[Paradigm shift in understanding Acute kidney injury in patients with  chronic liver disease: From pathophysiology to defining disease entities].

[Paradigm shift in understanding Acute kidney injury in patients with chronic liver disease: From pathophysiology to defining disease entities]. Z Gastroenterol. 2020 Mar;58(3):254-266 Authors: Scurt FG, Bose K, Canbay A, Mertens PR, Chatzikyrkou C Abstract The hepatorenal syndrome (HRS) is only a part of the wide spectrum of renal injury in patients with end-stage liver cirrhosis. Besides that, the advanced liver disease itself, or its underlying causes, as well as comorbidities, like diabetes mellitus, adiposity and arterial hypertension, can directly cause parenchymal renal insults (bile acid nephropathy, ischemic tubular injury, diabetic/hypertensive nephropathy, hepatitis B- and C-associated glomerulonephritis etc.). This kind of kidney injury is collectively described as non-hepatorenal syndrome AKI (non-HRS AKI. Beyond that, accumulating evidence highlights the role of systemic inflammation as an important common factor in the pathogenesis of decompensated liver cirrhosis, acute in chronic liver failure (ACLF) and renal dysfunction.In this review, we discuss recent data about definition, classification and pathophysiology of HRS, HRS-AKI and Non-HRS-AKI and exploit in this regard the diagnostic and prognostic potential of respective newer serum and urine markers. PMID: 32198739 [PubMed - as supplied by publisher]
Source: Zeitschrift fur Gastroenterologie - Category: Gastroenterology Authors: Tags: Z Gastroenterol Source Type: research