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Query: UMLS:C0022672 (
acute tubular necrosis
)
2,175
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The purpose of this study is to report short-term pregnancy outcome, subsequent pregnancy outcome, and remote prognosis (follow-up from 0.3 to 9.8 years) in 31 cases complicated by acute renal failure. Eighteen patients had "pure" preeclampsia and 12 patients (13 pregnancies) had chronic hypertension, parenchymal renal disease, or both before pregnancy. All patients had serial evaluation of renal function, urine microscopy, and electrolyte studies at the onset of acute renal failure and on follow-up. There were three immediate maternal deaths (two in the pure preeclampsia group and one in the other group). Nine patients (50%) in the "pure" group required dialysis during hospitalization and all 18 patients had
acute tubular necrosis
. Five patients (42%) in the other group required immediate dialysis and three patients had bilateral cortical necrosis. The majority of pregnancies in both groups were complicated by
abruptio placentae
and hemorrhage. All 16 surviving patients in the pure preeclampsia group had normal renal function on long-term follow-up (average 4.0 +/- 3.1 years). Conversely, nine of the 11 surviving patients in the second group required long-term dialysis on follow-up and four of them ultimately died of end-stage renal disease. We conclude that proper management of acute renal failure in patients with pure preeclampsia-eclampsia does not result in residual function impairment.
...
PMID:Acute renal failure in hypertensive disorders of pregnancy. Pregnancy outcome and remote prognosis in thirty-one consecutive cases. 231 88
Acute renal failure is a most challenging clinical problem when it occurs in pregnancy. It requires an understanding of the normal physiology of the kidney in pregnancy and the natural history of different underlying renal diseases when pregnancy occurs. Because patients with chronic renal disease may present with worsening proteinuria, hypertension, and renal function, these disorders must be excluded from those conditions that cause acute deterioration of renal failure in otherwise normal women during pregnancy. As in all patients who develop acute renal failure, prerenal and obstructive causes must be excluded. Particularly important causes of prerenal azotemia in pregnancy include hyperemesis gravidarum and uterine hemorrhage, especially if it is unsuspected as in
abruptio placentae
. Infectious causes of acute renal failure in the pregnant woman include acute pyelonephritis and septic abortion. The clinical presentation of both these conditions should be apparent, and appropriate diagnosis and treatment can then be promptly instituted. Renal cortical necrosis is another cause of renal failure that occurs more frequently in pregnancy, and it must be differentiated from the many causes of
acute tubular necrosis
that may be associated with pregnancy. Those conditions that cause renal failure unique to pregnancy must always be considered when renal function deteriorates in the last trimester or the postpartum period. Severe preeclampsia, acute fatty liver of pregnancy, and idiopathic postpartum acute renal failure may all present similar complications, but the approach to each of these clinical disorders must be individualized. By understanding the causes of renal functional deterioration in pregnancy, a logical differential diagnosis can be established, allowing appropriate therapeutic decisions to preserve both maternal and fetal well-being.
...
PMID:Acute renal failure in pregnancy. 305 11