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Hyperlactataemia with acute kidney injury following community assault: cause or effect?


David Lee Skinner
Carolyn Lewis
Kim de Vasconcellos
John Bruce
3 Grant Laing
Damian Clarke
Damian Clarke
David Muckart

Abstract

Background: Crush injury is a common presenting clinical problem in South African trauma patients, causing acute kidney injury (AKI). It has been  theorised previously that the AKI was not due to an anaerobic phenomenon. A previous local study noted the presence of a mild hyperlactataemia among  patients with crush syndrome, but the significance and causes of this was not fully explored. This study aimed to examine the incidence of  hyperlactataemia in patients with crush syndrome presenting to a busy emergency department (ED) in rural South Africa.


Methods: The study was conducted at Edendale Hospital in KwaZulu-Natal province in South Africa from 1 June 2016 to 31 December 2017. All patients  from the ED who had sustained a crush injury secondary to a mob assault were included in the study. Patients with GCS on arrival of < 13 or polytrauma  were excluded from analysis. The primary outcome of interest was the presence of hyperlactataemia (> 2.0mmol/L) on presentation. The Kidney Disease  Improving Global Outcomes (KDIGO) criteria were used to diagnose and stage AKI as a secondary outcome.


Results: A total of 84 patients were eligible for analysis. Sixty-nine (82%) patients presented with hyperlactataemia. The median serum lactate was  4.9mmol/L (IQR 2.3–7.2mmol/L). Fifteen (18%) patients were diagnosed with AKI on presentation according to serum creatinine. Ten patients were  diagnosed as Stage 1, three were Stage 2 and two Stage 3 AKI respectively. There was no difference in the incidence of AKI in patients with or without  hyperlactataemia (p = 0.428). Time from injury to presentation was a median 365 minutes (IQR 180–750 minutes). Six (7%) patients were admitted to high  care unit and nine (11%) were admitted to the intensive care unit (ICU). No patients died within 48 hours of admission. Two patients received renal  replacement therapy during the first 48 hours of admission to hospital.


Conclusion: Hyperlactataemia is a common feature of patients presenting to the ED following crush syndrome secondary to beatings received during  interpersonal violence. The origin of this hyperlactataemia is currently unknown. Further research needs to be conducted into the origin of the  hyperlactataemia and its clinical significance. In this cohort, the utilisation of RRT was low but the incidence of AKI was high and developed rapidly  following the injury. The utilisation of RRT also needs to be further studied in larger patient populations in South Africa to make local clinical  recommendations for use. 


Journal Identifiers


eISSN: 2078-5151
print ISSN: 0038-2361