Acute kidney injury: Difference between revisions

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==Background==
==Background==
*Majority of cases of community-acquired ARF is secondary to volume depletion
*Majority of cases of community-acquired ARF is secondary to volume depletion although consideration of pre-renal, post renal, and renal causes are important.
===RIFLE Classification===
===AKI Staging===
#Risk - Serum Cr increased 1.5x baseline
{| {{table}}
#Injury - Serum Cr increased 2.0x baseline
| align="center" style="background:#f0f0f0;"|'''AKI Stage'''<ref>Moore PK, et. al. Management of acute kidney injury: core curriculum 2018. Am J Kidney Dis. 2018; 72: 136-148.</ref>
#Failure - Serum Cr increased 3.0x baseline OR Cr >4 and acute increase >0.5
| align="center" style="background:#f0f0f0;"|'''KDIGO'''
#Loss - Complete loss of kidney function for >4wk
| align="center" style="background:#f0f0f0;"|'''UOP'''
#ESRD - Need for renal replacement therapy for >3mo
|-
| 1||Cr 1.5-1.9x baseline over 7d '''or''' ≥0.3 mg/dL increase over 48hrs||<0.5 mL/kg/hr  for 6-12hrs
|-
| 2||Cr 2.0-2.9x baseline||<0.5 mL/kg/hr for >12hrs
|-
| 3||Cr ≥3.0x baseline '''or''' ≥4.0 mg/dL increase '''or''' initiation of RRT||<0.3 mL/kg/hr for >24hrs '''or''' anuria for >12hrs
|-
|}
===Chronic Kidney Disease Stages===
===Chronic Kidney Disease Stages===
*Useful if pt's baseline creatinine is unknown
*Useful if patient's baseline creatinine is unknown
**Stage 1: Kidney damage (e.g. proteinuria) and normal GFR; GFR >90
**Stage 1: Kidney damage (e.g. [[proteinuria]]) and normal GFR; GFR >90
**Stage 2: Kidney damage (e.g. proteinuria) and mild decr in GFR; GFR 60-89
**Stage 2: Kidney damage (e.g. [[proteinuria]]) and mild decrease in GFR; GFR 60-89
**Stage 3: Moderate decrease in GFR; GFR >30-59
**Stage 3: Moderate decrease in GFR; GFR >30-59
**Stage 4: Severe decrease in GFR; GFR 15-29
**Stage 4: Severe decrease in GFR; GFR 15-29
**Stage 5: Kidney failure (dialysis or kidney transplant needed); GFR <15
**Stage 5: Kidney failure (dialysis or kidney transplant needed); GFR <15


==Risk Factors==
===Risk Factors===
#Radiocontrast agents
*[[Contrast-Induced Nephropathy|Radiocontrast agents]]
##Esp if GFR <60, hypovolemic  
**Especiallyif GFR <60, hypovolemic  
#Atherosclerosis
*Atherosclerosis
#Chronic hypertension
*Chronic [[hypertension]]
#Chronic kidney disease
*Chronic kidney disease
#NSAIDs
*[[NSAIDs]]
#ACEI/ARB
*[[ACEI]]/[[ARB]]
#Sepsis
*[[Sepsis]]
#Hypercalcemia
*[[Hypercalcemia]]
#Hepatorenal syndrome
*[[Hepatorenal syndrome]]
 
==Etiology==
===Prerenal===
#Hypovolemia
##GI: decreased intake, vomiting and diarrhea
##Pharmacologic: diuretics
##Third spacing
###Pancreatitis
##Skin losses: fever, burns
##Miscellaneous
###Hypoaldosteronism
###Salt-losing nephropathy
###Postobstructive diuresis
#Hypotension
##Septic vasodilation
##Hemorrhage
##Decreased cardiac output
###Ischemia/infarction
###Valvulopathy
##Pharmacologic
###B-blockers
###CCBs
###Antihypertensive medications
##High-output failure
###Thyrotoxicosis
###AV fistula
#Renal artery and small-vessel disease
##Embolism: thrombotic, septic, cholesterol
##Thrombosis: atherosclerosis, vasculitis, sickle cell disease
##Dissection
##Pharmacologic
###NSAIDs
###ACEI/ARB
####Observed shortly after initiation of therapy
##Microvascular thrombosis
###Preeclampsia
###HUS
###DIC
###vasculitis
###SCD
##Hypercalcemia
 
