Serum creatinine and cystatin C provide conflicting evidence of acute kidney injury following acute ingestion of potassium permanganate and oxalic acid.
Thilini Madushanka WijerathnaIndika Bandara GawarammanaDhammika Menike DissanayakaChathura PalanagasingheFathima ShihanaGihani DassanayakaSeyed ShahmyZoltan Huba EndreFahim MohamedNicholas Alan BuckleyPublished in: Clinical toxicology (Philadelphia, Pa.) (2017)
In most AKI, sCysC increases to the same extent but more rapidly than sCr, as sCysC has a shorter half-life. This suggests either a reduction in Cystatin C production or, conversely, that the rapid early rise of sCr results from increased production of creatine and creatinine to meet energy demands following severe oxidative stress mediated by H2C2O4 and KMnO4. Increased early creatinine excretion supports the latter explanation, since creatinine excretion usually decreases transiently in AKIN2/3 from other causes.