SUMMARYBackground: Acute kidney injury is a frequent problem among many critically ill patients, commonly in the context of multiple organ failure and decreased renal perfusion. Its presence conveys a poor prognosis. Currently, effective therapeutic interventions are limited and dopaminergic agonists have been suggested as an option to prevent further damage. Methods: We performed a randomized, double-blinded, prospective crossover study in 17 patients admitted to our trauma intensive care unit (ICU) with evidence of impaired renal function. Patients were randomized to a 24-h intravenous infusion of low-dose fenoldopam or placebo. When the infusion of fenoldopam or placebo was completed, patients underwent a 24-h "washout" period in which no study intervention was performed. This sequence was repeated in each patient with the opposite agent, so each patient served as his own control. Four-hour creatinine collections were taken during the last 4 h of each infusion and washout periods to determine creatinine clearance changes during and after the administration of the study drug. Results: The creatinine clearance was higher with fenoldopam infusion than with placebo infusion (P = 0.045). The FENa was not significantly different. Conclusions: Our study showed that low-dose Fenoldopam increases creatinine clearance in the critically ill with renal insufficiency. Fenoldopam may be a useful drug in ICU patients with early renal dysfunction.
Retraction: The following article from Dialysis & Transplantation, 'Fenoldopam in critically ill patients with early renal dysfunction: A crossover study' by Gian Paparcuri, Miguel Cobas, Maria De La Pena, Erik Barquist and Albert Varon, published online on March 8, 2011 in Wiley Online Library (wileyonlinelibrary.com), and in Volume 40, pp. 164‐167, has been retracted through agreement between the first author, the Editors, Andrew Z. Fenves and Larry B. Melton, and Wiley Periodicals, Inc. The retraction has been agreed due to duplicate publication in another journal.
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