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Synopsis of Hepatorenal Syndrome

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Patients with advanced liver disease, portal hypertension, and ascites also have ... Normal or minimally abnormal (granular or hyaline casts) Step 3. Algorithm (2) ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Synopsis of Hepatorenal Syndrome


1
Synopsis of Hepatorenal Syndrome
  • Wang, Tzong-Luen, MD, PhD

2
HRS
  • Aggressive form of ARF that frequently
    complicates hepatic failure due to advanced
    cirrhosis or other liver diseases, including
    malignancy, hepatic resection, and biliary
    obstruction.
  • Intrarenal vasoconstriction and avid sodium
    retention are early sequelae.

3
HRS
  • Patients with advanced liver disease, portal
    hypertension, and ascites also have increased
    plasma volume but reduced effective arterial
    blood volume as a consequence of systemic
    vasodilatation and pooling of blood in the portal
    circulation.
  • Renal failure typically develops slowly over
    weeks or months in parallel with deteriorating
    hepatic function but may accelerate dramatically
    following a variety of hemodynamic insults,
    including hemorrhage, paracentesis, and
    overzealous use of diuretics, vasodilators, or
    cyclooxygenase inhibitors.

4
HRS
  • ARF progresses even after optimization of
    systemic hemodynamics and systemic arterial blood
    volume and removal of nephrotoxins, probably as a
    result of ongoing intrarenal vasoconstriction,
    hypoperfusion, and ischemia triggered by
    circulating factors or neural impulses
    originating in the failing liver.

5
Diagnosis of HRS
  • Chronic liver disease with acites
  • Slow onset azotemia (plasma creatinine gt 1.5
    mg/dL)
  • Tubular function good
  • Urine to plasma osmolarity ratio gt 1.0
  • Urine to plasma creatinine ratio gt 30
  • Urine sodium concentration lt 10 mEq/dL
  • No sustained benefit by expansion of
    intravascular space

6
Differential Diagnosis
7
Algorithm
  • Risng serum creatinine, oliguria in patients
    with liver disease
  • Step 1 History and Physical Examination ?
    Suspect HRS
  • Step 2 Urinalysis
  • Overly abnormal (cells, RBC, casts, protein)
    intrinsic renal disease
  • Normal or minimally abnormal (granular or hyaline
    casts) ? Step 3

8
Algorithm (2)
  • Step 3 Urine and Serum Biochemistry
  • Urine Na gt 40, UCRPCR lt 20, RFI gt 2 ATN
  • Urine Na lt 20, UCRPCR gt 40, RFI lt 1? Step 4
  • Step 4 Trial of volume expansion (1-2L saline)
  • Urine output increases, Serum creatinine falls
    Reversible prerenal azotemia Fluid
  • Oliguria persists, Creatinine stable or rising
    HRS Conservative renal failure treatment 10-20
    spontaneously reversible consider
    peritoneovenous shunt

9
Management
  • General measures
  • Try not to make the diagnosis
  • Attempt to rule out other likely diagnoses
  • Acute renal failure
  • Prerenal failure
  • Use of CVP or Swan-Ganz catheter
  • Volume chanllenge
  • Primum non nocere

10
Management
  • Specific therapeutic considerations
  • General
  • Sodium and fluid restriction
  • Correct acid-base disturbances
  • Correct severe anemia
  • Treat encephalopathy
  • Ascites reinfusion
  • Infusion of vasodilators
  • Acetylcholine
  • Phentolamine
  • Prostaglandins A1 and E
  • Dopamine

11
Management
  • Specific therapeutic considerations
  • Portacaval shuntingl
  • Dialysis
  • Continuous arteriovenous ultrafiltration (CAVU)
  • LeVeen (peritoneaovenous) shunt
  • Hepatic transplantation

12
Do Not Attempt to Make the Diagnosis of HRS
Firstly!!
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