Browsing by Subject "Acute Kidney Injury"
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Item Acute tubular necrosis(1966-04-28) UnknownItem Arm squeeze, ischemic preconditioning and more on the horizon(2023-10-13) Olafiranye, OladipupoItem Donald W. Seldin, M.D., Research Symposium finalist presentations(2022-04-29) Almonte, Matthew; Duvalyan, Angela; McAdams, Meredith; Onyirioha, Kristeen; Saez-Calveras, Nil; Triana, TaylorThis edition of the UT Southwestern Internal Medicine Grand Rounds features presentations by the six Foster Fellows selected as finalists from the Seventh Annual Donald W. Seldin, M.D. Research Symposium, which was held on April 21, 2022. These Foster Fellows presented work that spanned the breadth and depth of scholarly activity across the department, and at the close of Grand Rounds, one will be selected as the 2022 Seldin Scholar, in honor of Dr. Donald W. Seldin. The Grand Rounds presentation includes additional award presentations recognizing Clinical Vignettes, as well as the Award for Research in Quality and Education at Parkland Hospital and the Social Impact Award.Item The ethics of AKI in the ICU: when can (should) you say "no"?(2021-04-13) Moss, Alvin H.Many older adults with kidney failure and comorbidities may not live any longer with dialysis than without it. However, the de facto default practice is to start dialysis in most patients with progressive stage 5 chronic kidney disease. Medical anthropologists have described two factors contributing to the dialysis default: changing societal expectations resulting in a "biomedicalization of aging" and a "technological imperative" reflected in the difficulty of saying "no" to life-extending interventions, regardless of age, frailty, and complicating, debilitating medical conditions. Commentators have noted that default options are powerful and may be harmful to some patients. They have emphasized that to counter the clinical momentum of default options; it is necessary for clinicians to engage such patients and their families intentionally and explicitly in the process of shared decision-making. This lecture will present the evidence for the dialysis default and a patient-centered approach to respond to it.