Acute kidney injury (AKI) is a serious problem for patients in intensive care, especially those on life-support machines like ECMO (which helps the heart and lungs). More than half of these patients develop severe kidney problems that often require dialysis, and this greatly increases the risk of poor outcomes. Doctors try to prevent AKI by treating the underlying illness, avoiding kidney-harming drugs, and carefully managing fluids. But these methods are mostly supportive - they don't actively improve kidney function. Studies in surgical patients (especially heart and urology operations) show that giving amino acids before surgery can reduce the chance of developing AKI. A major clinical trial even found that this approach significantly lowered AKI rates in heart surgery patients. Amino acids (the building blocks of protein) seem to boost kidney performance. When given through a drip or feeding tube, they increase blood flow to the kidneys and may "wake up" unused kidney capacity - a concept called "functional renal reserve." It's not yet clear whether amino acids help critically ill patients on ECMO. More research is needed to see if this promising strategy can improve kidney function and outcomes in the sickest patients.
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The number of patients who received AA infusion within 24 hours of being randomised in the trial after ECMO initiation.
Timeframe: 24 Hours from randomisation