===Intrinsic===
#Tubular diseases
##Ischemic acute tubular necrosis
###Caused by more advanced disease due to the prerenal causes
#Nephrotoxins
##Aminoglycosides, radiocontrast, amphotericin, heme pigments (rhabdo, hemolysis)
##Obstruction
###Uric acid, calcium oxalate, myeloma, amyloid
###Pharmacologic: sulfonamide, triamterene, acyclovir, indinavir
#Interstitial diseases
##Acute interstitial nephritis: typically a drug reaction (NSAIDs, abx, phenytoin)
##Infection: bilateral pyelonephritis, Legionnaire disease, hantavirus
##Infiltrative disease: sarcoidosis, lymphoma
##Autoimmune diseases: SLE
#Glomerular diseases
##Rapidly progressive glomerulonephritis
###Goodpasture, Wegener granulomatosis, HSP, SLE, membranoproliferative GN
##Postinfectious glomerulonephritis
#Small-vessel diseases
##Microvascular thrombosis
###Preeclampsia, HUS, DIC, TTP, vasculitis (PAN, SCD, atheroembolism)
##Malignant hypertension
##Scleroderma
##Renal vein thrombosis
 
===Postrenal===
#Infants and children
##Urethra and bladder outlet
###Anatomic malformations
####Urethral atresia
####Meatal stenosis
####Anterior and posterior urethral valves
##Ureter
###Anatomic malformations
####Vesicoureteral reflux (female preponderance)
####Ureterovesical junction obstruction
####Ureterocele
####Retroperitoneal tumor
#All ages
##Various locations in GU tract
###Trauma
###Blood clot
##Urethra and bladder outlet
###Phimosis or urethral stricture (male preponderance)
###Neurogenic bladder
####DM, spinal cord disease, multiple sclerosis, Parkinson's
####Pharmacologic: anticholinergics, a-adrenergic antagonists, opiates
#Adults
##Urethra and bladder outlet
###BPH
###Cancer of prostate, bladder, cervix, or colon
###Obstructed catheters
##Ureter
###Calculi, uric acid crystals
###Papillary necrosis
####SCD, DM, pyelonephritis
###Tumor: Ureter, uterus, prostate, bladder, colon, rectum; retroperitoneal lymphoma
###Retroperitoneal fibrosis: idiopathic, tuberculosis, sarcoidosis, propranolol
###Stricture: TB, radiation, schistosomiasis, NSAIDs
###Miscellaneous
####Aortic aneurysm
####Pregnant uterus
####IBD
####Trauma


