acute renal insufficiency the same as acute renal failure?

Nursing Students Student Assist

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Hi everyone,

I'm doing a research project on acute renal insufficiency, but have only come across information on acute renal failure. Both terms seem to be used interchangeably, and I'm really confused. I'm not sure where I can find solid, reliable information on ARI. I have textbooks, and that's ok, but not so sure if I should be reading up on renal failure or not.

Help please :idea:

Don't have references but look at dehydration. This is what I've seen causing elevated cr and bun. With dehydration it clears up once hydrated.

Thank you Rita for your input :D

Does this mean that Acute Renal Insufficiency and Renal Failure are the same thing?

As you can see from age, many years since school. My judgement is they are not they same though related. In dehydration bun and cr rise but return to normal with hydration. There was recent article in a nursing journal regarding acute renal injury suggesting that post op bp drop with drop in output could, down the road , result in renal failure and need for dialysis. In renal failure dialysis is needed to correct.

Specializes in Medsurg/ICU, Mental Health, Home Health.
In renal failure dialysis is needed to correct.

In end-stage renal disease, this is true. However, a lot of times dialysis is NOT needed for Acute Renal Failure. Apparently, the appropriate term isn't even Acute Renal Failure...it's Acute Kidney Injury.

There is the prerenal cause, usually dehydration, that corrects with fluids. It's because the "failure" or "injury" occurs prior to kidney involvement. This is corrected with fluids, for example.

Intrarenal failure is because of something WITHIN the kidney (glomerulonephritis, for example). And Post Renal occurs AFTER the kidney has filtered, so there is some sort of obstruction. Getting rid of this obstruction returns lab values to normal.

As for Acute Renal Insufficiency, I have never heard this term. My guess is that one of the above is occurring but lab values and/or urine production hasn't QUITE reached renal failure levels?

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