An abrupt (<72 hours) reduction in kidney function defined as: an absolute increasein serum creatinine by >26.4 µm/l OR an increase in creatinine by >50% OR a reduction in UO
Diagnosti Criteria (KDIGO)
AKI is diagnosed if any of the following are present:
- Increase in serum creatinine ≥ 0.3 mg/dL within 48 hours
- Increase in serum creatinine to ≥ 1.5 times baseline within 7 days
- Urine output < 0.5 mL/kg/hour for ≥ 6 hours
Aetiology
Pre-renal - impaired blood flow to the kidney
- Reversible volume depletion causes a reduction in perfusion to the kidneys - leads to oliguria (<0.5 mls/kg/hr) and increase in creatinine
- Hypovolaemia - haemorrhage, volume depletion (e.g. D+V, burns)
- Hypotension - cardiogenic shock, distributive shock (e.g. sepsis, anaphylaxis)
- Renal hypoperfusion - NSAIDs/COX-2, ACEi/ARBs, hepatorenal syndrome
- ACEi result in loss of loss of efferent arteriolar vasoconstriction which is a compensatory mechanism for volume depletion → major fall in GFR
- Untreated pre-renal AKI leads to acute tubular necrosis (see below)
Renal
- Diseases causing inflammation or damage to cells causing AKI
- Vascular - vasculitis, renovascular disease
- Glomerular - glomerulonephritis
- Interstitial nephritis - drugs, infection (TB), systemic (sarcoid)
- Tubular injury - ischaemia, drugs (gentamicin), contrast, rhabdomyolysis
Acute tubular necrosis
- Tubular cell death
- Commonest form of AKI in hospital
- Due to a combination of factors leading to decreased renal perfusion
- Common causes include sepsis and severe dehydration
- Other important causes include rhabdomyolysis and drug toxicity
Post-renal
- AKI due to obstruction of urine flow leading to back pressure and thus loss of concentrating ability
- Causes: stones, cancers, strictures, extrinsic pressure
Risk factors
Patient
- Older age
- CKD
- Diabetes
- Cardiac failure
- Liver disease
- PVD
- Previous AKI
Exposure
- Hypotension
- Hypovolaemia
- Sepsis
- Deteriorating NEWS
- Recent contrast
- Exposure to certain medications
Pathophysiology
KDIGO staging classification

Clinical presentation
Symptoms
- Constitutional symptoms - anorexia, weight loss, fatigue, lethargy
- Nausea and vomiting
- Itch
- Fluid overload - oedema, SOB
Signs
- Fluid overload including HTN, oedema, pulmonary oedema, pleural effusion
- Uraemia including itch, pericarditis
- Oliguria
Investigations
- U+Es
- Bloods - FBC and coagulation screen
- Abnormal clotting, anaemia
- Urinalysis - haematoproteinuria
- USS - obstruction?
- Immunology - ANA, ANCA, GBM
- Protein electrophoresis and BJB if considering myeloma (elderly AKI + bone pain + hypokalaemia + anaemia)
Stage | Class | Serum Creatinine or GFR Criteria | Urine Output Criteria |
1 | Risk | Serum creatinine ×1.5 or GFR decrease >25% | <0.5 mL/kg/hour for 6 hours |
2 | Injury | Serum creatinine ×2 or GFR decrease >50% | <0.5 mL/kg/hour for 12 hours |
3 | Failure | Serum creatinine ×3 or serum creatinine ≥354 µmol/L (≈4.0 mg/dL) | <0.3 mL/kg/hour for 24 hours or anuria for 12 hours |
ㅤ | Loss | Persistent acute kidney failure = complete loss of kidney function for >4 weeks | — |
ㅤ | End-Stage Kidney Disease | End-stage kidney disease for >3 months | — |
Management
Pre-renal AKI
- Assess for hydration
- Clinical observations (BP, HR, UO)
- JVP, cap refill, oedema
- Pulmonary oedema
- Fluid challenge for hypovolaemia
- Crystalloid (0.9% NaCl) or colloid (Gelofusin) - do NOT use 5% dextrose
- Give bolus of fluid then reassess and repeat as necessary
- Ig >1000mls IN and no improvement, seek help
Further treatment (pre-renal and renal)
- Ensure good perfusion pressure
- Fluid resuscitate
- Once fluid resuscitated, if still not achieving an adequate BP → inotropes/vasopressors
- Treat underlying cause e.g. antibiotics if sepsis
- Stop nephrotoxic
- Dialysis if remains anuric and uraemia
Post-renal AKI
- Relieve obstruction - catheter, nephrostomy
- Refer urology if ureteric stenting required
Urgent indications for haemodialysis
- Hyperkalaemia >7 or >6.5 unresponsive to medical therapy
- Severe acidosis - pH <7.15
- Fluid overload e.g. pulmonary oedema
- Urea >40, pericardial rub/effusion
Complications
- Hyperkalaemia
- Fluid overload (pulmonary oedema)
- Severe acidosis (pH <7.15)
- Uraemic pericardial effusion
- Severe uraemia (Ur >40)