Abstract

Sepsis-induced acute kidney injury (SAKI) remains an important challenge in critical care medicine. We reviewed current available evidence on prevention and treatment of SAKI with focus on some recent advances and developments. Prevention of SAKI starts with early and ample fluid resuscitation preferentially with crystalloid solutions. Balanced crystalloids have no proven superior benefit. Renal function can be evaluated by measuring lactate clearance rate, renal Doppler, or central venous oxygenation monitoring. Assuring sufficiently high central venous oxygenation most optimally prevents SAKI, especially in the post-operative setting, whereas lactate clearance better assesses mortality risk when SAKI is present. Although the adverse effects of an excessive “kidney afterload” are increasingly recognized, there is actually no consensus regarding an optimal central venous pressure. Noradrenaline is the vasopressor of choice for preventing SAKI. Intra-abdominal hypertension, a potent trigger of AKI in post-operative and trauma patients, should not be neglected in sepsis. Early renal replacement therapy (RRT) is recommended in fluid-overloaded patients’ refractory to diuretics but compelling evidence about its usefulness is still lacking. Continuous RRT (CRRT) is advocated, though not sustained by convincing data, as the preferred modality in hemodynamically unstable SAKI. Diuretics should be avoided in the absence of hypervolemia. Antimicrobial dosing during CRRT needs to be thoroughly reconsidered to assure adequate infection control.

Highlights

  • Both sepsis and acute kidney injury (AKI) are diseases of major concern in critically ill patients

  • We review some important developments in prevention and treatment of septic AKI (SAKI) which have contributed to this improved prognosis or hold promise for further amelioration

  • Crystalloids are preferred over colloids but balanced crystalloids do not appear superior to classic crystalloids for counteracting SAKI

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Summary

Introduction

Both sepsis and acute kidney injury (AKI) are diseases of major concern in critically ill patients. Aggressive fluid resuscitation can be life-saving [15], yet several observational studies in critically ill patients with SAKI have linked fluid overload to increased mortality and reduced kidney recovery [16, 17]. Data from the SAFE study [34] and a systematic review [35] showed that the use of albumin-containing solutions for the resuscitation of patients with sepsis was associated with lower mortality and did not impair renal function compared with other fluid resuscitation regimens.

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