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Advisor(s)
Abstract(s)
Background: Acute kidney injury in the pandemic swine origin influenza A virus (H1N1) infection has been reported as coursing with severe illness, although renal pathogenic mechanisms and histologic
features are still being characterised.
Case Report: We present two patients admitted
with H1N1 pneumonia, sepsis, acute respiratory distress syndrome and need for invasive mechanical ventilation who developed acute kidney injury and became dialysis-dependent. In both cases a kidney
biopsy was performed to establish a definitive diagnosis.
Severe acute tubular necrosis was identified,
with no further abnormalities.
Conclusion: This report seems to confirm that the acute kidney injury in H1N1 infection is focused on the tubular cells. Our cases corroborate the renal
histopathologic findings of other studies, highlighting the central role of the tubular cell. We bring new evidence of the histopathology of AKI in H1N1 infection
since our data were collected in living patients and not via post-mortem studies.
Description
Keywords
Lesão Renal Aguda Vírus da Gripe A, Subtipo H1N1 Necrose Tubular Aguda
Citation
Port J Nephrol Hypert 2011; 25 (4): 291-294