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New treatments of hepatorenal syndrome.
Semin Liver Dis. 2006 Aug; 26(3):254-64.SL

Abstract

Hepatorenal syndrome (HRS) is a common complication of advanced cirrhosis, characterized by renal failure and major abnormalities in the systemic circulatory function. Renal failure is caused by intense vasoconstriction of the renal circulation. The syndrome is probably the final consequence of an extreme underfilling of the arterial circulation, secondary to vasodilatation in the splanchninc vascular bed and a decrease in cardiac output due to central hypovolemia. The diagnosis of HRS is based on the exclusion of other causes of renal failure. The survival of patients with HRS is very short, particularly when there is rapidly progressive renal failure (type-1 HRS). Liver transplantation is the best therapeutic option but its applicability is low. During the past few years effective treatment for HRS, such as vasoconstrictor drugs (vasopressin analogues, proportional variant-adrenergic agonists) associated with intravenous albumin infusion and transjugular intrahepatic portosystemic shunts (TIPS), have been introduced. They improve circulatory function, normalize serum creatinine, and may improve survival. Sequential treatment with vasoconstrictors plus albumin and TIPS is an attractive therapeutic possibility. Plasma volume expansion with albumin at infection diagnosis in patients with spontaneous bacterial peritonitis and the administration of pentoxiphilline in patients with severe alcoholic hepatitis significantly reduce the development of type-1 HRS.

Authors+Show Affiliations

Liver Unit, Institut of Digestive and Metabolic Diseases, Hospital Clinic, University of Barcelona, Spain.No affiliation info availableNo affiliation info available

Pub Type(s)

Journal Article
Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't
Review

Language

eng

PubMed ID

16850375

Citation

Arroyo, Vicente, et al. "New Treatments of Hepatorenal Syndrome." Seminars in Liver Disease, vol. 26, no. 3, 2006, pp. 254-64.
Arroyo V, Terra C, Ginès P. New treatments of hepatorenal syndrome. Semin Liver Dis. 2006;26(3):254-64.
Arroyo, V., Terra, C., & Ginès, P. (2006). New treatments of hepatorenal syndrome. Seminars in Liver Disease, 26(3), 254-64.
Arroyo V, Terra C, Ginès P. New Treatments of Hepatorenal Syndrome. Semin Liver Dis. 2006;26(3):254-64. PubMed PMID: 16850375.
* Article titles in AMA citation format should be in sentence-case
TY - JOUR T1 - New treatments of hepatorenal syndrome. AU - Arroyo,Vicente, AU - Terra,Carlos, AU - Ginès,Pere, PY - 2006/7/20/pubmed PY - 2006/12/21/medline PY - 2006/7/20/entrez SP - 254 EP - 64 JF - Seminars in liver disease JO - Semin Liver Dis VL - 26 IS - 3 N2 - Hepatorenal syndrome (HRS) is a common complication of advanced cirrhosis, characterized by renal failure and major abnormalities in the systemic circulatory function. Renal failure is caused by intense vasoconstriction of the renal circulation. The syndrome is probably the final consequence of an extreme underfilling of the arterial circulation, secondary to vasodilatation in the splanchninc vascular bed and a decrease in cardiac output due to central hypovolemia. The diagnosis of HRS is based on the exclusion of other causes of renal failure. The survival of patients with HRS is very short, particularly when there is rapidly progressive renal failure (type-1 HRS). Liver transplantation is the best therapeutic option but its applicability is low. During the past few years effective treatment for HRS, such as vasoconstrictor drugs (vasopressin analogues, proportional variant-adrenergic agonists) associated with intravenous albumin infusion and transjugular intrahepatic portosystemic shunts (TIPS), have been introduced. They improve circulatory function, normalize serum creatinine, and may improve survival. Sequential treatment with vasoconstrictors plus albumin and TIPS is an attractive therapeutic possibility. Plasma volume expansion with albumin at infection diagnosis in patients with spontaneous bacterial peritonitis and the administration of pentoxiphilline in patients with severe alcoholic hepatitis significantly reduce the development of type-1 HRS. SN - 0272-8087 UR - https://www.unboundmedicine.com/medline/citation/16850375/New_treatments_of_hepatorenal_syndrome_ L2 - http://www.thieme-connect.com/DOI/DOI?10.1055/s-2006-947293 DB - PRIME DP - Unbound Medicine ER -