1.Clinicopathologic features and renin-angiotensin-aldosterone system inhibitor usage of malignant hypertension patients with acute kidney injury
Lingyi XU ; Linger TANG ; Shuo XUE ; Qingqing ZHOU ; Lei JIANG ; Li YANG ; Xizi ZHENG
Chinese Journal of Nephrology 2025;41(4):250-257
Objective:To summarize the clinicopathologic characteristics of malignant hypertension (MHT) patients with acute kidney injury (AKI) and application of renin-angiotensin-aldosterone system inhibitor (RAASi).Methods:It was a retrospective cohort study. The adult patients with MHT and AKI admitted to Peking University First Hospital from January 1, 2012 to July 14, 2022. The patients were categorized into RAASi group and non-RAASi group based on RAASi administration from AKI onset to discharge. The clinicopathological data between the two groups were compared, and application of RAASi was analyzed.Results:A total of 179 patients were enrolled with age of 31 (26, 37) years and 148 males (82.7%). Ninety-five patients (53.1%) received dialysis treatment. The common causes of MHT were essential hypertension (125 patients, 69.8%), renal hypertension (39 patients, 21.8%) and endocrine hypertension (7 patients, 3.9%). AKI severity distribution showed 41 patients (22.9%) in stage 1, 1 patient (0.5%) in stage 2 and 137 patients (76.5%) in stage 3. Among MHT patients, 94 patients (52.5%) had been treated with RAASi before AKI, and 13 patients (7.3%) discontinued RAASi after AKI. Among 85 patients (47.5%) without receiving RAASi treatment before AKI, 68 new patients (38.0%) received RAASi treatment after AKI, and 40 patients (22.3%) were treated with the support of dialysis. Compared with non-RAASI group ( n=30), proportions of chronic kidney disease ( χ2=6.324, P=0.012) and post-AKI hyperkalemia ( χ2=4.048, P=0.044) in RAASi group ( n=149) were lower, and the proportion of dialysis treatment ( χ2=5.638, P=0.018), admission diastolic blood pressure ( Z=-3.609, P<0.001) and maximum diastolic blood pressure during hospitalization ( Z=-1.978, P=0.048) were higher. There were no statistically significant differences in the rates of target blood pressure control and renal function recovery between the two groups during hospitalization (all P>0.05). During hospitalization, 64 patients received renal biopsies, of which 50 patients (78.1%) had typical MHT vascular lesions such as "onion skin" in renal arterioles. Twenty-seven patients (42.2%) were complicated with glomerular diseases, and IgA nephropathy was the most common type (85.2%, 23/27). The proportions of glomerular ischemia and sclerosis, endothelial cell proliferation and acute renal tubular injury in RAASi group ( n=54) were lower than those in non-RAASi group ( n=10), and proportions of thrombosis and "onion skin" change were higher than those in RAASi group ( n=10), but the differences were not statistically significant (all P>0.05). Renal function recovery occurred in 47 patients (26.3%) by discharge. Among 95 dialysis patients, 26 patients (27.4%) achieved dialysis independence at discharge. Conclusions:MHT patients with AKI exhibit severe renal pathology and short-term poor prognosis. RAASi is primarily prescribed to those with relatively better kidney function or those receiving dialysis support.
