Acute Tubular Necrosis (ATN)

Although in clinical practice the term acute tubular necrosis (ATN) is often used synonymously with AKI, these terms should not be used interchangeably. Although ATN is the most common form of intrinsic AKI, particularly in critically ill patients, it represents only one of multiple causes of AKI - Prof. Charles RP George

Acute Tubular Necrosis (ATN)
Acute Tubular Necrosis (ATN)

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The Rise and Fall of Acute Tubular Necrosis – An exercise in medical semiotics

Sudden cessation of renal function often has catastrophic clinical consequences. It must always have occurred since typical precipitants of it have existed for millennia. Even though physicians have observed patients and documented their findings over all those years a succinct description of the condition failed to impact broadly upon medical consciousness until the mid-20th century. It then took the mass destruction that accompanied ruthless bombing of civilians during World War II, together with astute conceptualisation by a few physicians, to create a composite awareness within the medical community that such a phenomenon does indeed often occur under appropriate circumstances, and to…

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Resources

 The Rise and Fall of Acute Tubular Necrosis – An exercise in medical semiotics

The pathway of knowledge about this condition that led from ancient times through to the 1940s was tortuous, at least in part because of the disorganised terminology that clinicians used to describe it.

Toronto Notes

Pigmented (or Heme) Granular Casts

DoveMed

The prognosis of Acute Tubular Necrosis depends upon the severity at presentation and initiation of appropriate therapy. Nevertheless, unlike other acute kidney injuries or conditions, Acute Tubular Necrosis is usually reversible with appropriate treatment, if no major associated diseases are present.

MedBullets

A 44-year-old woman with no significant past medical history presents to the emergency room with toxic ingestion of ethylene glycol. She answers appropriately but requires frequent redirection. Physical exam reveals bilateral flank pain. Her serum creatinine, previously normal, is now increased at 3 mg/dL. Urinalysis with sediment analysis reveals granular casts and significant hematuria. Fomepizole is given.

WikiDoc

Acute tubular necrosis (ATN) defines a pathologic process rather than a clinical syndrome in which varying degrees of renal tubular injury occur. Clinically, ATN manifests as acute kidney injury although the terms have previously been used interchangeably. ATN is the most common cause of overt AKI.

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