Pre renal^
azotemia
Hepatorenal
syndrome
Acute tubular
Necrosis
Urinary sodium
(mmol/L)
<10 <10 >20
Urine/plasma
creatinine ratio
>30/1 >20/1 <20/1
Urine osmolarity
(mosmol/l)
≥200 higher than
plasma
>200 higher
than plasma
Relatively similar to
plasma (isothenuric)
Urine sediment Normal Unremarkable Casts, cellular debris
Treatment of Hepatorenal Syndrome
- Treatment of HRS is largely supportive.
- Prevention is more important. Toxic agents as NSAIDs,
demeclocycline, aggressive diuresis or aggressive paracentesis have to
be avoided. - If azotaemia is discovered in hepatic patient, the precipitating factor as
volume contraction, cardiac decompensation and urinary tract
obstruction have to be discovered and promptly treated. - If prerenal azotemia is possible we have to give a volume expander
(colloid as albumin or crystalloid as saline). - Abdominal paracentesis with plasma volume expansion (e.g. by salt
free albumin) may decrease the intra-abdominal pressure, decrease