• Intensive care medicine · Oct 2019

    Review

    Mechanisms for hemodynamic instability related to renal replacement therapy: a narrative review.

    • Adrianna Douvris, Khalid Zeid, Swapnil Hiremath, Sean M Bagshaw, Ron Wald, William Beaubien-Souligny, Jennifer Kong, Claudio Ronco, and Edward G Clark.
    • The Ottawa Hospital, Department of Medicine and Kidney Research Centre, Ottawa Hospital Research Institute, University of Ottawa, 1967 Riverside Drive, Ottawa, ON, K1H 7W9, Canada.
    • Intensive Care Med. 2019 Oct 1; 45 (10): 1333-1346.

    AbstractHemodynamic instability related to renal replacement therapy (HIRRT) is a frequent complication of all renal replacement therapy (RRT) modalities commonly used in the intensive care unit. HIRRT is associated with increased mortality and may impair kidney recovery. Our current understanding of the physiologic basis for HIRRT comes primarily from studies of end-stage kidney disease patients on maintenance hemodialysis in whom HIRRT is referred to as 'intradialytic hypotension'. Nonetheless, there are many studies that provide additional insights into the underlying mechanisms for HIRRT specifically in critically ill patients. In particular, recent evidence challenges the notion that HIRRT is almost entirely related to excessive ultrafiltration. Although excessive ultrafiltration is a key mechanism, multiple other RRT-related mechanisms may precipitate HIRRT and this could have implications for how HIRRT should be managed (e.g., the appropriate response might not always be to reduce ultrafiltration, particularly in the context of significant fluid overload). This review briefly summarizes the incidence and adverse effects of HIRRT and reviews what is currently known regarding the mechanisms underpinning it. This includes consideration of the evidence that exists for various RRT-related interventions to prevent or limit HIRRT. An enhanced understanding of the mechanisms that underlie HIRRT, beyond just excessive ultrafiltration, may lead to more effective RRT-related interventions to mitigate its occurrence and consequences.

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