Clinical journal of the American Society of Nephrology : CJASN
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Clin J Am Soc Nephrol · May 2007
Multicenter StudySeptic acute kidney injury in critically ill patients: clinical characteristics and outcomes.
Sepsis is the most common cause of acute kidney injury (AKI) in critical illness, but there is limited information on septic AKI. A prospective, observational study of critically ill patients with septic and nonseptic AKI was performed from September 2000 to December 2001 at 54 hospitals in 23 countries. A total of 1753 patients were enrolled. ⋯ There was a trend to lower serum creatinine (106 [73 to 158] versus 121 [88 to 184] mumol/L; P = 0.01) and RRT dependence (9 versus 14%; P = 0.052) at hospital discharge for septic AKI. Patients with septic AKI were sicker and had a higher burden of illness and greater abnormalities in acute physiology. Patients with septic AKI had an increased risk for death and longer duration of hospitalization yet showed trends toward greater renal recovery and independence from RRT.
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Clin J Am Soc Nephrol · May 2007
Multicenter StudyNorth East Italian Prospective Hospital Renal Outcome Survey on Acute Kidney Injury (NEiPHROS-AKI): targeting the problem with the RIFLE Criteria.
Acute kidney injury (AKI) in the intensive care unit (ICU) is associated with an enhanced mortality. The Acute Dialysis Quality Initiative group has proposed the RIFLE (Risk-Injury-Failure-Loss-ESRD) classification to standardize the approach to AKI. This study was performed to estimate the AKI incidence in ICU patients in northeastern Italy and describe clinical characteristics and outcomes of patients with AKI on the basis of their RIFLE class. ⋯ In this study, AKI incidence in the ICU was between 9 and 12%, with 3.3% of ICU patients requiring renal replacement therapy. Sepsis was a significant contributing factor. Overall mortality was between 30 and 42%, and was highest among those in RIFLE class F.
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Gastric bypass surgery is a common treatment for morbid obesity. The presence of comorbid conditions and drugs that are used to treat them can adversely influence kidney function. Risk factors and outcomes of acute kidney injury (AKI) after gastric bypass surgery are not well understood, however. ⋯ Duration of hospitalization was greater in patients with AKI versus no AKI (4.0 versus 2.7 d; P = 0.0003). Postoperative AKI is not infrequent after gastric bypass surgery. Certain comorbid conditions and their commonly prescribed treatments, ACE-I or ARB, are independently associated with increased risk for postoperative AKI.