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Acute Kidney Injury in Neonatal Hypoxic-Ischemic Encephalopathy Patients Treated with Therapeutic Hypothermia: Incidence and Risk Factors.

Emre DincerSevilay TopcuoğluElif Betül Keskin ÇetinkayaÖzge Yatır AlkanElif ÖzalkayaSelim SancakGüner Karatekin
Published in: Therapeutic hypothermia and temperature management (2023)
Studies in infants with hypoxic-ischemic encephalopathy (HIE) due to perinatal asphyxia have generally focused on neurological outcomes. Although acute kidney injury (AKI) rate decreased in advent of therapeutic hypothermia (TH), it is still a common and important entity. In this retrospective study, we aimed to investigate the risk factors for AKI in HIE patients treated with hypothermia. Infants treated with TH due to HIE were reviewed retrospectively and infants who developed AKI and not were compared. Ninety-six patients were enrolled in the study. AKI developed in 27 (28%) patients and 4 (14.8%) of them were stage III AKI. In the AKI group, gestational age of the patients was significantly higher ( p =  0.035), the 1st minute Apgar score was significantly lower ( p =  0.042), and convulsions (p =  0.002), amplitude-integrated electroencephalography disorders ( p =  0.025), sepsis ( p =  0.017), need for inotropic therapy ( p =  0.001), need of invasive mechanical ventilation ( p =  0.03), and systolic dysfunction in echocardiography ( p =  0.022) were significantly higher. In logistic regression tests, Apgar score at the 1st minute was found to be independent risk factor for developing AKI. AKI has the potential to worsen the neurological damage and correlates with morbidities of perinatal asphyxia. It is important to determine the incidence and risk factors for developing AKI in this delicate group of patients to prevent further renal damage.
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