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The Central Role of Renal Microcirculatory Dysfunction in the Pathogenesis of Acute Kidney Injury
Author(s) -
Can İnce
Publication year - 2014
Publication title -
nephron clinical practice
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
ISSN - 1660-2110
DOI - 10.1159/000363203
Subject(s) - medicine , acute kidney injury , microcirculation , pathophysiology , endothelial dysfunction , kidney , pathogenesis , nitric oxide , renal function , intensive care medicine , acute tubular necrosis , etiology , kidney disease , bioinformatics , pathology , biology
Acute kidney injury (AKI) is a rapidly developing condition often associated with critical illness, with a high degree of morbidity and mortality, whose pathophysiology is ill understood. Recent investigations have identified the dysfunction of the renal microcirculation and its cellular and subcellular constituents as being central to the etiology of AKI. Injury is caused by inflammatory activation involving endothelial leucocyte interactions in combination with dysregulation of the homeostatis between oxygen, nitric oxide, and reactive oxygen species. Effective therapies expected to resolve AKI will have to control inflammation and restore this homeostasis. In order to apply and guide these therapies effectively, diagnostic tools aimed at physiological biomarkers of AKI for monitoring renal microcirculatory function in advance of changes in pharmacological biomarkers associated with structural damage of the kidney will need to be developed.

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