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1 rities in metformin prescription in moderate kidney dysfunction.
2 IgR was recently shown to be associated with kidney dysfunction.
3 F508 homozygous patients do not present with kidney dysfunction.
4 ions in CFTR result in little or no apparent kidney dysfunction.
5 n E (apoE) might independently contribute to kidney dysfunction.
6 tein expression to resolve ageing-associated kidney dysfunction.
7 zed by fluid retention, pulmonary edema, and kidney dysfunction.
8 ) were the primary outcomes as indicators of kidney dysfunction.
9 eatinine ratio indicated potential liver and kidney dysfunction.
10 nts who survived, 262 (43.6%) had persistent kidney dysfunction.
11 n studied in a large sample with and without kidney dysfunction.
12 al procedures at risk for AKI and persistent kidney dysfunction.
13 reate a self-perpetuating cycle of heart and kidney dysfunction.
14 so most research has focused on remedies for kidney dysfunction.
15 ch therapies would not be contraindicated by kidney dysfunction.
16 s, few validated biomarkers exist to predict kidney dysfunction.
17 inflammation, and cyst formation, leading to kidney dysfunction.
18 ic knockout of GRK4 decreased injury-induced kidney dysfunction.
19 transplantation-associated post-IRI chronic kidney dysfunction.
20 ecedes nephron loss, fibrosis, and long-term kidney dysfunction.
21 phils from healthy subjects or patients with kidney dysfunction.
22 we characterize a mechanism of tumor-induced kidney dysfunction.
23 on, DNA damage response, tubular damage, and kidney dysfunction.
24 mice also show symptoms of more generalized kidney dysfunction.
25 n critically ill patients is associated with kidney dysfunction.
26 embolism, serious infections and progressive kidney dysfunction.
27 notypes associated with liver, skeletal, and kidney dysfunction.
28 n injury (IRI) can lead to acute and chronic kidney dysfunction.
29 uld slow the progression to higher stages of kidney dysfunction.
30 y be at increased risk for treatment-related kidney dysfunction.
31 fset by greater neurohormonal activation and kidney dysfunction.
32 oral anticoagulants (DOACs) in patients with kidney dysfunction.
33 rd-dose DOACs over warfarin in patients with kidney dysfunction.
34 in patients hospitalized for HF by degree of kidney dysfunction.
35 d ejection fraction experiencing significant kidney dysfunction.
36 ction in glomerular hyperfiltration-mediated kidney dysfunction.
37 oth acute kidney injury (AKI) and persistent kidney dysfunction.
38 litus or hypertension and varying degrees of kidney dysfunction.
39 hocytes in the skin and blood, and liver and kidney dysfunction.
40 rdial edema, phenotypes typically induced by kidney dysfunction.
41 200 mg/m(2), with dose reduction for severe kidney dysfunction.
42 of increased serum retinol in the context of kidney dysfunction.
43 o identify inflammatory processes related to kidney dysfunction.
44 atterning and neonatal death consistent with kidney dysfunction.
45 A miRNA panel was associated with human kidney dysfunction.
46 and venous thromboembolism in patients with kidney dysfunction.
47 and 85 (9.0%) had both retinopathy and early kidney dysfunction.
48 deposition but neither mesangial injury nor kidney dysfunction.
