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Número 21 - 26 de Novembro de 2007
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207 -
Aldo José Peixoto Filho - Formado na Universidade Federal de Santa Catarina em 1992 no momento trabalha na Universidade de Yale, New Haven, Connecticut onde é o diretor da clínica de hipertensão. Tem publicado vários artigos sobre hipertensão com Sergio Santos (Hypertension in dialysis.Curr Opin Nephrol Hypertens. 2005 Mar;14(2):111-8.). Publicaram também no Atualidades em Nefrologia 9, capítulo 42: Controle da hipertensão arterial na hemodiálise. Selecionamos o artigo abaixo que mostra que a piora da função renal avaliada pela elevação da creatinina está relacionada com pior prognóstico dos pacientes. Também faz parte do Corpo Editorial do Jornal Brasileiro de Nefrologia.
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The prognostic importance of a small acute decrement in kidney function in hospitalized patients: a systematic review and meta-analysis.
Coca SG, Peixoto AJ, Garg AX, Krumholz HM, Parikh CR.
Am J Kidney Dis.
2007 Nov;50(5):712-20.
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Clinical Epidemiology Research Center, VA Connecticut Healthcare System, West Haven, USA.
BACKGROUND: Recently, acute kidney injury defined by small changes in serum creatinine levels was associated with worse short-term outcomes; however, the precision and variability of this association was not fully explored.
STUDY DESIGN: Systematic review and meta-analysis. SETTING & PARTICIPANTS: Hospitalized patients. SELECTION CRITERIA FOR STUDIES: MEDLINE and EMBASE databases were searched for observational cohort studies and randomized controlled trials published from 1990 through February 2007 that provided information for small changes in serum creatinine levels. PREDICTOR: Small acute changes in serum creatinine levels by absolute and percentage of changes in serum creatinine levels (lower threshold for increase in serum creatinine <0.5 mg/dL or <25%). OUTCOME: Short-term mortality (or=50%) had the greatest RR of death (RR, 6.9; 95% CI, 2.0 to 24.5). Results were similar when absolute changes in creatinine levels were considered and when pooled estimates of adjusted RR were used. LIMITATIONS: Individual patient data were unavailable; thus, only group-level data were pooled for meta-analysis. Results showed a significant degree of statistical heterogeneity that was only partially ameliorated by separating studies into subsets based on clinical setting. CONCLUSIONS: Short-term mortality and acute decreases in renal function are associated through a graded relationship such that even mild changes in serum creatinine levels portend worse outcome in a variety of clinical settings and patient-types.
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