
pmid: 13931952
pmc: PMC1515215
A review is presented of ten years' experience with the differential diagnosis of oliguria, utilizing the standard tests of renal function with the addition of the phenolsulfonphthalein excretion and urinary chloride measurements. The histories of 60 patients seen in consultation because of 24-hour urinary volume of less than 400 ml were studied in order to clarify the value of these tests. Particular attention was given to the postoperative "dilution state," the oliguria of which tends to mimic that of "acute tubular necrosis."In only 25 per cent of the 60 cases was "acute tubular necrosis" responsible for the oliguria. In the remaining 75 per cent of patients, oliguria was due either to the effects of simple dehydration without tubular damage, or to tubular dysfunction on a physiologic rather than an organic basis. Thus, three out of four patients with oliguria required aggressive and specific fluid-electrolyte therapy, often with the intensive use of potassium. One out of four required the opposite in therapy-controlled dehydration without added potassium and, on occasion, peritoneal or extracorporeal dialysis, in order to allow six to ten days for tubular repair.
Diagnosis, Differential, Dehydration, Renal Dialysis, Oliguria, Fluid Therapy, Humans, Kidney Tubular Necrosis, Acute, Water-Electrolyte Balance, Anuria
Diagnosis, Differential, Dehydration, Renal Dialysis, Oliguria, Fluid Therapy, Humans, Kidney Tubular Necrosis, Acute, Water-Electrolyte Balance, Anuria
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