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Introduction:
Acute kidney injury (AKI) occurs in one fourth of the children admitted to pediatric
intensive care unit (PICU). The rationale for the study is to check the ability of �Renal
Angina Index� (RAI) as a predictor of AKI for the early detection and management of
AKI.
Methodology:
An observational study conducted on children, aged 1 month to 12 years, admitted
in PICU of a rural tertiary care center, after ethical approval and informed consent.
Patients with previous diagnosis of renal impairment were excluded. The RAI (day
0) was calculated at admission by multiplying risk group score and renal injury score
along with serum creatinine levels on day 0 and estimated creatinine clearance (eCrCl)
was calculated, which was correlated with the reference eCrCl as per age standards. The
RAI �8 was considered positive and the proportion of children with positive RAI on
day 0 developing AKI on day 3, AKI stage 2 or above as per KDIGO classification, was
studied using appropriate statistical tools.
Results:
There were 27 children, with median age 18 months (IQR10, 48) enrolled, with
a prevalence of AKI being 40.7% and the median day of onset of AKI being 2 days
(IQR-2, 3). Twelve children�s (44.4%) had positive RAI. Out of this, 10 cases (83.3%)
developed AKI compared to only one patient (6.7%) of RAI negative cases. The
sensitivity, specificity, positive predictive value (PPV) and negative predictive values
(NPV) were 90.91%, 87.50%, 83.33% and 93.33%, respectively. The Receiver Operating
Characteristic curve of Day 0 RAI �8 showed AUC of 0.87, which was better than AUC
of serum creatinine on day 0 (i.e., 0.78).
Conclusion:
RAI on admission has a better predictive value for detection of AKI in children
admitted in PICU.
Biography
Pandey Amit Kumar, Department of Pediatrics is a member of Pravara Institute of Medical Sciences-DU, Loni. He is a Junior Resident. His research interests are Newborn Screening, Infant Nutrition, and Inborn Errors of Metabolism.
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