Diagnosing acute interstitial nephritis: considerations for clinicians
Abstract
Abstract Acute interstitial nephritis (AIN) is a common cause of acute kidney injury (AKI), particularly in hospitalized patients. It can be difficult for clinicians to differentiate between AIN and other common causes of AKI, most notably acute tubular necrosis (ATN) and prerenal injury. Clinicians often struggle with the clinical history and laboratory data available to definitively diagnose AIN. Sometimes they diagnose ATN or AIN based on these flawed data. Thus it is important that clinicians be familiar with the utility of commonly ordered tests used to aid in the diagnosis. Unfortunately, no single test performs particularly well on its own, and until a biomarker is rigorously shown to be diagnostic of AIN, most patients require a kidney biopsy to definitively establish the diagnosis and direct further management.
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