49 mputation, was 14.1% (n = 118) in those with kidney dysfunction, 13.5% (n = 67) in those with heart f
51 ated, 5%) showing the highest proportions of kidney dysfunction (40%) and peripheral artery disease (
52 oporosis, 9.6% [95% CI, 8.0%-11.5%]), renal (kidney dysfunction, 5.0% [95% CI, 4.0%-6.3%]), and hemat
53 ut retain NK cells, showed similar levels of kidney dysfunction 65 days after transplantation (creati
54 107 [31.9%]; OR, 1.54 [95% CI, 1.10-2.16]), kidney dysfunction (87 [34.1%] vs 80 [23.9%]; OR, 1.65 [
55 fied renal failure and reported disorders of kidney dysfunction after adjustment for biological donor
57 ccinylacetone which induces severe liver and kidney dysfunction along with mutagenic changes and hepa
58 sent in treated HIV infection contributes to kidney dysfunction among HIV-infected men receiving high
60 erved higher incidence and relative rate for kidney dysfunction among treated patients, compared with
61 optosis in acute folate nephropathy and less kidney dysfunction and a lower mortality rate in cisplat
63 to cryptic antigens as novel accelerators of kidney dysfunction and acute or chronic allograft reject
64 iency of either PD-1 ligand also exacerbated kidney dysfunction and acute tubular necrosis after subt
65 ll overexpression of SMN reduced I/R-induced kidney dysfunction and attenuated AKI-to-CKD transition,
66 tients with ESRD, cancer risk is affected by kidney dysfunction and by immunosuppression after transp
69 inflammatory markers while decreasing early kidney dysfunction and clinical posttransplant pancreati
70 ular difficulty grasping the significance of kidney dysfunction and connecting this to the symptoms t
71 ers have modified our understanding of acute kidney dysfunction and damage, and their association wit
73 s a microvascular complication that leads to kidney dysfunction and ESRD, but the underlying mechanis
81 e data indicate strong short-term effects of kidney dysfunction and immunosuppression on cancer incid
85 o offer a new pathway to noninvasively image kidney dysfunction and local injuries at the anatomical
86 Little is known about the association of kidney dysfunction and outcome in acute severe hypertens
87 ice treated with IL-33 developed more severe kidney dysfunction and proteinuria, glomerular sclerosis
89 endent association has been observed between kidney dysfunction and the risk of hearing loss, the und
90 ow that Kim-1-deficient mice had more severe kidney dysfunction and tissue damage after bilateral ren
92 heir TCR repertoire, have significantly less kidney dysfunction and tubular injury after renal IRI co
93 need to understand how brain death leads to kidney dysfunction and, hence, how this can be prevented
94 enal infiltration, (c) reduced the extent of kidney dysfunction, and (d) attenuated proximal tubule d
97 risk stratification, identification of early kidney dysfunction, and development of interventions to
98 ansplantation, which attenuated proteinuria, kidney dysfunction, and fibrosis compared with control s
100 KI is characterized by abrupt and reversible kidney dysfunction, and incomplete recovery leads to chr
101 y vasculopathy, lymphoproliferative disease, kidney dysfunction, and infection, each as an ordinal sc
103 became hypertensive, a known risk factor for kidney dysfunction, and showed decreased glomerular filt
106 nuria, glomerular injury, podocyte loss, and kidney dysfunction as compared to the mice with diabetes
108 present a machine learning model to predict kidney dysfunction, as a proxy for drug induced renal to
110 is, acute hypertension, vascular injury, and kidney dysfunction associated with pathophysiology drive
111 3.18 x 10(-7)) and of experiencing resolving kidney dysfunction at 1 year were 13x higher (P = 2.15 x
113 79 years) and the prevalence of preadmission kidney dysfunction (baseline eGFR <60 ml/min per 1.73 m(
115 e patients may have reversible components of kidney dysfunction, both HF and renal parameters improvi
116 ampsia is multifactorial, including not only kidney dysfunction but also endothelial dysfunction, as
117 th diabetes typically occurs due to signs of kidney dysfunction but sometimes is due to less serious
118 in forms of immunodeficiency, for example in kidney dysfunction, but may enhance sterile forms of inf
