by Raymond T. Hu,
Yugeesh R. Lankadeva, Fumitake Yanase, Eduardo A. Osawa, Roger G. Evans and
Rinaldo Bellomo
Critical Care volume 26,
Article number: 389 (2022)
Acute kidney injury (AKI) is common in the critically ill.
Inadequate renal medullary tissue oxygenation has been linked to its
pathogenesis. Moreover, renal medullary tissue hypoxia can be detected before
biochemical evidence of AKI in large mammalian models of critical illness. This
justifies medullary hypoxia as a pathophysiological biomarker for early
detection of impending AKI, thereby providing an opportunity to avert its
evolution. Evidence from both animal and human studies supports the view that
non-invasively measured bladder urinary oxygen tension (PuO2) can provide a
reliable estimate of renal medullary tissue oxygen tension (tPO2), which can
only be measured invasively. Furthermore, therapies that modify medullary tPO2 produce
corresponding changes in bladder PuO2. Clinical studies have shown that bladder
PuO2 correlates with cardiac output, and that it increases in response to
elevated cardiopulmonary bypass (CPB) flow and mean arterial pressure. Clinical
observational studies in patients undergoing cardiac surgery involving CPB have
shown that bladder PuO2 has prognostic value for subsequent AKI. Thus,
continuous bladder PuO2 holds promise as a new clinical tool for
monitoring the adequacy of renal medullary oxygenation, with its implications
for the recognition and prevention of medullary hypoxia and thus AKI.
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