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Hemostasis in patients with acute kidney injury secondary to acute liver failure
Author(s) -
Banwari Agarwal,
Alex Gatt,
Anne Riddell,
Gavin Wright,
Pratima Chowdary,
Rajiv Jalan,
Andrew K. Burroughs,
Andrew Davenport
Publication year - 2013
Publication title -
kidney international
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 3.499
H-Index - 276
eISSN - 1523-1755
pISSN - 0085-2538
DOI - 10.1038/ki.2013.92
Subject(s) - medicine , acute kidney injury , renal replacement therapy , hemostasis , thromboelastography , prothrombin time , antithrombin , von willebrand factor , coagulation , tissue factor pathway inhibitor , tissue factor , platelet , gastroenterology , surgery , heparin
Acute kidney injury (AKI) occurs in over half of patients with acute liver failure. Despite prolonged prothrombin times and thrombocytopenia, continuous renal replacement therapy circuits frequently develop clots during patient treatment. Here we assessed factors contributing to this by measuring coagulation parameters (standard coagulation tests, pro- and anticoagulant factors, thromboelastography, and thrombin generation) in 20 consecutive patients with acute liver failure; mean age 42 years. Within 48 h, 10 had developed stage 3 AKI and 9 required continuous renal replacement therapy, of whom 2 had frequent circuit clots. The patients with stage 3 AKI were found to have significantly lower platelet counts and levels of factor V and the natural anticoagulants antithrombin, Protein C and Protein S, but increased extrinsic pathway activation and von Willebrand factor levels. Tissue factor levels were greater in those with stage 3 AKI, as was microparticle activity. Although patients with acute liver failure and advanced AKI requiring continuous renal replacement therapy have an even more marked thrombocytopenia and more prolonged extrinsic pathway activation, this was not associated with increased bleeding. Thus, more frequent circuit clots during continuous renal replacement therapy appear to be due to a combination of increased tissue factor and microparticle release, endothelial activation, and reduction in natural anticoagulants.

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