

262. CCC: Management of Cardiorenal Syndrome in the CICU with Dr. Nayan Arora and Dr. Elliott Miller
Feb 6, 2023
41:18
Cardiorenal Syndrome Defined
- Cardiorenal syndrome is the interaction between heart and kidney dysfunction where one organ's failure drives the other.
- Dr. Elliott Miller frames it into five types to conceptualize acute and chronic bidirectional effects.
Focus On Perfusion And Decongestion
- Dr. Nayan Arora simplifies management to two priorities: ensure renal perfusion and achieve decongestion.
- These goals guide interventions more than strict CRS subtype labels.
Double Diuretic Dose Quickly
- Start with an appropriate IV loop diuretic and reassess urine output within 1–2 hours.
- If urine output is <200 mL, redose promptly by doubling the loop dose rather than waiting.
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Introduction
00:00 • 2min
Cardio Renal Syndrome Podcast - Dr. Elliot Miller and Dr. Naehna Rara
01:32 • 2min
Dr. Aurora on the Cardiness Podcast
03:19 • 2min
Cardio Renal Syndrome and Acute Kidney Injury in the Critical Care Setting
05:06 • 2min
Cardio Renal Syndrome - What Are the Pathophysiologic Differences?
06:43 • 2min
Can You Quickly Define a.k.i?
08:17 • 2min
A Case Study of a 50 Year Old Man With Hypertension in Critical Care
10:13 • 2min
How Do I Decongest a Reese Patient?
11:48 • 2min
Kratinem Is Associated With Better Outcomes
13:47 • 3min
The Role of POCUS in Cardiology
16:23 • 2min
Dosage of Prothocnea
18:34 • 2min
ACE Inhibitors in Acute Kidney Injuries?
20:18 • 2min
Dioritic Resistance in the ICU?
22:16 • 4min
What Kind of Nephron Blockade Do You Think About?
26:40 • 2min
Diuretic Resistance in Heart Failure Patients
28:12 • 2min
Diuretic Therapy - Is There a Role for Dialysis?
30:28 • 3min
Is RAS Inhibition a Good Option for Hyperkilymic Patients?
33:13 • 2min
Acute Renal Failure - Cardiogenic Shot or Mechanical Support Devices?
35:01 • 2min
Is It Possible to Improve Renal Perfusion Pressure in a CCU?
37:07 • 2min
Cardionards Cardiac Critical Care - What Makes Your Heart Flutter?
39:20 • 2min
The Cardiorenal Syndrome is commonly encountered, and frequently misunderstood. Join the CardioNerds team as we discuss the complex interplay between the heart and kidneys with Dr. Elliott Miller (Assistant Professor of Medicine at Yale University School of Medicine and Associate Medical Director of the Cardiac Intensive Care Unit of Yale New Haven Hospital), and Dr. Nayan Arora (Clinical Assistant Professor of Medicine and Nephrologist at the University of Washington Medical Center). We are hosted by FIT lead Dr. Matthew Delfiner (Cardiology Fellow at Temple University), Cardiac Critical Care Series Co-Chairs Dr. Mark Belkin (AHFTC faculty at University of Chicago) and Dr. Karan Desai (Cardiologist at Johns Hopkins Hospital), and CardioNerds Co-Found Dr. Dan Ambinder. In this episode we discuss the definition and pathophysiology of the cardiorenal syndrome, explore strategies for initial diuresis and diuretic resistance, and management of the common heart failure medications in this setting. Show notes were developed by Dr. Matthew Delfiner. Audio editing by CardioNerds Academy Intern, student doctor Akiva Rosenzveig.
The CardioNerds Cardiac Critical Care Series is a multi-institutional collaboration made possible by contributions of stellar fellow leads and expert faculty from several programs, led by series co-chairs, Dr. Mark Belkin, Dr. Eunice Dugan, Dr. Karan Desai, and Dr. Yoav Karpenshif.
Pearls • Notes • References • Production Team
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Pearls and Quotes - Management of Cardiorenal Syndrome in the CICU
Cardiorenal syndrome (CRS) represents a range of clinical entities in which there is both heart and kidney dysfunction, and can be driven by one, or both, of the organs.
CRS is caused by reduced renal perfusion, elevated renal congestion, or a combination of the two. Treatment therefore focuses on increasing perfusion, by optimizing cardiac output and mean arterial pressure, and reducing congestion through diuresis.
Patients should be monitored for an adequate response to the initial diuretic dose within 2 hours of administration. If the response is inadequate, the loop diuretic dose should be doubled.
Diuretic resistance can be managed via sequential nephron blockade, most commonly with thiazide diuretics, but also with amiloride, high-dose spironolactone, or acetazolamide, as these target different regions of the nephron.
In cases of refractory diuretic resistance, hypertonic saline can be considered with the help of an experienced clinician.
Continuation or cessation of renin-angiotensin-aldosterone system (RAAS) inhibitors in the setting of CRS should be made on a case-by-case basis.
Show notes - Management of Cardiorenal Syndrome in the CICU
1. Cardiorenal syndrome (CRS) is a collection of signs/symptoms that indicate injury to both the heart and kidneys. Organ dysfunction in one can drive dysfunction in the other. Cardiorenal syndrome can be categorized as:
Type 1 - Acute heart failure causing acute kidney injury
Type 2 - Chronic heart failure causing chronic kidney injury
Type 3 - Acute kidney injury causing acute heart failure
Type 4 - Chronic kidney injury causing chronic heart failure
Type 5 - Co-development of heart and kidney injury by another systemic process.
These categories can be helpful for education, discussion, and research purposes, but they do not usually enter clinical practice on a regular basis since different categories of cardiorenal syndrome are not necessarily treated differently.
2. CRS is caused by either reduced renal perfusion, elevated renal congestion, or a combination of the two. When dealing with CRS, note that:
CRS can be caused by poor kidney perfusion,