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      Congestive renal failure: the pathophysiology and treatment of renal venous hypertension.

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      Journal of cardiac failure

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          Abstract

          Longstanding experimental evidence supports the role of renal venous hypertension in causing kidney dysfunction and "congestive renal failure." A focus has been heart failure, in which the cardiorenal syndrome may partly be due to high venous pressure, rather than traditional mechanisms involving low cardiac output. Analogous diseases are intra-abdominal hypertension and renal vein thrombosis. Proposed pathophysiologic mechanisms include reduced transglomerular pressure, elevated renal interstitial pressure, myogenic and neural reflexes, baroreceptor stimulation, activation of sympathetic nervous and renin angiotensin aldosterone systems, and enhanced proinflammatory pathways. Most clinical trials have addressed the underlying condition rather than venous hypertension per se. Interpreting the effects of therapeutic interventions on renal venous congestion are therefore problematic because of such confounders as changes in left ventricular function, cardiac output, and blood pressure. Nevertheless, there is preliminary evidence from small studies of intense medical therapy or extracorporeal ultrafiltration for heart failure that there can be changes to central venous pressure that correlate inversely with renal function, independently from the cardiac index. Larger more rigorous trials are needed to definitively establish under what circumstances conventional pharmacologic or ultrafiltration goals might best be directed toward central venous pressures rather than left ventricular or cardiac output parameters.

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          Author and article information

          Journal
          J. Card. Fail.
          Journal of cardiac failure
          1532-8414
          1071-9164
          Dec 2012
          : 18
          : 12
          Affiliations
          [1 ] Division of Nephrology, Hypertension and Renal Transplantation, University of Florida, Gainesville, Florida 32610-0224, USA. Rossea@medicine.ufl.edu
          Article
          S1071-9164(12)01287-0
          10.1016/j.cardfail.2012.10.010
          23207082
          a886e168-a6f2-4625-a941-f95aa8889234
          Copyright © 2012 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
          History

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