Hepatorenal Syndrome Type 1: Diagnosis and Treatment
Advances in Chronic Kidney Disease
by Justin M. Belcher
3d ago
Hepatorenal syndrome (HRS) is a feared complication in patients with advanced cirrhosis and is associated with significant morbidity and mortality. While recognized as a distinct physiologic condition for well over one hundred years, a lack of objective diagnostic tests has made the diagnosis one of exclusion. Since 1979, multiple sets of diagnostic criteria have been proposed. Though varying in detail, the principal intent of these criteria is to identify patients with severe, functional acute kidney injury that is unresponsive to volume resuscitation and exclude those with structural in ..read more
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Hepato-Cardio-Renal Syndrome
Advances in Chronic Kidney Disease
by Abhilash Koratala, Frederik Verbrugge, Amir Kazory
3d ago
Hepatorenal syndrome has conventionally been regarded as a multisystem syndrome in which pathophysiologic pathways that link cirrhosis with impairment in kidney function are followed by dysfunction of several organs such as the heart. The advances in cardiac studies have helped diagnose more subtle cardiac abnormalities that would have otherwise remained unnoticed in a significant subset of patients with advanced liver disease and cirrhosis. Accumulating data suggests that in many instances, the cardiac dysfunction precedes and predicts development of kidney disease in such patients ..read more
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Cholemic Nephropathy: Role in Acute Kidney Injury in Cholestasis and Cirrhosis
Advances in Chronic Kidney Disease
by Klemens Pinter, Alexander Rosenkranz
3d ago
The concept of structural kidney damage and renal dysfunction as a result of jaundice attracted attention in the medical community in the early and mid-20th century. The postulated doctrine of the time was that the excretion of elevated concentrations of bile results in bile-stained casts occupying collecting and distal convoluted tubules, degeneration of tubular epithelium, and decreased renal function. Compared to the hepatorenal syndrome, the poster child of hepatology and nephrology collaboration, the notion of structural kidney damage and renal dysfunction as a result of cholemia lost its ..read more
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Hyponatremia in the Context of Liver Disease
Advances in Chronic Kidney Disease
by Amy A. Yau, Florian Buchkremer
3d ago
Hyponatremia is common in patients with liver disease and is associated with increased mortality, morbidity, and a reduced quality of life. In liver transplantation, the inclusion of hyponatremia in organ allocation scores has reduced waitlist mortality. Portal hypertension and the resulting lowering of the effective arterial blood volume are important pathogenetic factors, but in most patients with liver disease, hyponatremia is multifactorial. Treatment requires a multifaceted approach that tries to reduce electrolyte-free water intake, restore urinary dilution, and increase nonelectrolyte s ..read more
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Liver Disease–Associated Glomerulopathies
Advances in Chronic Kidney Disease
by Swetha R. Kanduri, Yonatan Peleg, Shikha Wadhwani
3d ago
Hepatitis B virus (HBV) and hepatitis C virus (HCV) infect a significant number of individuals globally and their extra-hepatic manifestations, including glomerular disease, are well established. Additionally, liver disease–associated IgA nephropathy is the leading cause of secondary IgA nephropathy with disease course varying from asymptomatic urinary abnormalities to progressive kidney injury. Herein we provide an updated review on the epidemiology, pathogenesis, clinical manifestations, and treatment of HBV- and HCV-related glomerulonephritis as well as IgA nephropathy in patients with live ..read more
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Renal Replacement Therapy in Cirrhosis: A Contemporary Review
Advances in Chronic Kidney Disease
by Caterina Pelusio, Paul Endres, Javier A. Neyra, Andrew S. Allegretti
3d ago
Acute kidney injury is a common complication of decompensated cirrhosis, frequently requires hospitalization, and carries a high short-term mortality. This population experiences several characteristic types of acute kidney injury: hypovolemic-mediated (prerenal), ischemic/nephrotoxic-mediated (acute-tubular necrosis), and hepatorenal syndrome. Prerenal acute kidney injury is treated with volume resuscitation. Acute-tubular necrosis is treated by optimizing perfusion pressure and discontinuing the offending agent ..read more
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Pathophysiology of Hepatorenal Syndrome
Advances in Chronic Kidney Disease
by Juan Carlos Q. Velez, Nyan Latt, Roger A. Rodby
3d ago
Hepatorenal syndrome type 1 (HRS-1) is a unique form of acute kidney injury that affects individuals with decompensated cirrhosis with ascites. The primary mechanism leading to reduction of kidney function in HRS-1 is hemodynamic in nature. Cumulative evidence points to a cascade of events that led to a profound reduction in kidney perfusion. A state of increased intrahepatic vascular resistance characteristic of advanced cirrhosis and portal hypertension is accompanied by maladaptive peripheral arterial vasodilation and reduction in systemic vascular resistance and mean arterial pressure ..read more
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The Kidney and Liver Disease Connection
Advances in Chronic Kidney Disease
by Juan Carlos Q. Velez, Prakash Gudsoorkar, Geetha Maddukuri, Charuhas Thakar
3d ago
There is a complex interplay between a normal functioning kidney and liver, and unfortunately, interruption of this harmonious relationship in disease states can lead to severe consequences for the patient. Liver pathologies constitute underpinnings in which unique renal and electrolyte disorders manifest in various different ways. In September 2023, Adv Kidney Dis Health published the first issue of a compilation of review articles entitled Update on Kidney and Liver Disease Connection Part I. This special edition covered topics related to medical conditions in patients affected with liver di ..read more
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Toxin-Induced Liver Injury and Extracorporeal Treatment of Liver Failure
Advances in Chronic Kidney Disease
by Angela H. Lam, Joshua D. King
3d ago
Poisoning with a large variety of drugs and naturally occurring toxins may result in acute liver injury and failure. Drug-induced liver injury is a major cause of liver failure nationwide, and it is likely that nephrologists will be involved in treating patients with these conditions. A number of xenobiotics resulting in liver toxicity may cause acute kidney injury or other organ injury as well. Most agents causing drug- or toxin-induced liver failure lack specific therapies, although a few xenobiotics such as acetaminophen have effective antidotal therapies if administered prior to developmen ..read more
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3d ago
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