1. CLINICO-LABORATORY CHARACTERISTICS, RISK FACTORS AND OUTCOME OF ACUTE KIDNEY INJURY
- Author
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Khushbakht Hussam, Arbab Nisar Ahmad, Najmush Shakireen, Shahzad Ahmad, Rabia Saeed, and Arshad Hussain
- Subjects
Creatinine ,medicine.medical_specialty ,business.industry ,Acute kidney injury ,medicine.disease ,Sepsis ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,chemistry ,Research centre ,Oliguria ,Internal medicine ,Hypovolemia ,General Health Professions ,Medicine ,General Pharmacology, Toxicology and Pharmaceutics ,medicine.symptom ,business ,Prospective cohort study ,General Dentistry ,Kidney disease - Abstract
OBJECTIVE: To determine the clinico-laboratory characteristics, risk factors and outcome related to acute kidney injury (AKI) in hospitalized patients. METHODS: This prospective study on 101 consecutive patients admitted to the Northwest General Hospital & Research Centre, Peshawar, Pakistan was carried out from January-March 2019. Patients were staged according to Kidney Disease Improving Global Outcomes (KDIGO) guidelines and outcomes were measured in terms of in-hospital mortality and change in KDIGO staging. RESULTS: Majority (n=57/101; 56.43%) were males. Mean age of patients was 57.90±16.93 years. Twenty-seven (26.73%) patients were in AKI stage-I, 29 (28.71%) in stage-2 and 45 (44.55%) were in stage-3. Hypertension (n=74/101; 73.27%) was the commonest co-morbid condition. Sepsis (n=39/101; 38.61%) and hypovolemia (n=21/101; 20.8%) were most common risk factors for AKI. There was complete recovery in 43 (42.57%) patients. In-hospital mortality was 6.9% (n=7/101) and 57.1% (n=4/7) of these patients had KDIGO stage-3. Serum creatinine levels declined in 22 (21.78%) cases, remained static in 23 (22.8%) and worsened in 06 (5.9%) cases. Male gender and presence of hypovolumia (p
- Published
- 2021