Acute Kidney Injury & Causes
Electrolyte Imbalances
Congenital & Structural Renal Disorders
Neonatal Hypoglycemia & Hyperglycemia
Newborn Hormone Disorders & Screening
100

This is the most common cause of acute kidney injury in neonates.

What is pre-renal (hypovolemia or poor perfusion)?

100

This electrolyte abnormality, often seen in renal impairment, can cause life-threatening cardiac arrhythmias.

What is hyperkalemia?

100

This renal malformation, detected on prenatal ultrasound, involves cysts replacing normal kidney tissue and usually affects only one kidney.

What is multicystic dysplastic kidney?

100

This hormone, produced by the pancreas, lowers blood sugar levels.

What is insulin?

100

This screening test is performed on all newborns to check for thyroid hormone deficiency.

What is newborn TSH (thyroid-stimulating hormone) screening?

200

Acute kidney injury can be diagnosed if this laboratory value rises above 1.0 mg/dL in a neonate.

What is serum creatinine?

200

Hyponatremia is diagnosed when the serum sodium falls below this value (in mmol/L or mEq/L).

What is 135 mmol/L (or 135 mEq/L)?

200

This condition is caused by backward flow of urine from bladder to kidneys and increases risk of infection.

What is vesicoureteral reflux?

200

Infants of diabetic mothers are at increased risk for this metabolic disturbance shortly after birth.

What is hypoglycemia?

200

This endocrine disorder causes salt-wasting crises and ambiguous genitalia, and is included in newborn screening.

What is congenital adrenal hyperplasia (CAH)?

300

This medication, commonly used in the NICU, can cause intrinsic renal injury (nephrotoxicity) in neonates.

What is gentamicin (or amphotericin, vancomycin)?

300

This electrolyte is often low in preterm infants and is essential for muscle contraction and bone development.

What is calcium (hypocalcemia)?

300

Absence of one or both kidneys seen on prenatal imaging is called this.

What is renal agenesis?

300

Persistent hypoglycemia unresponsive to glucose may be caused by this endocrine disorder.

What is congenital hyperinsulinism (or persistent hyperinsulinemic hypoglycemia)?

300

This hormone, produced by the adrenal cortex, helps regulate sodium and water balance in neonates.

What is aldosterone?

400

This post-renal cause of AKI is often diagnosed with ultrasound in term babies presenting with anuria.

What is urinary tract obstruction (or posterior urethral valves)?

400

This acid-base abnormality is typically seen in neonates with severe renal dysfunction.

What is metabolic acidosis?

400

This inherited disorder involves multiple cysts in both kidneys and may present with hypertension in neonates.

What is polycystic kidney disease?

400

This serious complication of neonatal hypoglycemia, especially if prolonged or recurrent, affects the brain and can lead to long-term neurological impairment.

What is seizure (or cerebral injury/neurological damage)?

400

Delayed closure of the anterior fontanelle and poor feeding in a neonate may indicate this endocrine disorder.

What is congenital hypothyroidism?

500

The most definitive treatment for severe neonatal AKI with fluid overload and metabolic derangements.

What is dialysis (peritoneal dialysis)?

500

This electrolyte must be corrected slowly to prevent central pontine myelinolysis.

What is sodium (hyponatremia)?

500

This is the most common cause of obstruction in male neonates leading to hydronephrosis.

What are posterior urethral valves?

500

Preterm neonates may develop this metabolic abnormality if total parenteral nutrition is excessive.

What is hyperglycemia?

500

This hormone, released from the pituitary, stimulates the adrenal glands to produce cortisol.

What is adrenocorticotropic hormone (ACTH)?