介绍“尿液生化方法”:一种改善危重患者急性肾损伤监测的替代工具。

Frontiers in nephrology Pub Date : 2025-02-19 eCollection Date: 2025-01-01 DOI:10.3389/fneph.2025.1525551
Alexandre Toledo Maciel
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摘要

尿电解质和指标评估作为急性肾损伤(AKI)病理生理理解和管理的工具,直到今天,仍是一个有争议的问题。基于尿钠浓度和钠和尿素的分离排泄,AKI的经典划分为“肾前”(功能性/短暂性)和“肾性”(结构性/持续性),这种划分已经流行了几十年,并且仍然存在于医学教科书中。然而,使用这些参数的研究的结论是非常异质和有争议的。在过去的十年中,由于从肾血流量增加的实验动物中检索到与“肾前AKI”相容的尿生化(UB),因此肾前模式受到质疑,导致一些作者得出结论,该方法对AKI监测无效。我们的小组也研究了UB在AKI中的应用,我们认为在临床实践中充分使用该工具的关键是在我们看待和解释数据的方式上完全改变思维方式。在这篇文章中,我们提出了“尿液生化方法”作为UB评估的替代方法,我们认为这种方法比传统方法更有意义,似乎对AKI监测更有用。尽管这种替代方法的真正效用需要在大型前瞻性研究中得到证实,但本文的目的是为危重病护理从业者打开思路,重新评估关于在AKI监测中使用尿电解质的古老概念和想法。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Introducing the "urine biochemical approach": an alternative tool for improving acute kidney injury monitoring in critically ill patients.

Urine electrolytes and indices assessment as a tool for acute kidney injury (AKI) pathophysiological understanding and management is, until these days, a matter of debate. The classic division of AKI in "pre-renal" (functional/transient) and "renal" (structural/persistent) based on the urinary concentration of sodium and the fractional excretions of sodium and urea has gained popularity for decades and is still present in medical textbooks. Nevertheless, the conclusions of the studies that have used these parameters are very heterogenous and controversial. In the last decade, the pre-renal paradigm has been questioned since urine biochemistry (UB) compatible with "pre-renal AKI" was retrieved from experimental animals with increased renal blood flow, leading some authors to conclude that this approach is not useful for AKI monitoring. Our group has also studied the use of UB in AKI and we think that the key point for adequate use of this tool in clinical practice is a complete mindset change in the way we look and interpret data. In this article, we present the "urine biochemical approach" as an alternative way for UB assessment, which we believe that makes more sense and seems to be more useful for AKI monitoring than the traditional approach. Although the real utility of this alternative approach needs to be confirmed in large, prospective studies, the aim of the present article is to open the mind of critical care practitioners for a potential reappraisal of ancient concepts and ideas regarding the use of urine electrolytes in AKI monitoring.

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