==Clinical Features==
==Clinical Features==
*Acute renal failure itself has few symptoms until severe uremia develops:
*Acute renal failure itself has few symptoms until severe uremia develops:
**N/V, drowsiness, fatigue, confusion, coma
**[[Nausea/vomiting]], drowsiness, fatigue, confusion, [[coma]], [[pericarditis]]
*Pts more likely to present w/ symptoms related to underlying cause:
*Patients more likely to present with symptoms related to underlying cause:
**Prerenal
**Prerenal
***Thirst, orthostatic light-headedness, decreasing urine output
***Thirst, orthostatic lightheadedness, decreasing urine output
**Intrinsic
**Intrinsic
***Flank pain, hematuria
***[[Flank pain]], [[hematuria]]
****Nephrolithiasis
****[[Nephrolithiasis]]
****Papillary necrosis
****Papillary necrosis
****Crystal-induced nephropathy
****Crystal-induced nephropathy
***Myalgias, seizures, recreational intoxication
***[[Myalgia]]s, [[seizures]], recreational intoxication
****Pigment-induced ARF (rhabdo)
****Pigment-induced ARF ([[rhabdomyolysis]])
***Darkening urine and edema (esp w/ preceding pharyngitis or cutaneous infection)
***Darkening urine and edema (esp with preceding pharyngitis or cutaneous infection)
****Acute glomerulonephritis
****Acute glomerulonephritis
***Fever, arthralgia, rash  
***[[Fever]], [[arthralgia]], [[rash]]
****Acute interstitial nephritis
****Acute interstitial nephritis
***Cough, dyspnea, hemoptysis
***[[Cough]], [[dyspnea]], [[hemoptysis]]
****Goodpasture, Wegener granulomatosis
****[[Goodpasture syndrome]], [[granulomatosis with polyangiitis]] (Wegener's)
**Postrenal
**Postrenal
***Alternating oliguria and polyuria is pathognomonic of obstruction
***Alternating oliguria and [[polyuria]] is pathognomonic of obstruction
***Anuria
***Anuria


==Diagnosis==
==Etiologies==
#Prerenal
[[File:Differential Diagnosis of Acute Kidney Injury.png|thumb]]
##BUN/Cr ratio > 20
===Prerenal===
##FeNa <1% ((urine sodium/plasma sodium) / (urine creatinine / serum creatinine))
*[[Hypovolemia]]
##Urine osm >500
**GI: decreased intake, [[vomiting]] and [[diarrhea]]
##Microscopic analysis
**[[Hemorrhage]]
###Hyaline casts
**Pharmacologic: [[diuretics]]
#Instrinsic
**Third spacing
##FeNa >1%
***[[Pancreatitis]]
##Urine Osm <350
**Skin losses: [[hyperthermia]], [[burns]]
##Microscopic analysis
**Miscellaneous
###Acute glomerulonephritis: RBCs, casts
***Hypoaldosteronism
###Acute tubular necrosis: protein, tubular epithelial cells
***Salt-losing nephropathy
#Postrenal
***[[Postobstructive diuresis]]
##FeNa >1%
*[[Hypotension]]
##Urine Osm <350
**[[Sepsis]]
**Decreased cardiac output: decompensated [[heart failure]], [[tamponade]], massive pulmonary embolus
**[[Hepatorenal Syndrome]]
***Ischemia/infarction
***[[Valvular Disease|Valvulopathy]]
**Pharmacologic
***[[Beta-blockers]]
***[[Calcium-channel blockers]]
***[[Antihypertensive medications]]
**[[High output heart failure]]
***[[Thyrotoxicosis]]
***AV fistula
*Renal artery and small-vessel disease
**Embolism: thrombotic, septic, cholesterol
**Thrombosis: atherosclerosis, [[vasculitis]], [[sickle cell disease]]
**Dissection
**Pharmacologic
***[[NSAIDs]]
***[[ACEI]]/[[ARB]]
****Observed shortly after initiation of therapy
**Microvascular thrombosis
***[[Preeclampsia]]
***[[Hemolytic Uremic Syndrome (HUS)]]
***[[Thrombotic Thrombocytopenic Purpura (TTP)]]
***[[Disseminated Intravascular Coagulation (DIC)]]
***[[Vasculitis]]
***[[Sickle Cell Disease]]
**[[Hypercalcemia]]