119 e antiretroviral therapy, is associated with kidney dysfunction, but the magnitude of the effect and
120 Tenofovir exposure increased the risk of kidney dysfunction by 63% (HR, 1.63; 95% confidence inte
121 0/yr) was strongly associated with prevalent kidney dysfunction by cystatin C >1.29 g/dl (adjusted OR
125 nsated heart failure (ADHF), the presence of kidney dysfunction can substantially shape prognosis and
129 jury markers, reduced apoptosis and improved kidney dysfunction, concomitant with mitigated histologi
131 ios (OR) for the association between TDF and kidney dysfunction (defined as eGFR <90 mL/min/1.73 m(2)
132 and eGFR were influenced by the severity of kidney dysfunction: DEHP and BBzP exposure showed negati
133 stage heart failure patients with concurrent kidney dysfunction despite limited evidence supporting i
135 scores, incidence of jaw osteonecrosis, and kidney dysfunction did not differ significantly between
136 ad to hepatorenal syndrome, a severe type of kidney dysfunction driven by circulatory disturbances an
138 blood cells and schistocytes) and transplant kidney dysfunction during the first 2 weeks after transp
139 Finally, 47 of 131 patients experienced kidney dysfunction during the median 15-year follow-up p
141 addition to elevations in serum creatinine, kidney dysfunction encompasses inadequate maintenance of
142 for kidney replacement therapy or persistent kidney dysfunction, endotracheal intubation, mechanical
143 ntified hundreds of genetic risk regions for kidney dysfunction [estimated glomerular filtration rate
144 HD), periventricular leukomalacia (PVL), and kidney dysfunction; Fer-1 inhibited lipid peroxidation,
145 e toxic gain-of-function variants that cause kidney dysfunction, following a recessive mode of inheri
146 the association with risk of progression to kidney dysfunction from the time of measurement through
147 3(hu/hu) mice display elevated biomarkers of kidney dysfunction, glomerulosclerosis, C3/C5b-9 deposit
148 0 (death, dialysis dependence, or persistent kidney dysfunction [>25% decline in estimated glomerular
151 ently or recently hospitalized with ADHF and kidney dysfunction highlight the importance of improving
152 plant or altered in response to detection of kidney dysfunction, histologic evidence of allograft dam
153 (HR, 1.02; 95% CI, 1.00-1.04; P = .04), and kidney dysfunction (HR, 3.58; 95% CI, 1.35-9.46; P = .01
154 ide (NR) prevented several manifestations of kidney dysfunction (i.e., albuminuria, increased urinary
155 sociation between long-term TDF exposure and kidney dysfunction in a cohort of 1043 human immunodefic
156 vascular hemodynamics recovery, and limiting kidney dysfunction in a vasopressinergic-dependent manne
157 Whether treatment with pravastatin mitigates kidney dysfunction in adult patients with early autosoma
158 ting factors and mechanisms underlying brain-kidney dysfunction in CKD remain poorly understood.
168 g recognition of the incidence and impact of kidney dysfunction in recipients of nonrenal solid organ
170 ability to determine the actual incidence of kidney dysfunction in the health centers as it was not f
172 s. 4.5 0.5; P < 0.01 vs. low risk) and early kidney dysfunction, including ~8.3 mL/min/1.73 m(2) high
173 ent aly/aly (MAP3K14(aly/aly)) mice had less kidney dysfunction, inflammation, and apoptosis in acute
177 terioration of kidney function or persistent kidney dysfunction is associated with an irreversible lo
179 patients with ESRD, but whether less severe kidney dysfunction is associated with CAC is uncertain.
183 The aim of this study was to examine whether kidney dysfunction is associated with the type of clinic
185 readily differentiate between the stages of kidney dysfunction is highly desired for improving our f
193 ile chronic kidney disease, due to bilateral kidney dysfunction, is associated with insulin resistanc
194 taracts and glaucoma, mental retardation and kidney dysfunction, is caused by mutations in the OCRL g
199 injury (IRI) as assessed by tubular injury, kidney dysfunction, necrosis, apoptosis and inflammatory
201 and many disease states, including liver and kidney dysfunction, neurological disorders, and cancer.
