2018
DOI: 10.31021/ijrdt.20181102
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Contrast-induced Acute Kidney Injury: A Contemporary Review

Abstract: Clinically significant Contrast-Induced Acute Kidney Injury (CIAKI) is a severe complication of interventional contrast-based procedures of all kinds. It involves high morbidity, mortality, social and financial losses. Acute renal damage after coronary angiography or percutaneous coronary intervention may occur in 1-2% of cases in the general population or 50+% of cases with high CIAKI exposure. It is essential to detect high-risk patients with renal damage as a major and frequent CIAKI predisposing factor. Th… Show more

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Cited by 1 publication
(3 citation statements)
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“…She fulfilled the criteria for contrast induced acute kidney injury (CI‐AKI), i.e. an increase in serum creatinine of 25% or 26.5μmol/L, a temporal relationship to the contrast agent (generally two to three days), and other causes of renal impairment excluded 1,2 . Risk factors for CI‐AKI 2,3 are: age; female gender; diabetes mellitus; hypertension; renal impairment; heart failure; myeloma; albuminuria; anaemia; hypovolaemia; nephrotoxic drugs; hypoalbuminaemia; higher glucose level; and higher LDL level.…”
Section: Results (Normal Range)mentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…She fulfilled the criteria for contrast induced acute kidney injury (CI‐AKI), i.e. an increase in serum creatinine of 25% or 26.5μmol/L, a temporal relationship to the contrast agent (generally two to three days), and other causes of renal impairment excluded 1,2 . Risk factors for CI‐AKI 2,3 are: age; female gender; diabetes mellitus; hypertension; renal impairment; heart failure; myeloma; albuminuria; anaemia; hypovolaemia; nephrotoxic drugs; hypoalbuminaemia; higher glucose level; and higher LDL level.…”
Section: Results (Normal Range)mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The patient had several risk factors: age, gender, diabetes, hypertension, renal impairment, hyperglycaemia, raised LDL level, and ACE inhibitor use. Characteristics of the contrast (intra-arterial, non-ionic, hyperosmolar or larger volumes) also increase the risk of CI-AKI, [1][2][3] but modern weight-based contrast dosing minimises this. Some risk factors can be modified, some cannot.…”
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confidence: 99%
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