Management of Chronic Kidney Disease Patients in the Intensive Care Unit: Mixing Acute and Chronic Illness

Blood Purif. 2017;43(1-3):151-162. doi: 10.1159/000452650. Epub 2017 Jan 24.

Abstract

Patients with chronic kidney disease (CKD) are at high risk for developing critical illness and for admission to intensive care units (ICU). 'Critically ill CKD patients' frequently develop an acute worsening of renal function (i.e. acute-on-chronic, AoC) that contributes to long-term kidney dysfunction, potentially leading to end-stage kidney disease (ESKD). An integrated multidisciplinary effort is thus necessary to adequately manage the multi-organ damage of those kidney patients and contemporaneously reduce the progression of kidney dysfunction when they are critically ill. The aim of this review is to describe (1) the pathophysiological mechanisms underlying the development of AoC kidney dysfunction and its role in the progression toward ESKD; (2) the most common clinical presentations of critical illness among CKD/ESKD patients; and (3) the continuum of care for CKD/ESKD patients from maintenance hemodialysis/peritoneal dialysis to acute renal replacement therapy performed in ICU and, vice-versa, for AoC patients who develop ESKD.

Publication types

  • Review

MeSH terms

  • Critical Care / methods
  • Critical Care / standards
  • Disease Management*
  • Disease Progression
  • Humans
  • Intensive Care Units / organization & administration*
  • Kidney Failure, Chronic / therapy
  • Renal Insufficiency, Chronic / physiopathology*
  • Renal Insufficiency, Chronic / therapy
  • Renal Replacement Therapy / methods