202 vents (MAKE30)-a composite of new persistent kidney dysfunction, new initiation of dialysis, and deat
205 ysis to show that genetic variants linked to kidney dysfunction on chromosome 20 target the acyl-CoA
206 health care, but the effects of less severe kidney dysfunction on these outcomes are less well defin
207 s of retinopathy only, 250 (26.5%) had early kidney dysfunction only, and 85 (9.0%) had both retinopa
211 uartile vs the remaining 3 quartiles), early kidney dysfunction (OR 1.56, 95% CI 1.06-2.28, per stand
212 I, 0.76-1.01), with a decrease in persistent kidney dysfunction (OR, 0.80; 95% CI, 0.69-0.93) and mor
213 mposite primary end point was new infection, kidney dysfunction, or death between days 3 and 15 after
214 The proportion of female sex (P = .009), kidney dysfunction (P = .001), cardiac diseases (P = .00
215 -day follow-up in the outcomes of persistent kidney dysfunction (P = .08), new dialysis dependence (P
216 the longitudinal, noninvasive monitoring of kidney dysfunction progression in preclinical research.
217 ther neutrophils or serum from patients with kidney dysfunction-related HU with or without UA depleti
219 gold nanoparticles, can noninvasively detect kidney dysfunction, report on the dysfunctional stages,
220 ver, the prognostic biomarker used to report kidney dysfunction (serum creatinine concentration) has
221 um UA of 9-12 mg/dL) related or unrelated to kidney dysfunction significantly diminished neutrophil a
222 ity), incidence of osteonecrosis of the jaw, kidney dysfunction, skeletal morbidity rate (mean number
223 0.80-1.18) and did not significantly vary by kidney dysfunction stage for either of these primary end
224 ction on a protocol biopsy in the absence of kidney dysfunction, subclinical rejection has garnered a
225 AMCKD was characterized by vascular and kidney dysfunction, TGF beta -dependent glomeruloscleros
226 Hepatorenal syndrome (HRS) is a form of kidney dysfunction that characteristically occurs in liv
228 C seems to identify a "preclinical" state of kidney dysfunction that is not detected with serum creat
229 e newer targeted therapeutics can also cause kidney dysfunction through on and off-target mechanisms.
231 clinical management of patients experiencing kidney dysfunction through the trajectory of advanced he
232 l trials in patients with moderate-to-severe kidney dysfunction to further refine their optimal manag
234 trial, we assigned 11,182 patients with the kidney-dysfunction triad who were being treated at 141 p
235 ease, type 2 diabetes, and hypertension (the kidney-dysfunction triad), the results of large-scale tr
236 y preserved mitochondria but also attenuated kidney dysfunction, tubular damage, interstitial fibrosi
238 investigated the impact of the inclusion of kidney dysfunction type on the discrimination and calibr
241 ty and the potential for objectively defined kidney dysfunction types to enhance the prognostication
242 both severity and recovery of postoperative kidney dysfunction using the pattern of longitudinal cha
243 nal syndrome as the sole primary etiology of kidney dysfunction was 100% specific for native kidney e
245 qualitative study of patients with ADHF and kidney dysfunction was conducted at 3 hospitals within a
246 mild nonproliferative retinopathy) and early kidney dysfunction was defined as AER >/=7.5 mug/min.
248 he overall incidence and rate of progressive kidney dysfunction was higher in the treated cohort than
251 eutic agents are nephrotoxic and can promote kidney dysfunction, which frequently manifests during th
252 ystem and contributing to the progression of kidney dysfunction, which in its turn influences the gut
253 IL11 in TECs leading to SNAI1 expression and kidney dysfunction, which is not seen in Il11 deleted mi
254 d heart failure (HF) often have accompanying kidney dysfunction, which was recently defined as cardio
255 rm mortality was compared in recipients with kidney dysfunction who underwent heart-kidney transplant
257 tual framework for appropriate evaluation of kidney dysfunction within the context of clinical trajec