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High Cut‐Off Membrane Hemodiafiltration in Myoglobinuric Acute Renal Failure: A Case Series

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TLDR
Elimination of myoglobin within the body was shown in this study to occur slowly during the period of anuria, and highly efficient myoglobin removal by high cut‐off membrane hemodiafiltration was demonstrated in patients.
Abstract
Acute renal failure is a major complication of rhabdomyolysis. New membranes for hemodialysis have been developed with a high cut-off pore size allowing efficient removal of myoglobin. We report on six patients treated by hemodiafiltration with a high cut-off membrane (HCO-HDF) for myoglobinuric acute renal failure. Rhabdomyolysis was caused by infection in two patients, by a statin in one patient and a non-traumatic crush in another, and followed cardiovascular surgery in two others. Ten HCO-HDF procedures were performed. A high cut-off hemofilter was used, with citrate anticoagulation and postdilutional fluid substitution of 2-3 L/h, dialysate flow 500 mL/min, and blood flow within 250-300 mL/min. Albumin losses were replaced by infusion of human albumin solution, and the mean myoglobin reduction ratio was 77% (range, 62-89%). An excellent clearance of 81 mL/min (range 42-131 mL/min) was achieved. Nearly 5 g of myoglobin was removed into the dialysate collected in one of the procedures. A high rebound in serum myoglobin, on average to 244% of the post-procedure myoglobin level, was observed. The four patients alive at the time remained anuric for a week. Slow myoglobin elimination with a mean half-time of 39 h (range 19-59 h) was observed in that period. Highly efficient myoglobin removal by high cut-off membrane hemodiafiltration was demonstrated in our patients. Rapid redistribution from the extracellular fluid and sustained myoglobin release were suggested by the high rebound observed. Elimination of myoglobin within the body was shown in our study to occur slowly during the period of anuria.

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Acute kidney injury due to rhabdomyolysis and renal replacement therapy: a critical review

TL;DR: Better knowledge of the pathophysiology of rhabdomyolysis and following AKI could widen treatment options, leading to preservation of the kidney: the decision to initiate renal replacement therapy in clinical practice should not be made on the basis of the myoglobin or creatine phosphokinase serum concentrations.
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Newly designed CRRT membranes for sepsis and SIRS--a pragmatic approach for bedside intensivists summarizing the more recent advances: a systematic structured review

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Molecular Mechanisms and Novel Therapeutic Approaches to Rhabdomyolysis-Induced Acute Kidney Injury

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Extended characterization of a new class of membranes for blood purification: the high cut-off membranes.

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References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Rhabdomyolysis and Acute Kidney Injury

TL;DR: This review summarizes current views on the pathogenesis of myoglobin-induced kidney injury as well as on its prevention and treatment.
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Bench-to-bedside review: Rhabdomyolysis – an overview for clinicians

TL;DR: The most sensitive laboratory finding of muscle injury is an elevated plasma creatine kinase level, and the management of patients with rhabdomyolysis includes early vigorous hydration.
Journal ArticleDOI

Factors Predictive of Acute Renal Failure in Rhabdomyolysis

TL;DR: In a historical cohort study, acute renal failure developed in 16.5% of 157 patients with rhabdomyolysis over a two-year study period and factors predictive of renal failure in this setting included the degree of serum creatine kinase, serum potassium, and serum phosphorus level elevation.
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Extracorporeal cardiopulmonary resuscitation in patients with inhospital cardiac arrest: A comparison with conventional cardiopulmonary resuscitation*

TL;DR: Extracorporeal cardiopulmonary resuscitation showed a survival benefit over conventional cardiopulent resuscitation in patients who received cardiopULmonary resuscitations for >10 mins after witnessed inhospital arrest, especially in cases with cardiac origins.
Journal ArticleDOI

Prevention of Acute Renal Failure in Traumatic Rhabdomyolysis

TL;DR: None of the patients suffered from extensive crush injuries with evidence of severe rhabdomyolysis and were treated by the induction of an alkaline solute diuresis immediately on their extrication from the debris, attribute this success to the unprecedented early institution of appropriate therapy.
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