Preventing acute kidney injury after noncardiac surgery.

Curr Opin Crit Care

Emergency and Organ Transplantation Department, Anesthesia and Intensive Care Unit, University of Bari, Bari, Italy.

Published: August 2010

Purpose Of Review: In surgical patients, outcome is strictly dependent on the occurrence of postoperative complications, and a postoperative failing kidney has a significant independent effect on outcome. Acute kidney injury (AKI) occurs in 1% of noncardiac surgical patients and is commonly associated with more serious complications. It is important to prevent AKI wherever possible.

Recent Findings: The mainstay of postoperative AKI prevention is perioperative maintenance of blood volume with adequate cardiac output by hemodynamic monitoring and fluids/inotropes infusion. There is a growing interest for pharmacological and metabolic interventions. Most interventions, however, have been predominantly evaluated in cardiac surgery and no definite conclusion can be translated in other settings. Tight control of glycemia is still matter of debate and a role, if any, may be limited to cardiac surgical patients.

Summary: Adopting adequate nephroprotective strategies is favored by knowing the moment of the actual insult to the kidney. Nevertheless, in the literature too many areas of uncertainty still exist due to the lack of renal risk stratification, of adequately powered studies, of uniform AKI definition, and of appropriate sample composition. The only recommendation for renal protection still consists in maintaining an optimal blood volume and an adequate cardiac output.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1097/MCC.0b013e32833a9ef5DOI Listing

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