医学
肾功能
肌酐
急性肾损伤
内科学
肾脏疾病
透析
横纹肌溶解症
肌酸激酶
胃肠病学
泌尿科
甲状腺功能
内分泌学
甲状腺
作者
Naga Sai Sri Harsha Narilla,Spoorthi Ramineni,Sirisha Yarlagadda,Varun Kumar Bandi
出处
期刊:Clinical Nephrology
[Dustri-Verlag Dr. Karl Feistle]
日期:2023-04-01
卷期号:99 (4): 187-190
摘要
Hypothyroidism is an important reversible cause of acute kidney injury (AKI), acting through various mechanisms, including rhabdomyolysis, metabolic, and systemic effects.We screened all patients presenting with AKI for hypothyroidism, and suspected hypothyroid-induced AKI patients were followed up.The prevalence of hypothyroidism-induced AKI was 1.9%, with the commonest presenting symptom being pedal edema. The mean thyroid-stimulating hormone levels (mIU/L) and estimated glomerular filtration rate (eGFR) (mL/min/1.73m2) were 123.5 ± 22.32 and 29.4 ± 20.54, respectively, at presentation, and 3.28 ± 4.91 and 71.39 ± 40.28, respectively, at the end of 8 weeks. Creatine Phosphokinase (CPK) was significantly elevated in only 1 patient. One patient became dialysis-dependent (11.1%), 2 had partial renal recovery (22.2%), and 6 patients had complete renal recovery (66.7%). There was a significant positive correlation between renal recovery and CPK at admission, eGFR at admission, and hemoglobin, and a significant negative correlation with the presence of chronic kidney disease, urea at admission, and creatinine at admission.Thyroid hormones exert various effects on the kidney, and their imbalance can significantly alter renal function. Elevated creatinine with normal GFR can occur due to increased release of creatinine. Our study is the first published series of hypothyroid-associated AKI with follow-up data. .
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