2018
DOI: 10.1093/ndt/gfy047
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Urinary hypoxia: an intraoperative marker of risk of cardiac surgery-associated acute kidney injury

Abstract: Low urinary PO2 during adult cardiac surgery requiring CPB predicts AKI, so may identify patients in which intervention to improve renal oxygenation might reduce the risk of AKI.

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Cited by 67 publications
(105 citation statements)
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References 44 publications
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“…Furthermore, most patients requiring diagnostic evaluation of AKI are in critical care settings, connected to monitoring and life-maintaining equipment that preclude bedside usage of MRI. A more feasible and promising technology for the early real-time detection of evolving medullary hypoxia and for assessing the risk of hypoxic AKI is a continuous determination of urinary pO 2 at the catheter tip, as recently shown in the settings of cardiac surgery [80].…”
Section: Renal Functional Imagingmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Furthermore, most patients requiring diagnostic evaluation of AKI are in critical care settings, connected to monitoring and life-maintaining equipment that preclude bedside usage of MRI. A more feasible and promising technology for the early real-time detection of evolving medullary hypoxia and for assessing the risk of hypoxic AKI is a continuous determination of urinary pO 2 at the catheter tip, as recently shown in the settings of cardiac surgery [80].…”
Section: Renal Functional Imagingmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Computational models of renal oxygenation also predict medullary hypoxia during CPB 9‐12 . Furthermore, risk of AKI is associated with indices of intra‐operative renal hypoxia, as assessed by urinary oxygen tension (PO 2 ) 13‐15 or near infrared spectroscopy 16,17 . Thus, strategies aimed at improving renal oxygenation during CPB have the potential to mitigate post‐operative AKI.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…There is accumulating evidence for an important role of renal tissue hypoxia, particularly in the medulla, in the pathophysiology of this form of AKI 3 . Renal medullary hypoxia during CPB is predicted from computational models of renal oxygenation, 4,5 has been observed in experimental models of CPB, 6‐9 and can be inferred from the observation of reduced urinary oxygen tension (pO 2 ) during CPB in patients 10‐12 . Moreover indices of intra‐operative renal hypoxia in patients, generated from near‐infrared spectroscopy 13,14 or measurement of urinary pO 2 , 10‐12 are associated with development of post‐operative AKI.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%