Spectrum of community-acquired acute kidney injury in India : a retrospective study

Joint Authors

Kaul, Anupma
Sharma, Raj Kumar
Tripathi, Rama
Suresh, Krishnaswamy Jai
Bhatt, Sanjay
Prasad, Narayan

Source

Saudi Journal of Kidney Diseases and Transplantation

Issue

Vol. 23, Issue 3 (30 Jun. 2012), pp.619-628, 10 p.

Publisher

Saudi Center for Organ Transplantation

Publication Date

2012-06-30

Country of Publication

Saudi Arabia

No. of Pages

10

Main Subjects

Medicine

Topics

Abstract EN

An understanding of the epidemiology of community-acquired acute kidney injury (CAAKI) is necessary to establish its overall burden and plan potential preventive strategies.

This study was done in an urban tertiary care center in northern India with the aim to identify the etiology and outcomes as well as the factors associated with in-hospital mortality of CAAKI patients.

A five year retrospective analysis of all patients with CAAKI admitted to the Nephrology Department from January 2005 to December 2009 was done.

From 5499 consecutive patients, 240 patients (2.5 %), with a mean age of 39.8 ± 14.48 years, were diagnosed to have CAAKI as per our specified criteria.

The most common cause of CAAKI was medical (77.5 %), followed by obstetrical (14.2 %) and surgical (8.3 %) causes.

Among the medical causes, acute diarrheal disease was the most common cause (29 %), followed by malaria (18.8 %) and sepsis (13.9 %).

Sepsis had the highest in-hospital mortality (46 %).

Nephrolithiasis was the most common surgical cause.

Puerperal sepsis (44.1 %), pre-eclampsia (23.5%), intrauterine death (11.8 %), antenatal hemorrhage (11.8 %) and post-partal hemorrhage (8.8 %) were the obstetric causes of CAAKI.

Among 45 patients who underwent a renal biopsy, acute tubulointerstitial nephritis (33.3 %) was the most common, followed by acute tubular necrosis (22.2 %), glomerulonephritis (17.7 %), thrombotic microangiopathy (17.7 %) and acute cortical necrosis (8.89 %).

Of the 83 % patients who underwent dialytic therapy, 44.5 % underwent hemodialysis, 22.5 % continuous veno-venous hemodiafiltration, 21.6 % sustained low efficiency dialysis and 11.4 % peritoneal dialysis.

The overall in-hospital mortality among patients with CAAKI was 26.20 %.

CAAKI remains a common problem affecting nearly 2.5 % of patients attending nephrology units

American Psychological Association (APA)

Kaul, Anupma& Sharma, Raj Kumar& Tripathi, Rama& Suresh, Krishnaswamy Jai& Bhatt, Sanjay& Prasad, Narayan. 2012. Spectrum of community-acquired acute kidney injury in India : a retrospective study. Saudi Journal of Kidney Diseases and Transplantation،Vol. 23, no. 3, pp.619-628.
https://search.emarefa.net/detail/BIM-297562

Modern Language Association (MLA)

Kaul, Anupma…[et al.]. Spectrum of community-acquired acute kidney injury in India : a retrospective study. Saudi Journal of Kidney Diseases and Transplantation Vol. 23, no. 3 (Jun. 2012), pp.619-628.
https://search.emarefa.net/detail/BIM-297562

American Medical Association (AMA)

Kaul, Anupma& Sharma, Raj Kumar& Tripathi, Rama& Suresh, Krishnaswamy Jai& Bhatt, Sanjay& Prasad, Narayan. Spectrum of community-acquired acute kidney injury in India : a retrospective study. Saudi Journal of Kidney Diseases and Transplantation. 2012. Vol. 23, no. 3, pp.619-628.
https://search.emarefa.net/detail/BIM-297562

Data Type

Journal Articles

Language

English

Notes

Includes bibliographical references : p. 626-628

Record ID

BIM-297562