Kidney and lung in pathology: mechanisms and clinical implications

Multidiscip Respir Med. 2022 Jan 18;17(2):819. doi: 10.4081/mrm.2022.819. eCollection 2022 Jan 12.

Abstract

There is a close, physiological, relationship between kidney and lung that begin in the fetal age, and is aimed to keep homeostatic balance in the body. From a pathological point of view, the kidneys could be damaged by inflammatory mediators or by immune-mediated factors linked to a primary lung disease or, conversely, it could be the kidney disease that causes lung damage. Non-immunological mechanisms are frequently involved in renal and pulmonary diseases, as observed in chronic conditions. This crosstalk have clinical and therapeutic consequences. This review aims to describe the pulmonary-renal link in physiology and in pathological conditions.

Keywords: acute kidney injury; acute lung injury; chemokines; crosstalk.