==Work-up==
===Intrinsic===
#Urine
*Tubular diseases
##UA, urine sodium, urine creatinine, urine urea
**Ischemic acute tubular necrosis
#ECG (hyperkalemia)
***Caused by more advanced disease due to the prerenal causes
#Imaging
*Nephrotoxins
##CXR
**[[Aminoglycosides]], [[Contrast-Induced Nephropathy|radiocontrast]], [[amphotericin B]], heme pigments ([[rhabdomyolysis]], hemolysis)
###Evidence of volume overload, PNA
**Obstruction
##US
***Uric acid, calcium oxalate from [[Ethylene Glycol Toxicity]], [[Multiple myeloma]] (immunoglobin light chains), [[amyloidosis]]
###Test of choice in setting of acute renal failure
***Pharmacologic: [[sulfonamides]], triamterene, [[acyclovir]], indinavir
####Bladder size (post-void)
*Interstitial diseases
####Hydronephrosis
**Acute interstitial nephritis: typically a drug reaction ([[NSAIDs]], [[Penicillins]] and antibiotics, [[Diuretics]], [[phenytoin]])
####IVC collapsibility (prerenal)
**Infection: bilateral pyelonephritis, [[Legionella]], [[Hantavirus]]
##CT
**Infiltrative disease: [[sarcoidosis]], [[lymphoma]]
###Indicated if hydronephrois found on US in order to define the location of obstruction
**Autoimmune diseases: [[SLE]]
*Glomerular diseases
**Rapidly progressive glomerulonephritis
***[[Goodpasture syndrome]], [[granulomatosis with polyangiitis]] (Wegener's) [[HSP]], [[SLE]], membranoproliferative GN
**Postinfectious [[glomerulonephritis]]
*Small-vessel diseases
**Microvascular thrombosis
***[[Preeclampsia]], [[HUS]], [[DIC]], [[Thrombotic Thrombocytopenic Purpura (TTP)|TTP]], [[vasculitis]] (PAN, SCD, atheroembolism)
**[[Malignant hypertension]]
**[[Scleroderma]]
**Renal vein thrombosis
*[[Abdominal compartment syndrome]]
*[[Hepatorenal syndrome]]
*[[Cardiorenal syndrome]]


==Treatment==
===Postrenal===
#Treat underlying cause
*Infants and children
#IVF (prerenal)
**Urethra and bladder outlet
#Obstruction
***Anatomic malformations
##Note: Postobstructive diuresis can result in significant volume loss and death
****Urethral atresia
###Typically occurs when obstruction has been prolonged / has resulted in renal failure  
****Meatal stenosis
###Admit pts w/ persistent diuresis of >250 mL/h for >2hr  
****Anterior and posterior urethral valves
##Foley
**Ureter
##Suprapubic (if foley fails)
***Anatomic malformations
#Dialysis
****Vesicoureteral reflux (female preponderance)
##Indicated for:
****Ureterovesical junction obstruction
###A: Acidosis (severe)
****Ureterocele
###E: Electrolyte abnormality (e.g. uncontrolled hyperkalemia)
****Retroperitoneal tumor
###I: Intoxicants (Lithium, ASA, methanol, ethylene glycol, theophylline)
*All ages
###O: Overload (volume) w/ persistent hypoxia
**Various locations in GU tract
###U: Uremic pericarditis/encephalopathy/bleeding dyscrasia
***Trauma
###Also:
***Blood clot
####Na <115 or >165 mEq/L
**Urethra and bladder outlet
####BUN >100
***[[Phimosis]] or urethral stricture (male preponderance)
***Neurogenic bladder
****[[Diabetes mellitus]], spinal cord disease, [[multiple sclerosis]], [[Parkinson's disease]]
****Pharmacologic: [[anticholinergics]], [[alpha antagonist|a-adrenergic antagonists]], [[opioids]]
*Adults
**Urethra and bladder outlet
***BPH
***Cancer of prostate, bladder, cervix, or colon
***Obstructed catheters
**Ureter
***[[Ureteral calculi]], uric acid crystals
***Papillary necrosis
****[[Sickle cell disease]], [[DM]], [[pyelonephritis]]
***Tumor: Ureter, uterus, prostate, bladder, colon, rectum; retroperitoneal lymphoma
***Retroperitoneal fibrosis: idiopathic, [[tuberculosis]], [[sarcoidosis]], [[propranolol]]
***Stricture: [[TB]], [[Radiation exposure|radiation]], [[schistosomiasis]], [[NSAIDs]]
***Miscellaneous
****[[Abdominal aortic aneurysm|Aortic aneurysm]]
****Pregnant uterus
****[[IBD]]
****[[Renal trauma|Renal]] or [[ureter trauma]]
 
