Acute Kidney Injury Clinical Trial
Official title:
Role of Renal Doppler Ultrasound in Early Detection of Acute Kidney Injury in Critically Ill Patients
Acute kidney injury is a common complication of critical illness and is associated with high morbidity and mortality .Acute kidney injury is a syndrome that is characterized by a rapid decline in renal function and urine output, resulting in retention of waste products such as urea, nitrogen, and serum creatinine. Life-threatening consequences include volume overload, hyperkalaemia, and metabolic acidosis . In its severe form, Acute kidney injury requires renal replacement therapy, which is applied in 5±13% of Intensive Care Unit patients
The incidence of Acute kidney injury in intensive care unit patients is rising due to the
population age increasing, more comorbidities, and a higher prevalence of risk factors.
Improved Intensive Care Unit management has, however, significantly diminished morbidity and
the mortality of patients who develop Acute kidney injury I. Despite an increase in the
number and severity of comorbidities, in-hospital mortality has declined, but the incidence
of Acute kidney injury ,and Acute kidney injury requiring renal replacement therapy has
increased over time .
There is still some dispute over the characterization of the different types of Acute kidney
injury. Classically there are three types of Acute kidney injury: pre-renal, intrinsic renal,
and post-renal failure. These are characterized as decreased renal blood flow (in 40-70% of
the patients), direct (intrinsic) renal parenchymal damage (in 10-50% of the patients), and
obstruction of urine flow which is less common in the ICU (10%), respectively..
In critically ill patients, sepsis and acute kidney injury are very common diseases and are
associated with increased hospitalization and elevated in-hospital mortality rates Acute
kidney injury is a dynamic process that evolves from an early reversible condition to an
established disease and leads to sustained renal impairment, cell death ,and delayed renal
recovery .Consequently, prompt resuscitation of the circulation and optimal perfusion
pressure are the primary therapies for critically ill patients with Acute kidney injury.
These methods are based principally on the appropriate management of intravenous fluid
replacement and vasopressor administration under strict hemodynamic monitoring .
Mechanisms of Acute kidney injury comprise renal hypo-perfusion, intra-renal
vasoconstriction, inflammation,oxidative stress and nephrotoxicity .An important
pathophysiological pathway includes intra renal vasoconstriction and endothelial damage of
the microvessels, leading to impaired macro- and microvascular flow, which further aggravates
ischemia .
Renal vasoconstriction is an early manifestation of Acute kidney injury. More specifically,
ultrasound imaging of the renal arteries can be instrumental in the early detection of Acute
kidney injury. Indeed, renal blood flow is decreased at a nearly stage during acute tubular
necrosis as a consequence of protracted intra renal vasoconstriction. The renal resistive
index , which is used for assessing arterial pulsatility, was shown to correlate with renal
vascular resistance . Renal Doppler ultrasound can measure the renal resistive index , a
sonographic index that reflects alterations in blood flow profile of the intrarenal arcuate
or interlobar arteries. It reflects the relation between the decline in speed loss of flow
(flow velocity) between the peak of systole and the end of diastole in (renal) blood vessels:
RRI = (peak systolic velocity _end diastolic velocity)/(peak systolic velocity). Normal
values are reported between 0.60 and 0.70 with the difference between both kidneys mostly
being less than 5% .
The Doppler renal resistive index has been used for years in a variety of clinical settings .
Doppler imaging identifies changes in blood flow at the micro-vascular level. Evaluation of
the vascular impedance at different sites of the renal parenchyma could provide useful
diagnostic and prognostic information. An increase in renal vascular resistance may be an
early sensitive sign of hemodynamic deterioration, even in seemingly stable patients.
Measuring flow resistance in the renal circulation, Renal resistive Index (RRI), could become
part of vital organ function assessment using Doppler ultrasound. An increased Doppler Renal
resistive Index is suggested to not only reflect changes in intra renal perfusion, but also
in systemic hemodynamics .
Renal resistive index (RI), determined by Doppler ultrasonography, directly reveals and
quantifies modifications in renal vascular resistance .
Aim of the work
The aim is to
1. Determine if the resistive Renal Index on ICU admission patients predicts the
development of Acute kidney injury during the first week.
2. Determine whether resistive Renal Index is related to the severity of Acute kidney
injury or not.
Patients and Methods 80 patients of critically ill patients including acute ischaemic
insults, patients presenting with septicaemia, hypertension, respiratory failure,
coagulation/ haemorrhagic disorders, shock, and liver disease and shock.
This study will be performed in the 24-bed mixed medical and surgical intensive care unit of
the Assiut University Hospital.
Sample size calculations will be based on the assumption that patients not developing Acute
kidney injury would have an RRI of 0.72 and patients developing Acute kidney injury would
have an Acute kidney injury of 0.79 with a standard deviation of 0.11. These calculations
were based on the results of other previous studies that reported median values for Acute
kidney injury and no Acute kidney injury
AKI was defined according to the Kidney Disease Improving Global Outcome (KDIGO)
classification using both creatinine and urine output criteria [20] KDIGO takes changes in
creatinine within 48 hours, or a decline in the glomerular filtration rate (GFR) over 7 days,
into account. AKI is defined as an increase in sCreat ≥0.3 mg/dL within 48 hours, or an
increase in sCreat ≥1.5-times baseline, which is known or presumed to have occurred within
the prior 7 days, or a Urine Out put of <0.5 mL/kg/h for 6 hours
Laboratory tests:
1. Complete blood count
2. Kidney function
3. Electrolytes including sodium,potassium, calcium,Phosphorus and uric acid
4. Urine analysis 5-24 hrs sodium in urine
Radiological test:
Doppler of both renal arteries with abdominal ultrasound. Renal resistive index was measured
with ultrasound-Doppler
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