Oliguria
First Things First (assess and treat for the following)
- Always attend to the ABCs as the first priority.    - Is the airway patent?
- Is there evidence of respiratory distress?
- Hemodynamic status, hypotension, tachycardia, evidence of shock?
 
- Does the patient have any electrolyte abnormalities that require immediate attention?  - K < 2.5 or > 6; Na < 120 or > 150; ECG abnormalities
- Severe metabolic acidosis (pH < 7.2)
- Assess volume status: hypervolemic, euvolemic or hypovolemic
 
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Last updated: May 10, 2010
Citation
"Oliguria." Pocket ICU Management, PocketMedicine.com, Inc, 2010. Anesthesia Central, anesth.unboundmedicine.com/anesthesia/view/Pocket-ICU-Management/534062/all/Oliguria. 
Oliguria. Pocket ICU Management. PocketMedicine.com, Inc; 2010. https://anesth.unboundmedicine.com/anesthesia/view/Pocket-ICU-Management/534062/all/Oliguria. Accessed October 31, 2025.
Oliguria. (2010). In Pocket ICU Management. PocketMedicine.com, Inc. https://anesth.unboundmedicine.com/anesthesia/view/Pocket-ICU-Management/534062/all/Oliguria
Oliguria [Internet]. In: Pocket ICU Management. PocketMedicine.com, Inc; 2010. [cited 2025 October 31]. Available from: https://anesth.unboundmedicine.com/anesthesia/view/Pocket-ICU-Management/534062/all/Oliguria.
* Article titles in AMA citation format should be in sentence-case
TY  -  ELEC
T1  -  Oliguria
ID  -  534062
Y1  -  2010/05/10/
BT  -  Pocket ICU Management
UR  -  https://anesth.unboundmedicine.com/anesthesia/view/Pocket-ICU-Management/534062/all/Oliguria
PB  -  PocketMedicine.com, Inc
DB  -  Anesthesia Central
DP  -  Unbound Medicine
ER  -  

 Pocket ICU Management
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