==Evaluation==
===Work-up===
*Urine
*Prostate exam
*[[Urinalysis]], urine sodium, urine creatinine, urine urea
*[[ECG]] (hyperkalemia)
*Chronic renal failure features
**Anemia, thrombocytopenia
**Iron studies with low Fe, low TIBC, low iron saturation, normal ferritin
**Secondary rise in PTH, high phos, low calcium
 
===Imaging===
*[[CXR]]
**Evidence of volume overload, pneumonia
*US: [[renal ultrasound|renal]]/[[bladder ultrasound|bladder]]
**Test of choice in setting of acute renal failure
**Bladder size (post-void)
**Hydronephrosis
**IVC collapsibility (prerenal)
*CT
**Useful to determine cause of post renal failure (identification of abdominal masses etc.)
**Should generally not be used with IV contrast due to potential risk for [[Contrast-Induced Nephropathy|CIN]]
**Indicated if hydronephrosis found on [[ultrasound]] in order to define the location of obstruction
 
===Diagnosis===
{| {{table}}
| align="center" style="background:#f0f0f0;"|'''Finding'''
| align="center" style="background:#f0f0f0;"|'''Prerenal'''
| align="center" style="background:#f0f0f0;"|'''Intrinsic'''
| align="center" style="background:#f0f0f0;"|'''Postrenal'''
|-
| BUN/creatinine ratio||>20||< 12||12-20 (normal range)
|-
| [[FeNa]]^||
*<1%
*< 2% for neonates
||
* >1%
*> 2.5% for neonates
||
*>1%
|-
| Urine osm|| >500|| <350||
|-
| Urine sodium ||< 20 mEq/L||> 40 mEq/L||
|-
| Specific gravity ||> 1.020|| < 1.020||
|-
| Fractional excretion of urea ||< 35%|| > 50%||
|-
| Microscopic analysis||
*Hyaline casts
||
*Acute glomerulonephritis: RBCs, casts
*Acute tubular necrosis: protein, tubular epithelial cells
*Interstitial nephritis: eosinophils
||
|}
 
^ (urine sodium/plasma sodium) / (urine creatinine / serum creatinine)
 
==Management==
''Treat underlying cause''
*Prerenal: [[IVF]] (or [[pRBCs]] if bleeding)
*Intrinsic: Depends on cause
*Obstruction:
**Note: Postobstructive diuresis can result in significant volume loss and death
***Typically occurs when obstruction has been prolonged / has resulted in renal failure  
***Admit patients with persistent diuresis of >250 mL/h for >2hr  
**Foley Catheter, consider [[Coude Catheter]]
**Suprapubic (if Coude fails)
 
===[[Dialysis]]===
*Indicated for:
**A: [[Acidosis]] (severe)
**E: [[Electrolyte abnormality]] (e.g. uncontrolled [[hyperkalemia]])
**I: Ingestions ([[lithium toxicity|lithium]], [[salicylate toxicity|ASA]], [[methanol]], [[ethylene glycol]], [[theophylline toxicity|theophylline]])
**O: [[fluid overload|Overload]] (volume) with persistent hypoxia
**U: [[uremia|Uremic]] [[pericarditis]]/[[encephalopathy]]/[[coagulopathy|bleeding dyscrasia]]
**Also:
***Na <115 or >165 mEq/L
***creatinine > 10
***BUN >100
*See [[Dialysis catheter placement]]
*See [[Austere peritoneal dialysis]]
 
===Phlebotomy to Treat [[Pulmonary Edema]]===
*Possible last ditch effort to tide patient over to formal dialysis if hours away
*If traditional pulmonary edema treatments are not working for [[Sympathetic crashing acute pulmonary edema (SCAPE)|SCAPE]] patient, one may attempt to remove 200-300 cc of blood as a bridge to dialysis<ref>Eiser AR et al. Phlebotomy for pulmonary edema in dialysis patients. Clin Nephrol. 1997 Jan;47(1):47-9.</ref>
*If Hb too low, may consider temporary venous tourniquets on each leg proximally q30 min to reduce preload volume to the heart, alternating legs


