Pediatric acute kidney injury
Pediatric acute kidney (renal failure) injury refers to the sudden loss of kidney function due to an underlying illness.
What is a pediatric acute kidney injury?
Acute (sudden) kidney injury, formerly called acute renal failure, occurs when a kidney is damaged suddenly due to an illness or condition – not because of a blow or injury to a kidney as the name might suggest. It’s a sudden onset of kidney failure that can happen within a few hours or days.
What are the signs and symptoms of a pediatric acute kidney injury?
Chest pain or pressure
Confusion
Fatigue
Fluid buildup in body
Infrequent urination
Shortness of breath
Slight backache
What are the causes of a pediatric acute kidney injury?
Slow blood flow caused by:
Blood or fluid loss
Burns
Heart attack or heart failure
Major surgery
Organ failure
Overuse of NSAID pain medicines (ibuprofen, ketoprofen, naproxen)
Severe allergic reactions
Conditions:
Certain kidney diseases or conditions, including hemolytic uremic syndrome
Multiple myeloma cancer (cancerous plasma cells)
Scleroderma (diseases that affect connective tissues that support internal organs)
Sepsis (life-threatening infection)
Inflamed blood vessels, or "vasculitis", which can scar blood vessels, making them stiff, weak and narrow
Blockage of the urinary tract caused by:
Blood clots in the urinary tract
Cancer
Nervous system problems that affect the bladder
Pediatric acute kidney injury doctors and providers
- Jyothsna Gattineni, MDPediatric Nephrologist
- Mouin Seikaly, MDPediatric Nephrologist
- Elizabeth Brown, MDPediatric Nephrologist
- Keri Drake, MDPediatric Nephrologist
- Halima Janjua, MDPediatric Nephrologist
- Raymond Quigley, MDPediatric Nephrologist
- Smitha Vidi, MDPediatric Nephrologist
- Robin Landgraf, APRN, PNP-PCNurse Practitioner - Nephrology