Renal perfusion pressure: role and implications in critical
illness
Annals of
Intensive Care volume 15, Article number: 115, Published: 08
August 2025
Abstract
The pressure-flow relationship is fundamental to circulatory
hemodynamics of any organ. In the kidney, renal perfusion pressure (RPP),
defined as the gradient between mean arterial pressure and renal venous
pressure or mean systemic filling pressure, serves as the principal driving
pressure for renal blood flow (RBF). This concept recognizes that both arterial
hypotension and venous congestion can reduce the pressure gradient for renal
perfusion, potentially contributing to renal dysfunction or acute kidney injury
(AKI). In health, whenever RPP fluctuates, the kidney autoregulates intrarenal
vascular resistance to maintain stable RBF and glomerular filtration rate over
a range of RPP. However, in critical illness, autoregulatory capacity may be
impaired, and the degree of impairment can vary not only between patients but
also within the same patient depending on the disease context or stage of
illness. Therefore, during critical illness, inadequate RPP tends to overwhelm
renal autoregulation capacity earlier than anticipated, leading to tissue
hypoperfusion and increased risk of AKI. Relying on standard blood pressure
targets to optimize RPP may not account for such inter- or intra-individual
variations in autoregulation. Experimental models have shown that AKI can
develop without overt macrocirculatory changes, implicating microcirculatory
dysfunction as an important contributor too. Dynamic, multi-modal assessment of
renal perfusion may offer a more precise approach to renal protection.
Additionally, the focus of research has shifted towards providing new insights
into individualized perfusion targets and refining RPP-guided strategies to
prevent AKI among high-risk patients in ICU. The objective of this review is to
describe the role of RPP, implications of dysregulated renal perfusion,
approaches to monitoring renal perfusion, and potential therapies targeting RPP
on the horizon for critically ill patients.
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