# Acute Kidney Injury in Children with Polyuria: A Systematic Review

**Authors:** Giulio Rivetti, Mariantonia Braile, Anna Di Sessa, Paola Tirelli, Stefano Guarino, Emanuele Miraglia del Giudice, Isabella Guzzo, Pierluigi Marzuillo

PMC · DOI: 10.3390/jcm15010351 · Journal of Clinical Medicine · 2026-01-02

## TL;DR

This study reviews cases where children with acute kidney injury also experience polyuria, highlighting connections to diabetes, Bartter syndrome, and neuroblastoma.

## Contribution

The paper identifies AKI cases in children with polyuria, emphasizing metabolic and renal conditions as potential causes.

## Key findings

- 45% of 20 patients with polyuria developed AKI, with stages 2 or 3 observed in some cases.
- Polyuria in AKI was linked to diabetic ketoacidosis, new-onset type 1 diabetes, Bartter syndrome, and neuroblastoma.
- AKI prevalence data was missing for 12 patients with diabetic ketoacidosis.

## Abstract

Objectives: Children may present with acute kidney injury (AKI) and polyuria under certain conditions which can complicate diagnosis and management. This review seeks to synthesize AKI presentations in children with polyuria. Methods: Publications for this systematic review were searched using Embase, PubMed, and Scopus. Methodological quality assessment of the included study and case reports was performed. Results: From the selected studies, we obtained data on 32 patients with a mean age of 11.02 ± 2.82 years, including 13 males and 19 females. Among them, 26 presented with polyuria: 19 with diabetic ketoacidosis (DKA), 5 with new-onset type 1 diabetes mellitus (T1DM) without DKA, 1 with Bartter syndrome, and 1 with neuroblastoma. In 12 patients with DKA, data to calculate AKI prevalence were not available. Among the remaining 20 patients (all with polyuria), 9 (45%) developed AKI. AKI stage 3 was observed in 4 patients and stage 2 in 1 patient. For the remaining 5 patients with AKI, no information about the AKI stage was available. Conclusions: AKI can present with polyuria as part of its pathophysiological mechanism. A relationship between polyuria and AKI (with KDIGO stage ≥ 2) was found in metabolic disorders (DKA), nephrological diseases (Bartter syndrome), and oncological conditions (neuroblastoma).

## Linked entities

- **Diseases:** acute kidney injury (MONDO:0002492), diabetic ketoacidosis (MONDO:0012819), type 1 diabetes mellitus (MONDO:0005147), Bartter syndrome (MONDO:0015231), neuroblastoma (MONDO:0005072)

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** Polyuria (MESH:D011141), T1DM (MESH:D003922), metabolic disorders (MESH:D008659), Bartter syndrome (MESH:D001477), DKA (MESH:D016883), AKI (MESH:D058186), nephrological diseases (MESH:D004194), oncological (MESH:D000072716), neuroblastoma (MESH:D009447)
- **Species:** Homo sapiens (human, species) [taxon 9606]

## Full text

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## Figures

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## References

38 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12786687/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12786687