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Cardiac Surgery-Associated Acute Kidney Injury
Author(s) -
Huijuan Mao,
Nevin Katz,
Wassawon Ariya,
Lourdes Blanca-Martos,
Zelal Adýbelli,
Anna Giuliani,
Tommaso Hinna Danesi,
Jeong Chul Kim,
Akash Nayak,
Mauro Neri,
Grazia Maria Virzì,
Alessandra Brocca,
Elisa Scalzotto,
Loris Salvador,
Claudio Ronco
Publication year - 2013
Publication title -
cardiorenal medicine
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.661
H-Index - 21
eISSN - 1664-3828
pISSN - 1664-5502
DOI - 10.1159/000353134
Subject(s) - medicine , acute kidney injury , fenoldopam , nesiritide , renal replacement therapy , intensive care medicine , cardiac surgery , cardiopulmonary bypass , intensive care unit , hemofiltration , anesthesia , surgery , hemodialysis , heart failure , natriuretic peptide , agonist , receptor
Cardiac surgery-associated acute kidney injury (CSA-AKI) is a common and serious postoperative complication of cardiac surgery requiring cardiopulmonary bypass (CPB), and it is the second most common cause of AKI in the intensive care unit. Although the complication has been associated with the use of CPB, the etiology is likely multifactorial and related to intraoperative and early postoperative management including pharmacologic therapy. To date, very little evidence from randomized trials supporting specific interventions to protect from or prevent AKI in broad cardiac surgery populations has been found. The definition of AKI employed by investigators influences not only the incidence of CSA-AKI, but also the identification of risk variables. The advent of novel biomarkers of kidney injury has the potential to facilitate the subclinical diagnosis of CSA-AKI, the assessment of its severity and prognosis, and the early institution of interventions to prevent or reduce kidney damage. Further studies are needed to determine how to optimize cardiac surgical procedures, CPB parameters, and intraoperative and early postoperative blood pressure and renal blood flow to reduce the risk of CSA-AKI. No pharmacologic strategy has demonstrated clear efficacy in the prevention of CSA-AKI; however, some agents, such as the natriuretic peptide nesiritide and the dopamine agonist fenoldopam, have shown promising results in renoprotection. It remains unclear whether CSA-AKI patients can benefit from the early institution of such pharmacologic agents or the early initiation of renal replacement therapy.

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