps in the understanding of kidney pathophysiology after AKI. When and how tubular cell necrosis can be blocked without promoting the persistence of cells with substantial DNA damage eventually promoting malignancies needs to be addressed. Another important point that needs to be elucidated is why some patients who are in specific risk groups are predominantly affected by AKI, with particular focus on the identification of patients with subclinical AKI.
National and international research networks, consortia, and consensus panels can advance consensus on innovations at the international level. Examples of these efforts include the AKI–Epidemiologic Prospective Investigation (AKI-EPI) study192, the Southeast Asia–AKI (SEA-AKI) study193, the Assessment of Worldwide Acute Kidney Injury, Renal Angina, and Epidemiology (AWARE)103 and Assessment of Worldwide Acute Kidney Injury Epidemiology in Neonates (AWAKEN) studies194, and the Acute Kidney Injury Clinical Study Group at KidneyResearchUK.
Primary prevention is also an essential focus of many initiatives. The National Institute for Health and Care Excellence (NICE) original guideline on AKI was published in 2013, following the observation that about 100,000 cases of AKI could have been averted across England with simple checks, such as ensuring patients are hydrated and that their medicines are reviewed, and that AKI costs were more than the National Health Service spends on breast, lung and skin cancer combined195. In 2013, the International Society of Nephrology launched the 0by25 AKI Initiative to prevent all avoidable deaths from AKI across the world by 202523,134. This initiative predominantly focuses on prevention of AKI in LMIC and low-resource settings, where KRT is not available or hardly accessible, with global outreach. Increasing the availability and accessibility for KRT is a priority in LMIC. Distinctive features of AKI in Western HIC are the ageing population, the association with multiple organ failure, the advanced technology available for patient care, the emerging area of onco-nephrology and the financial resources that enable care for almost all patients with AKI196. The European Renal Association — European Dialysis and Transplant Association has created a network of nephrologists to organize, coordinate and improve the practices, research and education in the field of AKI in Europe197. Finally, new technologies for KRT and drug therapeutic approaches remain heterogeneous across regions and even between treatment centres. Lack of agreement and uniformity delays progress and a shared approach is required to improve understanding, diagnosis and treatment of AKI across the globe.
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Acknowledgements
The European Research Council under the Consolidator Grant RENOIR supported P.R. (ERC-2014-CoG, grant number 648274). The Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft supported H.-J.A. (AN372/14-4, AN372/16-2, AN372/20-2, AN372/27-1 and AN372/30-1) and A.Z. (KFO342/1, ZA428/18-1 and ZA428/21-1). J.A.K. is supported by a grant (UH3DK114861) from the National Institute of Diabetes and Kidney Disease (NIDDK).
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Sections of the Primer were written by the authors as follows: Introduction (H.-J.A., J.A.K.); Epidemiology (H.-J.A., J.A.K., G.A.); Mechanisms/pathophysiology (P.R., H.-J.A.); Diagnosis, screening and prevention (H.-J.A., A.Z.); Management (H.-J.A., J.A.K., C.R.); Quality of life (H.J.A.); Outlook (H.-J.A., P.R.); Overview of the Primer (H.-J.A.).
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H.-J.A. received consultancy fees from Bayer, Boehringer, AstraZeneca, Janssen, Novartis, GlaxoSmithKline, Previpharma, Inositec and Secarna, unrelated to this publication. J.A.K. received consulting fees and/or grant support from Baxter, NxStage and Astute Medical/BioMerieux. J.A.K. became a full-time employee of Spectral Medical after submission of this manuscript. C.R. has been consulting or part of advisory boards for Asahi Kasei Pharma, Astute, Baxter, Biomerieux, B. Braun, Cytosorbents, Estor, Fresenius Medical Care, General Electric, Jafron, Medtronic and Toray. A.Z. has received consulting and/or lecture fees from Astute Medical/BioMerieux, Fresenius, Baxter, AM Pharma, La Jolla Pharmaceuticals and Astellas. A.Z. has received grant support from Astute Medical/BioMerieux, unrelated to this publication. G.A. and P.R. declare no competing interests.
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Nature Reviews Disease Primers thanks M. Ostermann, R. Evans, E. Daher, who co-reviewed with G. C. Meneses, K. Doi, J. Prowle, S. Menez, D. Ponce, and the other, anonymous, reviewer(s) for their contribution to the peer review of this work.
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Glossary
- Hepatorenal syndrome
-
Impaired kidney perfusion and function in patients with advanced liver failure as a consequence of marked abnormalities in arterial and venous circulation, as well as overactivity of endogenous vasoactive systems.
- Kidney failure
-
Complete (and life-threatening) loss of kidney function; kidney failure replaces the term end-stage kidney disease in new nomenclature put forward by the KDIGO.
- Glomerular filtration rate
-
The volume of filtrate passing the glomerular filtration barrier per unit of time; a marker of excretory kidney function.
- Third-space effusions
-
Accumulation of fluid in body cavities.
- Pulmonary congestion
-
An accumulation of fluid in the lungs, resulting in impaired gas exchange and arterial hypoxaemia.
- Fixed acid
-
An acid that accumulates in the body as a result of digestion, disease or metabolism and cannot be excreted by the lungs (non-volatile or fixed).
- Anion gap
-
The difference between the sum of routinely measured cations (Na+ and K+) and the sum of routinely measured anions (Cl− and HCO3−) in serum.
- Azotaemia
-
Abnormally high levels of nitrogen-containing compounds in the blood, occurring when the kidneys are no longer able to excrete nitrogen waste products via the urine.
- Venous congestion
-
A distention of veins filled with blood as a result of mechanical obstruction or right ventricular failure.
- Acute tubular necrosis
-
A form of AKI that involves loss of entire tubule segments due to necrotic death of tubular epithelial cells.
- Fluid resuscitation
-
Large-volume intravenous fluid replacement to treat AKI and circulatory shock due to severe intravascular volume depletion.
- G1 phase
-
The G1 phase is the first of four cell cycle phases that takes place in eukaryotic cell division and describes the period from the end of cell division to the beginning of DNA replication.
- Peritoneal dialysis
-
A treatment for kidney failure that uses the inside lining of the abdomen as a filtration membrane via intermittent filling and emptying of the peritoneal cavity with a dialysate solution to extract salt, uraemic toxins and other solutes from the blood.
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Kellum, J.A., Romagnani, P., Ashuntantang, G. et al. Acute kidney injury. Nat Rev Dis Primers 7, 52 (2021). https://doi.org/10.1038/s41572-021-00284-z
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1038/s41572-021-00284-z
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