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PedAM

Pediatric Disease Annotations & Medicines




Disease oliguria
Phenotype C0022660|acute renal failure
Sentences 9
PubMedID- 20113591 Three days after admission, acute renal failure with relative oliguria (0.85 l/24h) developed, as well as uremia (26.4 mg/dl), creatinemia (0.98 mg/dl), and abnormal liver function (aspartate aminotransferase 49 u/l and alanine transferase 60 u/l).
PubMedID- 22022406 They were considered to have severe malaria if they had asexual forms of plasmodium falciparum on their peripheral blood smear and at least one of the following criteria of severity: acute renal failure with oliguria and plasma creatinine of >3 mg/dl (265 µmol/l); hypoglycaemia (plasma glucose, <40 mg/dl (2.2 mmol/l)); shock with systolic blood pressure of <80 mm hg; metabolic acidosis with a base deficit of >10 mmol/l; venous plasma lactate of >4 mmol/l; or pulmonary oedema [18].
PubMedID- 21970223 Result: three patients had evidence of worsening severity of disease characterized by acute renal failure with oliguria, hellp syndrome, intrauterine growth restriction and adverse perinatal outcome.
PubMedID- 26550498 Additionally, the patient developed an acute renal failure with oliguria and hyperkalemia (in maximum 5.8 mmol/l) (figure 2).
PubMedID- 23362408 In some patients, severe injury to the kidneys may lead to acute renal failure with oliguria and/or hematuria.
PubMedID- 21906341 Although severe acute renal failure with oliguria or anuria has been reported to be associated with a worse outcome compared with patients with preserved urine output, the use of urine output as a criterion to classify aki severity may be misleading.
PubMedID- 24274585 acute renal failure with oliguria caused by hfrs often lasts for several days before spontaneously resolving (5).
PubMedID- 24868460 Criteria for starting cvvhdf in critically ill patients were preexisting chronic renal failure (on intermittent dialysis), acute renal failure with oliguria (<500 ml/d) and signs of fluid overload according to the rifle and akin classification, hyperkalaemia (k+ > 6.5 mmol/l), metabolic acidosis (ph < 7.20), uremic symptoms, and poisoning with dialysable toxins [1, 6, 18].
PubMedID- 20596117 Serum-potassium was 9.1 mmol/l and he had acute renal failure with oliguria, probably caused by reduced cardiac output due to hypovolemia combined with taking an ace inhibitor and spironolactone.

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