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Both urine output and SCr are used as measures of an acute change in GFR. The theoretical advantage of urine output over SCr is the speed of the response. For example, if GFR were to suddenly fall to zero, a rise in SCr would not be detectable for several hours. On the other hand, urine output would be affected immediately. Less is known about the use of urine output for diagnosis and staging compared to SCr, since administrative databases usually do not capture urine output (and frequently it is not even measured, especially outside the ICU). However, studies using both SCr and urine output to diagnose AKI show increased incidence, suggesting that the use of SCr alone may miss many patients. The use of urine output criteria (criterion 3) will also reduce the number of cases where criterion 1 and criterion 2 are discordant (cases B,C,D, and F in Table 7), as many of these cases will be picked up by urine output criteria.
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