Brazilian Journal of Nephrology (Jul 2024)

Common arboviruses and the kidney: a review

  • Gabriel Rotsen Fortes Aguiar,
  • Geraldo Bezerra da Silva Júnior,
  • Janaína de Almeida Mota Ramalho,
  • Nattachai Srisawat,
  • Elizabeth de Francesco Daher

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1590/2175-8239-jbn-2023-0168en
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 46, no. 3

Abstract

Read online Read online

Abstract Arboviruses are endemic in several countries and represent a worrying public health problem. The most important of these diseases is dengue fever, whose numbers continue to rise and have reached millions of annual cases in Brazil since the last decade. Other arboviruses of public health concern are chikungunya and Zika, both of which have caused recent epidemics, and yellow fever, which has also caused epidemic outbreaks in our country. Like most infectious diseases, arboviruses have the potential to affect the kidneys through several mechanisms. These include the direct action of the viruses, systemic inflammation, hemorrhagic phenomena and other complications, in addition to the toxicity of the drugs used in treatment. In this review article, the epidemiological aspects of the main arboviruses in Brazil and other countries where these diseases are endemic, clinical aspects and the main laboratory changes found, including changes in renal function, are addressed. It also describes how arboviruses behave in kidney transplant patients. The pathophysiological mechanisms of kidney injury associated with arboviruses are described and finally the recommended treatment for each disease and recommendations for kidney support in this context are given.

Keywords