Anemia is more common in later-stage chronic kidney disease (CKD), with diabetes and dialysis increasing the risk. Treating the underlying cause can improve symptoms and quality of life.
If chronic kidney disease (CKD) is left untreated, it can lead to complications like anemia and high blood pressure, which can worsen kidney function and contribute to other health issues.
Many patients with CHF are anemic, which raises the question, 'Could uncontrolled anemia be a cause?' The anemia is associated with more severe CHF and higher mortality, hospitalization and ...
As kidney function declines with the progression of chronic disease, renal anaemia becomes more pronounced. [File, Standard] Experts warn that anaemia is expected to become prevalent in the next ...
heart disease, anemia, nerve damage, and fluid retention can arise," says Nagata. "Without treatment, chronic kidney disease can lead to end-stage kidney failure, which is fatal without ...
Chronic kidney disease and anemia—both individually and together—spell bad news (in the form of increased mortality risk) for patients with heart failure, say the results of a new study of ...
KDOQI (2007) KDOQI Clinical Practice Guideline and Clinical Practice Recommendations for anemia in chronic kidney disease: 2007 update of hemoglobin target. Am J Kidney Dis 50: 471–530 National ...
Panelists discuss how chronic kidney disease leads to iron deficiency anemia through a complex interplay of impaired iron absorption, increased hepcidin production driven by inflammatory cytokines ...
GlobalData tracks drug-specific phase transition and likelihood of approval scores, in addition to indication benchmarks based off 18 years of historical drug development data. Attributes of the drug, ...