Journal article

Pathophysiology of septic acute kidney injury: What do we really know?

L Wan, SM Bagshaw, C Langenberg, T Saotome, C May, R Bellomo

Critical Care Medicine | Published : 2008

Abstract

Septic acute kidney injury accounts for close to 50% of all cases of acute kidney injury in the intensive care unit and, in its various forms, affects between 15% and 20% of intensive care unit patients. However, there is little we really know about its pathophysiology. Although hemodynamic factors might play a role in the loss of glomerular filtration rate, they may not act through the induction of renal ischemia. Septic acute renal failure may, at least in patients with a hyperdynamic circulation, represent a unique form of acute renal failure: hyperemic acute renal failure. Measurements of renal blood flow in septic humans are now needed to resolve this pivotal pathophysiological question..

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University of Melbourne Researchers