
pmid: 30309455
It is well established that a large number of patients with acute decompensated heart failure present with various degrees of heart and kidney dysfunction usually primary disease of heart or kidney often involve dysfunction or injury to the other. The term cardiorenal syndrome increasingly had been used without a consistent or well-accepted definition. To include the vast array of interrelated derangements and to stress the bidirectional nature of heart-kidney interactions, a new classification of the cardiorenal syndrome with 5 subtypes that reflect the pathophysiology, the time frame, and the nature of concomitant cardiac and renal dysfunction was proposed. Cardiorenal syndrome can generally be defined as a pathophysiological disorder of the heart and kidneys, in which acute or chronic dysfunction of one organ may induce acute or chronic dysfunction to the other. Although cardiorenal syndrome was usually referred to as acute kidney dysfunction following acute cardiac disease, it is now clearly established that impaired kidney function can have an adverse impact on cardiac function.
Male, Cardio-Renal Syndrome, Kidney Function Tests, Prognosis, Risk Assessment, Severity of Illness Index, Survival Analysis, Cause of Death, Heart Function Tests, Disease Progression, Prevalence, Humans, Female
Male, Cardio-Renal Syndrome, Kidney Function Tests, Prognosis, Risk Assessment, Severity of Illness Index, Survival Analysis, Cause of Death, Heart Function Tests, Disease Progression, Prevalence, Humans, Female
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