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Oliguria in the setting of critically ill patients is usually treated by admini-stering fluids and furosemide [1]. Invasive therapies, namely renal replacement therapies (RRT), are reserved for patients in whom less invasive measures have failed [2], especially if acute pulmonary oedema complicates the clinical picture [1]. Intravascular volume depletion elicits a kidney response consisting of augmented sodium retention at Henle's loop and water at the collecting tubules. In such conditions, loop diuretics such as furosemide would be less