==Disposition==
==Disposition==
Admit
*Admit


==See Also==
==See Also==
[[Hyperkalemia]]
*[[Hyperkalemia]]
*[[Renal ultrasound]]
*[[Hypertensive emergency]]
 
== Calculators ==
{{FENa_Calculator}}
 
{{CrCl_Calculator}}
 
{{Schwartz_Calculator}}
 
==External Links==
*[http://ddxof.com/acute-kidney-injury/ DDxOf: Differential Diagnosis of Acute Kidney Injury]
 
==References==
<references/>


==Source==
Tintinalli


[[Category:GU]]
[[Category:Renal]]

Latest revision as of 15:06, 21 March 2026

Background

  • Majority of cases of community-acquired ARF is secondary to volume depletion although consideration of pre-renal, post renal, and renal causes are important.

AKI Staging

AKI Stage[1] KDIGO UOP
1 Cr 1.5-1.9x baseline over 7d or ≥0.3 mg/dL increase over 48hrs <0.5 mL/kg/hr for 6-12hrs
2 Cr 2.0-2.9x baseline <0.5 mL/kg/hr for >12hrs
3 Cr ≥3.0x baseline or ≥4.0 mg/dL increase or initiation of RRT <0.3 mL/kg/hr for >24hrs or anuria for >12hrs

Chronic Kidney Disease Stages

  • Useful if patient's baseline creatinine is unknown
    • Stage 1: Kidney damage (e.g. proteinuria) and normal GFR; GFR >90
    • Stage 2: Kidney damage (e.g. proteinuria) and mild decrease in GFR; GFR 60-89
    • Stage 3: Moderate decrease in GFR; GFR >30-59
    • Stage 4: Severe decrease in GFR; GFR 15-29
    • Stage 5: Kidney failure (dialysis or kidney transplant needed); GFR <15

Risk Factors

Clinical Features

Etiologies

Differential Diagnosis of Acute Kidney Injury.png

Prerenal

Intrinsic

Postrenal

Evaluation

Work-up

  • Urine
  • Prostate exam
  • Urinalysis, urine sodium, urine creatinine, urine urea
  • ECG (hyperkalemia)
  • Chronic renal failure features
    • Anemia, thrombocytopenia
    • Iron studies with low Fe, low TIBC, low iron saturation, normal ferritin
    • Secondary rise in PTH, high phos, low calcium

Imaging

  • CXR
    • Evidence of volume overload, pneumonia
  • US: renal/bladder
    • Test of choice in setting of acute renal failure
    • Bladder size (post-void)
    • Hydronephrosis
    • IVC collapsibility (prerenal)
  • CT
    • Useful to determine cause of post renal failure (identification of abdominal masses etc.)
    • Should generally not be used with IV contrast due to potential risk for CIN
    • Indicated if hydronephrosis found on ultrasound in order to define the location of obstruction

Diagnosis

Finding Prerenal Intrinsic Postrenal
BUN/creatinine ratio >20 < 12 12-20 (normal range)
FeNa^
  • <1%
  • < 2% for neonates
  • >1%
  • > 2.5% for neonates
  • >1%
Urine osm >500 <350
Urine sodium < 20 mEq/L > 40 mEq/L
Specific gravity > 1.020 < 1.020
Fractional excretion of urea < 35% > 50%
Microscopic analysis
  • Hyaline casts
  • Acute glomerulonephritis: RBCs, casts
  • Acute tubular necrosis: protein, tubular epithelial cells
  • Interstitial nephritis: eosinophils

^ (urine sodium/plasma sodium) / (urine creatinine / serum creatinine)

