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Rhabdomyolysis

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Title: Rhabdomyolysis


1
Rhabdomyolysis
  • by Ri ???

2
Outline
  • Introduction
  • Cause
  • Pathophysiology
  • Laboratory findings
  • Treatment

3
  • Bench-to-bedside review Rhabdomyolysis an
    overview for clinicians
  • Ana L Huerta-Alardín1, Joseph Varon2 and Paul E
    Marik3
  • Critical Care 2005, 9158-169
  • Chapter 114 Rhabdomyolysis
  • Goldman Cecil Medicine 23rd ed

4
Introduction
  • Destruction or disintegration of striated muscle
  • Resulting in the leakage of the intracellular
    muscle constituents into the circulation and
    extracellular fluid
  • Weakness, myalgia and tea-colored urine are the
    main clinical manifestations

5
Cause
6
Cause
7
Drugs that may induce rhabdomyolysis
8
Statin related rhabdomyolysis
  • Directly or indirectly impairs the production or
    use of ATP by skeletal muscle
  • Increases energy requirements that exceed the
    rate of ATP production
  • Interfere with ATP production by reducing levels
    of coenzyme Q, chronic myositis syndrome
  • Risk factors high dosages, increasing age,
    female, renal and hepatic insufficiency, DM and
    concomitant therapy with drugs such as fibrates

9
Pathophysiology
10
Pathophysiology
  • Goldman Cecil Medicine 23rd ed

11
Pathophysiology
  • Goldman Cecil Medicine 23rd ed

12
(No Transcript)
13
Pathophysiology of ARF
  • Two crucial factors hypovolemia/ dehydration and
    aciduria
  • Heme protein toxicity
  • 1. Renal vasoconstriction with diminished
  • 2. Renal circulation, intraluminal cast
    formation and direct
  • 3. Heme Protein-induced cytotoxicity
  • Synergistic effect on renal vasoconstriction
  • Pigmented casts TammHorsfall protein with
    myoglobin
  • Heme-produced free radicals

14
Laboratory findings
  • CK levels most sensitive
  • Rises within 12 hours of the onset
  • Peaks in 13 days, and declines 35 days
  • 5000 U/l or greater is related to renal
    failure
  • Myoglobin in serum or urine
  • The early phases
  • Filtered by the kidney, plasma gt 1.5 mg/dl?
    appear in urine
  • Redbrown color to urine, gt100 mg/dl
  • short half-life (23 hours)
  • Metabolized by liver

15
Laboratory finding
  • Other muscle markers carbonic anhydrase III,
    Aldolase
  • Creatinine is elevated greater than the blood
    urea nitrogen?normal 101 ratio to 61
  • Hyperkalemia, hyperphosphatemia, hypocalcemia,
    and hyperuricemia

16
Management
  • Hydration with isotonic fluid, saline
    1-2L/hr(Grade IB)
  • keep 200-300ml/hr urine output till CK begin
    to decrease.
  • Forced diuresis Mannitol minimizes intratubular
    heme pigment deposition, free-radical scavenger,
    reduces blood viscosity, renal vasodilator
  • Evaluate plasma osm Q4-6H, osmolal gap?
    gt55mosm/kg gt stop Mannitol
  • Other diuretics

17
Management
  • Alkalinization of the urinegt pH 6.5(Grade 2B)
    bicarbonate(75mmol in 1-1.5L saline), may worsen
    the degree of hypocalcemia
  • Volume expansion with saline alone prevented
    progression to renal failure and that the
    addition of mannitol and bicarbonate had no
    additional benefit Homsi E, Barreiro M, Orlando
    J, Higa E

18
Management
  • Role of free-radical scavengers and antioxidants
  • Experimental models reduced ischemia
    reperfusion injury
  • Pentoxyphylline improve microvascular blood
    flow, neutrophil adhesion? cytokine release?
  • Vitamin E, C

19
Management
  • Dialysis
  • ARF developed, Daily hemodialysis or continuous
    hemofiltration?remove urea and potassium
  • Peritoneal dialysis is inadequate
  • The removal of myoglobin by plasma exchange has
    not demonstrated any benefit

20
Management
  • Administration of calcium should be avoided
    during the renal failure phase, unless the
    patient has symptomatic hypocalcemia or severe
    hyperkalemia(Grade IB)

21
Management of Crush syndrome
  • Mannitol and a forced alkaline diuresis are
    recommended when CK levelsgt 20,000 U/L
  • Urine output of 200 mL/hr
  • Urine pH between 6 7, serum pH lt 7.50
  • A bolus of 1 L of 5 dextrose plus 0.22 NaCl and
    100 mEq NaHCO3 ?infusion at 2 to 5 mL/kg/hr
  • 20 mannitol infusion 0.5 g/kg in 15min? 0.1
    g/kg/hr.

22
Take home message
  • Impairment of the production or use of ATP is the
    basic cause
  • Most useful laboratory findings are elevated CK(gt
    5000U/L related to ARF), initial detection of
    myglobulin
  • Management Aggressive hydration, diuresis, urine
    alkalinzation, free-radical scavengers, dialysis
  • Do not treat hypocalcemia unless symptom
    developed

23
Reference
  • Bench-to-bedside review Rhabdomyolysis an
    overview for clinicians
  • Ana L Huerta-Alardín1, Joseph Varon2 and Paul E
    Marik3
  • Critical Care 2005, 9158-169
  • Chapter 114 Rhabdomyolysis
  • Goldman Cecil Medicine 23rd ed
  • Clinical features and prevention of heme
    pigment-induced acute tubular necrosis, UpToDate
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