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Epidemiology, Clinical Features, and Diagnostic Studies for Major Causes of Acute Renal Failure



Etiology Epidemiology Clinical Features Serum Studies Urine Studies Other Testing
Prerenal ARF Most common cause of community-acquired ARF; history of poor fluid intake, treatment with NSAIDs/ACE inhibitors/ARBs, worsening heart failure Volume depletion (absolute/postural hypotension, low jugular venous pressure, dry mucus membranes) or decreased effective circulatory volume (e.g., heart failure or liver disease) High BUN/CR ratio (20) is suggestive but not diagnostic Hyaline casts
FENa <1%
UNa <10 mmol/
LSG >1.018

Intrinsic ARF
Diseases of large renal vessels
Renal artery thrombosis More common in those with atrial fibrillation or arterial thrombosis Flank or abdominal pain Elevated LDH Mild proteinuriaOccasional hematuria Renal angiogram or MR angiogram are diagnostic
Atheroembolic disease Vascular disease; classically occurs within days–weeks of manipulation of the aorta or other large vessels, often in the setting of anticoagulation Retinal plaques, palpable purpura, livedo reticularis EosinophiliaHypocomplementemia Eosinophiluria Skin or renal biopsy
Renal vein thrombosis History of nephrotic syndrome or pulmonary embolism Flank pain Mild proteinuriaOccasional hematuria Renal venogram or MR venogram are diagnostic
Diseases of small vessels and glomeruli
Glomerulonephritis/vasculitis Associated with recent infection (postinfectious or endocarditis), systemic lupus erythematosus, liver disease (hepatitis B or C)Anti-GBM disease: Typically men in their 20s–40sANCA disease: Two peaks: 20s–30s and 50s–60s New cardiac murmur (postinfectious)Skin rash/ulcers, arthralgias (lupus)Sinusitis (anti-GBM disease)Lung hemorrhage (anti-GBM, ANCA, lupus) ANA, ANCA, anti-GBM antibody, hepatitis serologies, cryoglobulins, blood cultures, ASO, complements (positive tests depend on etiology) Hematuria with red cell casts/dysmorphic red blood cellsGranular castsProteinuria (usually <1 g/d) Renal biopsy
Hemolytic-uremic syndrome/thrombotic thrombocytopenic Recent GI infection (E. coli) or use of calcineurin inhibitors (FK506 and cyclosporine) Fever, neurologic abnormalities Schistocytes on peripheral blood smear, elevated LDH, anemia, thrombocytopenia HematuriaMild proteinuriaRed cell casts (rare) Renal biopsy
Malignant hypertension Severe/uncontrolled hypertension Evidence of damage to other organs: headache, papilledema, heart failure with LVH by echocardiography/ECG Hematuria with red cell casts/proteinuria
Typically resolves with blood pressure control
Acute tubular necrosis
Ischemia Recent hemorrhage or severe hypotension Muddy brown granular or tubular epithelial cell casts
FENa >1%
UNa >20 mmol/
LSG <1.015

Exogenous toxins Recent exposure to nephrotoxic antibiotics or chemotherapy, often in association with sepsis, or volume depletion Muddy brown granular or tubular epithelial cell castsFENa >1%UNa >20 mmol/LSG <1.015
Recent exposure to radiocontrast, often in association with volume depletion, diabetes or CKD Muddy brown granular or tubular epithelial cell castsUrinalysis may be normalFENa often <1%UNa often <20 mmol/L
Endogenous toxins Rhabdomyolysis Post ictal state (seizures), evidence of trauma or prolonged immobilization Increased myoglobin, creatine kinase U/A positive for heme but no hematuria
Hemolysis: recent blood transfusion Fever, other evidence of transfusion reaction Pink plasma, increased LDH Pink, heme-positive urine without hematuria Transfusion reaction workup
Tumor lysis: recent chemotherapy Hyperuricemia, increased LDH Urate crystals
Multiple myeloma Individuals >60 years of age, ongoing constitutional symptoms (fatigue, malaise) Circulating monoclonal spike, anemia Dipstick-negative proteinuria, monoclonal spike on electrophoresis Bone marrow or renal biopsy
Ethylene glycol ingestion History of alcohol abuse, altered mental status Metabolic gap acidosis with osmolal gap, positive toxicology Oxalate crystals
Diseases of the tubulointerstitium
Allergic interstitial nephritis Recent medication exposure Fever, rash, arthralgias Eosinophilia White cell casts, eosinophiluria Renal biopsy
Acute bilateral pyelonephritis Fever, flank pain and tenderness Positive blood cultures Leukocytes, proteinuria, positive urine culture
Postrenal ARF History of renal stones or prostatic disease Palpable bladder, flank or abdominal pain Usually normal; hematuria if due to stones Imaging to assess obstruction: CT scan and/or ultrasound

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