Management

Treat underlying cause

  • Prerenal: IVF (or pRBCs if bleeding)
  • Intrinsic: Depends on cause
  • Obstruction:
    • Note: Postobstructive diuresis can result in significant volume loss and death
      • Typically occurs when obstruction has been prolonged / has resulted in renal failure
      • Admit patients with persistent diuresis of >250 mL/h for >2hr
    • Foley Catheter, consider Coude Catheter
    • Suprapubic (if Coude fails)

Dialysis

Phlebotomy to Treat Pulmonary Edema

  • Possible last ditch effort to tide patient over to formal dialysis if hours away
  • If traditional pulmonary edema treatments are not working for SCAPE patient, one may attempt to remove 200-300 cc of blood as a bridge to dialysis[2]
  • If Hb too low, may consider temporary venous tourniquets on each leg proximally q30 min to reduce preload volume to the heart, alternating legs

Disposition

  • Admit

See Also

Calculators

Fractional Excretion of Sodium (FENa)

FENa — Fractional Excretion of Sodium
Parameter Value
Serum Sodium (mEq/L)
Serum Creatinine (mg/dL)
Urine Sodium (mEq/L)
Urine Creatinine (mg/dL)
FENa (%)  %
Interpretation (in setting of oliguria/AKI)
<1% Pre-renal azotemia — Kidneys are sodium-avid (hypoperfusion, hypovolemia, heart failure, cirrhosis). Consider volume resuscitation.
>2% Intrinsic renal disease — ATN, AIN, or glomerulonephritis. Kidneys unable to concentrate urine.
1–2% Indeterminate — May be seen in early ATN or with mixed etiologies. Clinical correlation required.
Important Caveats
  • FENa is unreliable on diuretics — use FEUrea instead
  • Low FENa (<1%) can be seen in contrast nephropathy, rhabdomyolysis, early obstruction
  • Not validated in CKD patients
References
  • Espinel CH. The FENa test: use in the differential diagnosis of acute renal failure. JAMA. 1976;236:579-581. PMID 947239.
  • Steiner RW. Interpreting the fractional excretion of sodium. Am J Med. 1984;77:699-702. PMID 6486145.


Creatinine Clearance (Cockcroft-Gault)

Creatinine Clearance (Cockcroft-Gault)
Parameter Value
Age (years)
Sex 1 Male   Female
Weight (kg)
Serum Creatinine (mg/dL)
CrCl (mL/min) mL/min
Interpretation
>90 Normal renal function.
60–89 Mildly decreased (CKD Stage 2).
30–59 Moderately decreased (CKD Stage 3). Adjust renally-dosed medications.
15–29 Severely decreased (CKD Stage 4).
<15 Kidney failure (CKD Stage 5). Consider dialysis.
References
  • Cockcroft DW, Gault MH. Prediction of creatinine clearance from serum creatinine. Nephron. 1976;16(1):31-41. PMID 1244564.
  • Formula: CrCl = [(140 − age) × weight (kg)] / [72 × serum Cr (mg/dL)] × 0.85 if female.
  • Note: Use IBW or adjusted BW in obese patients. Not validated in AKI or rapidly changing creatinine.


Schwartz Equation (Pediatric GFR)

Schwartz Equation — Pediatric eGFR
Parameter Value
Height (cm)
Serum Creatinine (mg/dL)
Estimated GFR mL/min/1.73m²
References
  • Schwartz GJ, Muñoz A, Schneider MF, et al. New equations to estimate GFR in children with CKD. J Am Soc Nephrol. 2009;20(3):629-637. PMID 19158356.
  • Bedside Schwartz (2009): eGFR = 0.413 × height (cm) / serum creatinine (mg/dL). Valid for ages 1-16 years.

External Links

References

  1. Moore PK, et. al. Management of acute kidney injury: core curriculum 2018. Am J Kidney Dis. 2018; 72: 136-148.
  2. Eiser AR et al. Phlebotomy for pulmonary edema in dialysis patients. Clin Nephrol. 1997 Jan;47(1):47-9.