Recent advances in the pathogenetic mechanisms of sepsis-associated acute kidney injury

Sepsis is a serious medical condition that can lead to multi-organ failure and shock, and it is associated with increased mortality. Acute kidney injury (AKI) is a frequent complication of sepsis in critically ill patients, and often requires renal replacement therapy. The pathophysiology of AKI in...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of nephrology 2018-06, Vol.31 (3), p.351-359
Hauptverfasser: Fani, Filippo, Regolisti, Giuseppe, Delsante, Marco, Cantaluppi, Vincenzo, Castellano, Giuseppe, Gesualdo, Loreto, Villa, Gianluca, Fiaccadori, Enrico
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container_end_page 359
container_issue 3
container_start_page 351
container_title Journal of nephrology
container_volume 31
creator Fani, Filippo
Regolisti, Giuseppe
Delsante, Marco
Cantaluppi, Vincenzo
Castellano, Giuseppe
Gesualdo, Loreto
Villa, Gianluca
Fiaccadori, Enrico
description Sepsis is a serious medical condition that can lead to multi-organ failure and shock, and it is associated with increased mortality. Acute kidney injury (AKI) is a frequent complication of sepsis in critically ill patients, and often requires renal replacement therapy. The pathophysiology of AKI in sepsis has not yet been fully defined. In the past, classic theories were mainly focused on systemic hemodynamic derangements, underscoring the key role of whole kidney hypoperfusion due to reduced renal blood flow. However, a growing body of experimental and clinical evidence now shows that, at least in the early phase of sepsis-associated AKI, renal blood flow is normal, or even increased. This could suggest a dissociation between renal blood flow and kidney function. In addition, the scant data available from kidney biopsies in human studies do not support diffuse acute tubular necrosis as the predominant lesion. Instead, increasing importance is now attributed to kidney damage resulting from a complex interaction between immunologic mechanisms, inflammatory cascade activation, and deranged coagulation pathways, leading to microvascular dysfunction, endothelial damage, leukocyte/platelet activation with the formation of micro-thrombi, epithelial tubular cell injury and dysfunction. Moreover, the same processes, through maladaptive responses leading to fibrosis acting from the very beginning, may set the stage for progression to chronic kidney disease in survivors from sepsis-associated AKI episodes. The aim of this narrative review is to summarize and discuss the latest evidence on the pathophysiological mechanisms involved in septic AKI, based on the most recent data from the literature.
doi_str_mv 10.1007/s40620-017-0452-4
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subjects Medicine
Medicine & Public Health
Nephrology
Review
Urology
title Recent advances in the pathogenetic mechanisms of sepsis-associated acute kidney injury
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