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Mashup Score: 7How Low Can You Go With Dose of Continuous Kidney Replacement Therapy? Is That the Right Question to Ask? - 11 hour(s) ago
Less is more. Illustrations of the validity of this mantra in life and clinical medicine are not hard to find. Examples abound in the realm of critical care, such as with mechanical ventilation1 and transfusion targets.2 Perhaps the best example in critical care nephrology is in dose of continuous kidney replacement therapy (CKRT) for acute kidney injury (AKI). Early enthusiasm for the routine use of high-dose CKRT fueled by smaller single-center studies was halted by the publication in 2008 and 2009 of the VA/NIH Acute Renal Failure Trial Network (ATN) and the Randomized Evaluation of Normal vs Augmented Level (RENAL) Replacement Therapy studies.
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Mashup Score: 1The Relationship Between Neighborhood Disadvantage and Kidney Disease Progression in the Chronic Kidney Disease in Children (CKiD) Cohort - 17 hour(s) ago
To examine the relationship between neighborhood poverty and deprivation, chronic kidney disease (CKD) comorbidities, and disease progression in children with CKD.
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Mashup Score: 279Magnesium Disorders: Core Curriculum 2024 - 1 day(s) ago
Magnesium is ubiquitous in nature. It sits at the origin of the food chain, occupying the center of chlorophyl in plants. In humans, magnesium is critical to diverse molecular and catalytic processes, including energy transfer and maintenance of the genome. Despite its abundance, hypomagnesemia is common and often goes undiagnosed. This is in spite of epidemiologic data linking low magnesium with chronic diseases including diabetes mellitus. Clinically significant hypermagnesemia is encountered less frequently, but the presentation may be dramatic.
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Mashup Score: 0
Atrial fibrillation (AF) is the most common sustained arrythmia in the general population and an independent risk factor for death.1,2 AF occurs in up to 18% of patients with chronic kidney disease.3 The association of lower glomerular filtration rate (GFR) as a risk factor for incident AF is influenced by the method used to assess the estimated GFR (eGFR), which has implications for clinical practice.
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Mashup Score: 5Development and Validation of the Rating of CKD Knowledge Among Older Adults (Know-CKD) with Kidney Failure - 2 day(s) ago
Few older adults with kidney failure engage in shared decision-making (SDM) for kidney replacement therapy. Absence of instruments assessing SDM-relevant knowledge domains may contribute to this. We assessed the reliability and validity of a new instrument, the Rating of CKD Knowledge Older Adults (Know-CKD).
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Mashup Score: 1CaseHippo - 2 day(s) ago
One platform for interactive learning, engagement and collaborative knowledge
Source: cme.kidney.orgCategories: General Medicine News, NephrologyTweet
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Mashup Score: 5Association of Race and Ethnicity With High Longevity Deceased Donor Kidney Transplantation Under the US Kidney Allocation System - 3 day(s) ago
The US Kidney Allocation System (KAS) prioritizes candidates with ≤20% Estimated Post-Transplant Survival (EPTS) for high longevity kidneys defined by a ≤20% Kidney Donor Profile Index (KDPI). Use of EPTS in the KAS deprioritizes candidates with older age, diabetes, and longer dialysis durations. We assessed whether this use also disadvantages racial-ethnic minority candidates, who are younger but more likely to have diabetes and longer durations of kidney failure requiring dialysis.
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Mashup Score: 3The Importance of Hope for Patients With CKD - 3 day(s) ago
Receiving a diagnosis of chronic kidney disease (CKD) can be devasting to patients and their families. Patients with CKD and their care partners often face a lifetime of daily battles resulting from numerous symptoms and the disease’s complex pathophysiology. Many face progressive decline in kidney function and the possible need for kidney replacement therapy.
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Mashup Score: 1
Cognitive impairment is pervasive among kidney failure patients, reducing the chance of listing for kidney transplant (KT)1,2 and increasing time until KT for those who are listed.2 Yet, KT is the preferred form of kidney replacement therapy3 and has been shown to improve cognition.2,4,5 Cognitive impairment also has major implications on patients post-KT, impacting their health, graft survival, quality of life, and risk of mortality.2,5,6 While transplant institutes consider cognition when determining transplant eligibility, both patients and clinical experts argue that cognitive impairment alone should not be a contraindication for KT,7,8 particularly if certain cognitive domains can recover post-KT.
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Mashup Score: 17American Journal of Kidney Diseases - 3 day(s) ago
These articles highlight various types of disparities that impact patients with kidney diseases and call attention to more research that is necessary to achieve the goal of global health
Source: www.ajkd.orgCategories: General Medicine News, NephrologyTweet
Editorial by @NephCrit_NM, @luck_urine, and @javo_neyra: How Low Can You Go With Dose of Continuous Kidney Replacement Therapy? Is That the Right Question to Ask? https://t.co/VTETzUwamX (FREE) @UAB_NRTC