Title: Recovery from Acute Renal Failure After 23 Days of Anuria
Abstract: PROLONGED SURVIVAL of human beings without significant renal function has been made possible by repeated treatments with the artificial kidney.<sup>1-7</sup>Recoveries have been recorded in patients with acute renal failure after 34 days of oliguria,<sup>3,5</sup>but recovery after prolonged periods of total urinary suppression has been distinctly rare and may indicate a prognostic distinction between oliguria (less than 400 ml a day) and anuria (less than 25 ml a day). We recently treated a patient who developed acute renal failure after abortion complicated by Clostridium welchii sepsis. The 23-day-long anuria seemed to indicate an extremely poor prognosis and may have been related to delay in eradicating a residual uterine abscess which was a site of Clostridial infection. Nevertheless, the patient finally entered a short oliguric and then a diuretic phase, and ultimately recovered. Although other cases of anuria lasting from 22½ to 30 days without dialytic therapy have
Publication Year: 1963
Publication Date: 1963-10-05
Language: en
Type: article
Indexed In: ['crossref', 'pubmed']
Access and Citation
Cited By Count: 5
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