Litcius/Paper detail

Anaemia and acute kidney injury: the tip of the iceberg?

Yannis Lombardi, Christophe Ridel, Maxime Touzot

2020Clinical Kidney Journal15 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Abstract Acute kidney injury (AKI) is a common disorder that complicates the hospital course of many patients. AKI is linked with an independent risk of death, hospital length of stay and chronic kidney disease (CKD). Several preoperative predictors are found to be associated with AKI after surgery independent of its origin (cardiac versus non-cardiac). Among these, anaemia has been widely recognized and studied. Anaemia is more common within the surgical population for various reasons (iron deficiency, blood loss, anaemia of chronic disease such as inflammatory state, malignancy or CKD). Both pre- and postoperative anaemia have a deleterious impact on different clinical outcomes including AKI. In this issue, Nishimoto et al. investigated whether AKI could be a risk factor for anaemia (and not the opposite) and whether anaemia could be an independent mediator of mortality after AKI.

Topics & Concepts

MedicineAcute kidney injuryKidney diseaseMalignancyInternal medicineDiseaseIntensive care medicineAnemiaAcute Kidney Injury ResearchBlood transfusion and managementTrauma, Hemostasis, Coagulopathy, Resuscitation