Abstract

During the last few years, due to medical and surgical evolution, patients with increasingly severe diseases causing multiorgan dysfunction are frequently admitted to intensive care units. Therapeutic options, when organ failure occurs, are frequently nonspecific and mostly directed towards supporting vital function. In these scenarios, the kidneys are almost always involved and, therefore, renal replacement therapies have become a common routine practice in critically ill patients with acute kidney injury. Recent technological improvement has led to the production of safe, versatile and efficient dialysis machines. In addition, emerging evidence may allow better individualization of treatment with tailored prescription depending on the patients’ clinical picture (e.g. sepsis, fluid overload, pediatric). The aim of the present review is to give a general overview of current practice in renal replacement therapies for critically ill patients. The main clinical aspects, including dose prescription, modality of dialysis delivery, anticoagulation strategies and timing will be addressed. In addition, some technical issues on physical principles governing blood purification, filters characteristics, and vascular access, will be covered. Finally, a section on current standard nomenclature of renal replacement therapy is devoted to clarify the “Tower of Babel” of critical care nephrology.

Highlights

  • Ill patients with severe diseases and multisystem organ failure are currently frequently admitted to and treated in the intensive care unit (ICU)

  • The kidneys are almost always involved in such a syndrome, and dialytic techniques are routinely used in the ICUs to treat severe acute kidney injury (AKI)[2]

  • Technical issues The technological evolution of renal replacement therapy (RRT) Peter Kramer in 1977 described the first continuous form of dialysis dedicated to critically ill patients: continuous arteriovenous hemofiltration (CAVH)[3]

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Summary

Introduction

Ill patients with severe diseases and multisystem organ failure are currently frequently admitted to and treated in the intensive care unit (ICU). Current practice in renal replacement therapy (RRT) for adult critically ill patients, with specific details on technical features and clinical applications, will be reviewed. Technical issues The technological evolution of RRT Peter Kramer in 1977 described the first continuous form of dialysis dedicated to critically ill patients: continuous arteriovenous hemofiltration (CAVH)[3]. The arterio-venous pressure gradient was dependent on the mean arterial pressure of the patient and the intrinsic resistance of the circuit (determining the blood flow); the UF was determined by the hydrostatic pressure drop inside the filter and the negative suction provided by the UF column from the patient level to the ground. It soon became evident that an ideal extracorporeal circuit requires continuous pressure measurements at different levels (inlet and outlet of vascular access, inlet and outlet of the filter and UF ports)[4]

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