Kidney international
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Kidney international · Nov 2002
ReviewThe first international consensus conference on continuous renal replacement therapy.
Management of acute renal failure (ARF) in the critically ill is extremely variable and there are no published standards for the provision of renal replacement therapy in this population. We sought to review the available evidence, make evidence-based practice recommendations, and delineate key questions for future study. ⋯ Despite limited data, broad areas of consensus exist for use of CRRT and guideline development appears feasible. Equally broad areas of disagreement also exist and additional basic and applied research in acute renal failure is needed.
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Kidney international · Nov 2002
ReviewMicrovascular endothelial injury and dysfunction during ischemic acute renal failure.
The pathophysiology of ischemic acute renal failure (ARF) appears to involve a complex interplay between renal hemodynamics, tubular injury, and inflammatory processes. While the current paradigm of the pathophysiology of ischemic ARF invokes both sublethal and lethal tubular injury as being of paramount importance to diminished renal function, a growing body of evidence supports the contribution of altered renal vascular function in potentially initiating and subsequently extending the initial tubular injury. We propose that the "extension phase" of ischemic ARF involves alterations in renal perfusion, continued hypoxia, and inflammatory processes that all contribute to continued tubular cell injury. ⋯ Vascular congestion, edema formation, diminished blood flow, and infiltration of inflammatory cells have been documented in the corticomedullary junction of the kidney, but linking their genesis to vascular endothelial injury and dysfunction has been difficult. However, new investigative approaches, including multiphoton microscopy and the Tie2-GFP mouse, have been developed that will further our understanding of the roles endothelial injury and dysfunction play in the pathophysiology of ischemic ARF. This knowledge should provide new diagnostic and therapeutic approaches to ischemic ARF.