Clinical Course, Pathogenesis, and Anatomy of Acute Tubular Necrosis
ATN syndrome is characterized by an acute and usually progressive loss of tubular and glomerular function. The vast majority of patients with ATN have as their initiating event either a decrease in renal plasma flow or exposure to a nephrotoxic agent. The vasomotor nephropathy variant of ATN occurs in a patient in whom there is a decrease in blood pressure and/or in the effective circulating volume. The pathophysiological events in the generation of vasomotor nephropathy are not known with certainty (Stein et al., 1978). An initial decrease in renal blood flow appears to be a requisite for the development of ATN. However, blood flow returns nearly to normal within 24 to 48 hours after the initial insult. Despite adequate renal blood flow, tubular dysfunction persists and the glomerular filtration rate remains depressed. The factor or factors that sustain the renal functional impairment after the primary insult depend upon the the nature of the original insult. Leakage of glomerular ultrafiltrate from the tubular lumen into the interstitium across the damaged renal tubular cells, obstruction to flow due to debris or crystals in the lumen of the tubules, loss of high-energy intermediates in renal tubular cells, and a decrease in the glomerular capillary ultrafiltration coefficient (Kf) have all been proposed to play a pathophysiological role in sustaining the clinical picture of ATN.
The toxic nephropathy variant of ATN occurs in clinical circumstances in which the patient has been exposed to a nephrotoxic agent. These agents impair tubular function and cause a secondary decrease in filtration. Many drugs have been implicated in causing toxic nephropathy. Antibiotics, particularly the aminoglycoside antibiotics, and specific cancer chemotherapeutic agents are two classes of drugs commonly associated with ATN. Specific forms of toxic nephropathy are discussed in Chapter 35.
Histologically, the kidney may appear nearly normal. The brush border membranes of the proximal convoluted tubule may be absent and cellular debris may be observed in the tubule lumens. In patients with rhabdomyolysis and ATN, myoglobin-stained casts may be observed on histological examination of the kidney. Cellular infiltrates are not usually prominent unless there is an associated interstitial nephritis. There is, however, edema of the interstitium. Aminoglycoside antibiotic toxicity may be suggested by the presence of lipid whorls in the cytoplasm of the renal tubular cells. It is to be stressed that in the vast majority of patients with ATN, the histological picture is nondiagnostic. Despite the common use of the term acute tubular necrosis, necrosis of the tubules is rarely observed. The glomeruli appear normal by light microscopy. The functional abnormalities of ATN are not expressed in the histology of the kidney.
- OBLITERATIVE OR OBSTRUCTIVE PULMONARY HYPERTENSION
- SPECIFIC CAUSES OF CIRRHOSIS
- CLASSIFICATION OF THE MALABSORPTION SYNDROMES
- MULTIVALVULAR DISEASE
- ACUTE MYOCARDIAL INFARCTION
- COMPLICATIONS OF MYOCARDIAL INFARCTION AND THEIR MANAGEMENT
- Proteinuria
- Factors Involved in the Choice of Type of Dialysis
- Treatment and Prognosis
- GLOMERULAR DISEASE
- PHYSIOLOGY OF THE PULMONARY CIRCULATION
- Treatment and Prognosis
- THE AIRWAY STRUCTURE
- Specific Etiologies
- Pathology
- CONTROL OF BREATHING IN DISEASE STATES
- DIFFUSE LUNG DISEASE OF UNKNOWN ETIOLOGY
- SYNCOPE
- Potassium Homeostasis
- GASTROESOPHAGEAL REFLUX DISEASE
- Systemic Lupus Erythematosus (SLE)
- Lidocaine
- Urinary Tract Infection
- MOXIOUS GASES AflD FUMES
- Screening and Prevention
- HHSC Legislative Appropriations Request (LAR)
- ACID-PEPTIC DISEASE
- Management
- APPROACH TO THE DIAGNOSIS OF JAUNDICE
- NAUSEA AND VOMITING
- Sigmoidoscopy and Colonoscopy
- Peutz-Jeghers Syndrome
- HEART DISEASE AND PREGNANCY
- Acid-Base Abnormalities
- Public health and environment