Renal and systemic hemodynamics, plasma arginine vasopressin, plasma renin activity, plasma norepinephrine, blood volume and water loading test were studied in 10 patients with falciparum malaria without renal failure. Six patients responded to water load normally, while 4 patients had a decreased response to water load. The patients with a normal water load response had normal renal and systemic hemodynamics and a normal hormonal profile. The patients with a decreased response to water load had hyponatremia, hypervolemia, high cardiac index, low systemic vascular resistance, high plasma arginine vasopressin, high plasma renin activity, high plasma norepinephrine, low creatinine and p·aminohippurate clearances, low urine sodium and high urine osmolality. They had a lower mean arterial pressure during the acute phase of the disease than during the recovery phase. The findings suggest that a decreased response to water load is due to peripheral vasodilatation which results in a decreased effective blood volume leading to the release of vasopressin and norepinephrine, increased renin activity and decreased renal hemodynamics.
The effects of furosemide and furosemide with dopamine on renal function were studied in 23 patients with acute renal failure due to falciparum malaria whose serum creatinine ranged from 230 to 947 μmol/l. Furosemide given intravenously at the dosage of 200 mg 6 hourly for a period of 4 days did not alter the clinical course of renal failure. Intravenous administration of furosemide (200 mg 6 hourly) with dopamine (1 μg/kg/min) for 4 days increased creatinine clearance and arrested the progress of renal failure when the serum creatinine was less than 400 μmol/l, but failed to alter the course of renal failure when the serum creatinine exceeded 600 μmol/l.
Hemolytic uremic syndrome was observed in a 46-year-old man who had leptospirosis. Renal failure was severe with a prolonged clinical course. Despite clinical recovery there was residual renal damage indicated by mildly elevated serum creatinine. This is the first report of hemolytic uremic syndrome in leptospirosis.
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