急性肾损伤-第一部分

P. Sanders, A. Agarwal
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引用次数: 0

摘要

急性肾功能衰竭(ARF)被定义为肾功能突然下降导致含氮废物潴留的一种综合征。将这种抽象的描述转化为临床有用的、准确的、被广泛接受的定义是具有挑战性的,这在很大程度上是因为对血清肌酐浓度的关注,它很容易获得,但存在固有的局限性,即不能快速或微妙地检测肾小球滤过率(GFR)的变化,但这在临床上很重要。因此,近年来,术语急性肾损伤(AKI)已经取代了ARF,因为AKI代表了从轻度血清肌酐升高到明显肾功能衰竭的整个临床范围。AKI由风险-损伤-衰竭-损失- esrd (RIFLE)标准定义,基于血清肌酐浓度和尿流率。急性肾损伤网络(AKIN)随后进一步修改了定义,将AKI分为三个阶段。本章讨论了住院患者和社区获得性AKI的病因和诊断。本文还讨论了AKI的具体原因、处理和并发症。图中显示了AKI的病理生理分类以及高钾血症对心电传导(ECG)变化的影响。提供了以下AKI患者的工作表。本综述包含3张图,20张表,46篇参考文献。关键词:急性肾损伤,透析,对比,横纹肌溶解,肾病,尿液分析,多发性骨髓瘤,乙二醇,败血症,肝肾综合征
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Acute Kidney Injury - Part I
Acute renal failure (ARF) has been defined as a syndrome in which an abrupt decrease in renal function produces retention of nitrogenous waste products. Translating this abstract description into a clinically useful, accurate, and widely accepted definition has been challenging, in large part because of the focus on serum creatinine concentration, which is easily obtained but has the inherent limitation of poor detection of rapid or subtle, but clinically important, changes in the glomerular filtration rate (GFR). In recent years, therefore, the term acute kidney injury (AKI) has replaced ARF because AKI denotes the entire clinical spectrum from mild increases in serum creatinine to overt renal failure. AKI is defined by the Risk-Injury-Failure-Loss-ESRD (RIFLE) criteria, based on serum creatinine concentration and urine flow rate. The Acute Kidney Injury Network (AKIN) subsequently modified the definition further and divided AKI into three stages. This chapter includes discussions of the etiology and diagnosis of AKI in hospitalized patients and community-acquired AKI. The specific causes, management, and complications of AKI are also discussed. Figures illustrate the pathophysiologic classification of AKI and the effect of hyperkalemia on cardiac conduction—electrocardiogram (ECG) changes. A worksheet for following patients with AKI is provided.  This review contains 3 figures, 20 tables, and 46 references. Keywords:Acute kidney injury, dialysis, contrast, rhabdomyolysis, nephropathy, urinalysis, multiple myeloma, ethylene glycol, sepsis, hepatorenal syndrome
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