Non-resolution of acute kidney injury in the first week portends the development of chronic kidney disease in critically ill patients with cirrhosis.
Rakhi MaiwallSamba Siva Rao PasupuletiAshini Kumar HidamArchana RastogiSherin ThomasGuresh KumarAnupam KumarShiv Kumar SarinPublished in: Alimentary pharmacology & therapeutics (2023)
Almost two-thirds of critically ill patients with cirrhosis have AKI, which resolves in only one-half at day seven and predicts the development of CKD. Higher NGAL, RTEC, or granular casts were independent predictors of AKI-NR and CKD development. Enhanced tubular and endothelial injury, decreased repair, monocyte-macrophage infiltration and mitochondrial dysfunction in RTEC are associated with AKI non-resolution and risk of renal fibrosis.