“…The authors also concurred with the previous investigators that the length of hospital stay was prolonged in renal insufficiency patients compared with patients with normal renal function (p = 0.0006) [3,7,9] . However, this study differed from others in that the incidence of complications in terms of gastrointestinal bleeding, reoperation for bleeding, respiratory failure, wound infection, perioperative myocardial infarction, stroke and 30-day mortality rates was comparable between the groups of patients with normal and abnormal renal functions, while several other studies showed an increased incidence of these complications among patients with renal insufficiency [3,9,10] . The authors attributed the improved outcomes in their study to the effective perioperative management by avoiding hypotension, fluid and potassium overloading, withdraw of angiotensin-converting enzyme inhibitors 24 h prior to the surgery and limiting CPB time.…”