2016
Reduced Cardiac Index Is Not the Dominant Driver of Renal Dysfunction in Heart Failure
Hanberg JS, Sury K, Wilson FP, Brisco MA, Ahmad T, Maaten J, Broughton JS, Assefa M, Tang WH, Parikh CR, Testani JM. Reduced Cardiac Index Is Not the Dominant Driver of Renal Dysfunction in Heart Failure. Journal Of The American College Of Cardiology 2016, 67: 2199-2208. PMID: 27173030, PMCID: PMC4867078, DOI: 10.1016/j.jacc.2016.02.058.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchConceptsPulmonary artery catheterizationBlood urea nitrogenCardiac indexRenal functionHeart failureRenal dysfunctionGood renal functionReduced cardiac indexHigher cardiac indexGlomerular filtration rateSignificant inverse correlationMultiple subgroupsMulticenter populationWorse eGFRHF patientsCreatinine ratioArtery catheterizationPatient subgroupsFiltration rateSerial assessmentLinear mixed modelingESCAPE trialPatientsUrea nitrogenDysfunction
2013
Prevalence and Prognostic Importance of Changes in Renal Function After Mechanical Circulatory Support
Brisco MA, Kimmel SE, Coca SG, Putt ME, Jessup M, Tang WW, Parikh CR, Testani JM. Prevalence and Prognostic Importance of Changes in Renal Function After Mechanical Circulatory Support. Circulation Heart Failure 2013, 7: 68-75. PMID: 24214901, PMCID: PMC4067252, DOI: 10.1161/circheartfailure.113.000507.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchConceptsMechanical circulatory supportRenal functionCirculatory supportEarly improvementContinuous-flow devicesMechanically Assisted Circulatory SupportLarge multicenter populationSerial creatinine levelsGlomerular filtration rateMajority of patientsMulticenter populationCause mortalityInteragency RegistryAdult patientsCreatinine levelsPrognostic importancePrognostic significanceImproved prognosisFiltration ratePoor survivalSurvival disadvantageEGFRPatientsAdditional researchMechanistic basis