Oliguria in ICU 

 Definition

Oliguria = Urine output < 0.5 mL/kg/hour

 Exam pearl: Oliguria may precede rise in creatinine by 24–48 hours.


 Why Oliguria Matters in ICU?

Oliguria is:

  • Earliest sign of renal hypoperfusion
  • Marker of shock
  • Predictor of mortality
  • Often reversible if detected early

In ICU, urine output is a real-time organ perfusion monitor.

Minimum Urine Output

  • Adults: 0.5 mL/kg/h
  • Children: 1 mL/kg/h
  • Neonates: 1–2 mL/kg/h


 Causes of Oliguria – Structured Approach

1️⃣ Pre-Renal (Most Common in ICU)

Due to renal perfusion.

Causes:

  • Hypovolemia (bleeding, diarrhea, burns)
  • Septic shock
  • Cardiogenic shock
  • Hepatorenal syndrome
  • Increased intra-abdominal pressure
  • Severe vasodilation

Pathophysiology:

Perfusion RAAS activation Na+ retention Concentrated urine

Lab Clues:

Parameter

Pre-Renal

Urine Na

< 20 mEq/L

FENa

< 1%

Urine Osm

> 500 mOsm/kg

BUN/Cr

> 20:1


2️⃣ Intrinsic Renal Causes

A. Acute Tubular Necrosis (ATN)

Most common intrinsic cause in ICU.

Causes:

  • Prolonged shock
  • Sepsis
  • Nephrotoxins (aminoglycosides, contrast)
  • Rhabdomyolysis

Parameter

ATN

Urine Na

> 40

FENa

> 2%

Urine Osm

< 350

Muddy brown casts

Present


B. Acute Interstitial Nephritis

  • Drug induced (NSAIDs, PPIs, antibiotics)
  • Eosinophilia
  • WBC casts


C. Glomerulonephritis

  • RBC casts
  • Proteinuria
  • Hypertension


3️⃣ Post-Renal (Always Rule Out first)

Mechanical obstruction.

Causes:

  • BPH
  • Clots
  • Stones
  • Foley catheter blockage
  • Neurogenic bladder

Immediate Step:

✔️ Check catheter patency
✔️ Bladder scan
✔️ Ultrasound KUB


 Stepwise ICU Approach to Oliguria

 STEP 1 – Confirm True Oliguria

  • Check catheter
  • Ensure no kinking
  • Flush catheter
  • Bladder scan

 Never treat before confirming patency.


 STEP 2 – Assess Hemodynamics

  • MAP (<65?)
  • Lactate
  • Capillary refill
  • IVC ultrasound
  • Passive leg raise


 STEP 3 – Volume Status Assessment

Clinical Signs:

  • JVP
  • Skin turgor
  • Edema
  • Lung crackles

Ultrasound:

  • IVC collapsibility
  • LV function
  • Venous congestion (VExUS score)


 STEP 4 – Labs

  • Serum creatinine
  • BUN
  • Electrolytes
  • ABG
  • Urine routine
  • Urine sodium
  • FENa
  • FEUrea (if diuretics used)


 Fluid Challenge – When & How?

Indicated if:

  • Suspected hypovolemia
  • No signs of overload

Protocol:

  • 250–500 mL balanced crystalloid
  • Reassess in 15–30 min

 Stop if:

  • No increase in UO
  • Rising CVP
  • Lung B lines


 Role of Diuretics in Oliguria

Important Exam Point:

Diuretics DO NOT treat AKI
✔️ Used only for volume overload

Furosemide stress test:

  • 1–1.5 mg/kg IV
  • <200 mL urine in 2 hrs predicts severe AKI


Indications for Renal Replacement Therapy (RRT)

Absolute Indications (AEIOU)

A

Acidosis (pH < 7.1)

E

Electrolytes (K+ >6.5)

I

Intoxication

O

Overload refractory

U

Uremia (encephalopathy)


 Biomarkers in Oliguria

Emerging markers:

  • NGAL
  • KIM-1
  • Cystatin C

Not routine yet in India.


 Important ICU Concepts

1️⃣ Oliguria ≠ Always AKI

Post-op oliguria:

  • Stress response
  • ADH surge
  • Pain-induced vasoconstriction


2️⃣ Transient Oliguria in Shock

Short episodes (<6 hrs) may not cause permanent damage.


3️⃣ Permissive Oliguria?

Seen in:

  • Fluid restriction strategy
  • ARDS patients
  • De-resuscitation phase

Must monitor:

  • Lactate
  • Creatinine
  • Electrolytes