A1 Refereed original research article in a scientific journal

Association of oliguria with the development of acute kidney injury in the critically ill




AuthorsVaara ST, Parviainen I, Pettila V, Nisula S, Inkinen O, Uusaro A; The FINNAKI Study Group

PublisherNATURE PUBLISHING GROUP

Publication year2016

JournalKidney International

Journal name in sourceKIDNEY INTERNATIONAL

Journal acronymKIDNEY INT

Volume89

Issue1

First page 200

Last page208

Number of pages9

ISSN0085-2538

DOIhttps://doi.org/10.1038/ki.2015.269


Abstract

Urine output ((UO) criterion may increase the sensitivity of the definition of acute kidney injury (AKI). We determined whether the empirically derived definition for oliguria (<0.5 ml/kg/h) is independently associated with adverse outcome. Data analysis included hourly recorded UO from the prospective, multicenter FINNAKI study conducted in 16 Finnish intensive care units. Confounder-adjusted association of oliguria of different severity and duration primarily with the development of AKI defined by creatinine criterion (Cr-AKI) or renal replacement therapy (RRT) was assessed. Secondarily, we determined the association of oliguria with 90-day mortality. Of the 1966 patients analyzed for the development of AKI, 454 (23.1%) reached this endpoint. Within this AKI cohort, 312 (68.7%) developed Cr-AKI, 21(4.6%) commenced RRT without Cr-AKI, and 121 (26.7%) commenced RRT with Cr-AKI. Episodes of severe oliguria (<0.1 ml/kg/h) for more than 3 h were independently associated with the development of Cr-AKI or RRT. The shortest periods of consecutive oliguria independently associated with an increased risk for 90-day mortality were 6-12 h of oliguria from 0.3 to <0.5 ml/kg/h, over 6 h of oliguria from 0.1 to <0.3 ml/kg/h, and severe oliguria lasting over 3 h. Thus, our findings underlie the importance of hourly UO measurements. (C) 2015 International Society of Nephrology



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