Clin Nephrol
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Comparative Study
Differences in community, hospital and intensive care unit-acquired acute kidney injury: observational study in a nephrology service of a developing country.
Acute kidney injury (AKI) complicates more than 7% of all in-hospital patients. The aim of this study is to investigate the differences in community, hospital and intensive care unit-acquired AKI in patients undergoing nephrology consultation in a tertiary hospital in a developing country. ⋯ AKI is a frequent and frequently fatal condition. Mortality was higher in community and ICU-acquired than hospital ward-acquired AKI.
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Acute kidney injury (AKI) is costly and is associated with increased mortality and morbidity. An understanding of the renal physiologic changes that occur during pregnancy is essential for proper evaluation, diagnosis, and management of AKI. As in the general population, AKI can occur from prerenal, intrinsic, and post-renal causes. ⋯ For each of these disorders, delivery of the fetus is the recommended therapeutic option, with additional therapies indicated for each specific disease entity. An understanding of the various etiologies of AKI in the pregnant patient is key to the appropriate clinical management, prevention of adverse maternal outcomes, and safe delivery of the fetus. In pregnant women with pre-existing kidney disease, the degree of renal dysfunction is the major determining factor of pregnancy outcomes, which may further be complicated by a prior history of hypertension.