2.Statin prescription before the application of iodine contrast agents is a protective factor against contrast-induced acute kidney injury
Linger TANG ; Xizi ZHENG ; Lingyi XU ; Jinwei WANG ; Youlu ZHAO ; Damin XU ; Li YANG
Chinese Journal of Nephrology 2025;41(6):409-416
Objective:To investigate the correlation between statins and contrast-induced acute kidney injury (CI-AKI) and provide a reference basis for clinical practice.Methods:It was a retrospective cohort study. The adult patients were admitted to Peking University First Hospital from January 1, 2018, to December 31, 2020, and received at least one intravascular iodinated contrast administration during hospitalization. The clinical data of the patients were collected. The enrolled patients were divided into statin group and non-statin group according to statin exposure. The exposure of statins was defined as use of any type of statins within 48 hours before iodinated contrast administration. The primary outcome was in-hospital AKI defined as AKI developed after contrast administration and before discharge, with 30 days as the endpoint observation time, and the secondary outcome was post-contrast AKI (PC-AKI) defined as AKI onset within 72 hours after contrast administration. Cox regression model was applied to investigate the correlation between statin prescription prior to contrast administration and clinical outcomes. Pre-specified interaction analysis was conducted to examine modification effect of age, gender, baseline estimated glomerular filtration rate (eGFR), diabetes and the injection method of contrast.Results:Among 10 321 enrolled patients, the age was 63 (54, 71) years old, and 6 274 (60.8%) patients were males. There were 2 372 (23.0%) patients taking statins before the use of iodinated contrast agents, and the person-time incidence rate of in-hospital AKI was 2.5 per 1 000 person-days. The person-time incidence rate of statin users and statin non-users was 3.2 and 2.4 per 1 000 person-days, respectively. Compared with the non-statin group, age, serum creatinine and the proportions of males, admitted to the intensive care unit, lipid metabolism disorder, hypertension, diabetes, cerebrovascular diseases, cardiovascular diseases, using renin-angiotensin- aldosterone inhibitors, using diuretics, using non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs, using proton pump inhibitors, iodinated contrast administration via artery, eGFR<60 ml·min -1·(1.73 m 2) -1 were higher, while the proportions of general anesthesia surgery, severe liver diseases and tumors, and eGFR were lower in the statin group (all P<0.05). Among 10 321 patients, 5 867 patients had serum creatinine measurement within 72 hours after iodinated contrast administration, among which 70 patients (4.0 per 1 000 person-days) developed PC-AKI. Multivariate Cox regression analysis showed that statin use was an independent protective factor for in-hospital AKI ( HR=0.65, 95% CI 0.45?0.93, P=0.017) and PC-AKI ( HR=0.44, 95% CI 0.22?0.88, P=0.020). Subgroup analysis showed the significant interaction between diabetes and statin use ( P for interaction=0.039), and the protective effect of statins against in-hospital AKI was only observed in non-diabetic group ( HR=0.45, 95% CI 0.26?0.77). There were no significant differences in subgroups stratified by age, sex, baseline eGFR and the injection method of contrast (all P for interaction>0.05). Conclusions:Statin use prior to iodinated contrast administration is correlated with reduced risks of in-hospital AKI and PC-AKI in hospitalized patients, and the correlation between statin use and in-hospital AKI is more significant in non-diabetic patients. It is suggested that statin use before the application of iodinated contrast agents in hospitalized patients may prevent the occurrence of AKI.
3.Association of serum sodium level and its fluctuation with mortality in patients with hospital- acquired acute kidney injury
Shuo XUE ; Lingyi XU ; Shiyue YAN ; Si LIU ; Linger TANG ; Jinwei WANG ; Xizi ZHENG ; Li YANG
Chinese Journal of Nephrology 2025;41(8):587-594
Objective:To investigate the serum sodium level and its fluctuation in patients with hospitalized acquired acute kidney injury (AKI) and explore their impacts on in-hospital mortality.Methods:It was a single-center retrospective study. The adult patients developing hospital-acquired AKI and receiving at least twice serum sodium tests admitted to Peking University First Hospital from January 1, 2018, to December 31, 2020 were included. Dysnatremia included hyponatremia (< 135 mmol/L) and hypernatremia (>145 mmol/L). The patients were divided into hyponatremia group, normal serum sodium group and hypernatremia group, and the differences of clinical data among the three groups were compared. The fluctuation of serum sodium level was evaluated by coefficient of variation. A restricted cubic spline was applied to investigate the association between serum sodium level at AKI onset and mortality. Poisson regression analysis was used to explore the mortality risk of dysnatremia at AKI onset, dysnatremia at admission, and coefficient of variation of serum sodium, respectively.Results:Among the enrolled 1 475 AKI patients, the age was 66.0 (55.0, 78.0) years, and 850 patients (57.6%) were males. The estimated glomerular filtration rate was 77.3 (50.4, 97.6) ml·min -1·(1.73 m 2) -1. The time from admission to AKI onset was 8 (4, 15) days. The incidence of hyponatremia and hypernatremia at admission were 19.6% (289/1 475) and 2.6% (39/1 475), respectively, while the incidence at AKI onset was 24.0% (354/1 475) and 12.7% (188/1 475), respectively. There was statistically significant difference in terms of age, the initial classification distribution of AKI, serum sodium at admission, serum sodium at the occurrence of AKI, the lowest serum sodium at hospitalization, the highest serum sodium at hospitalization, the coefficient of variation of serum sodium, and the proportions of heart failure, stroke, disseminated intravascular coagulation, sepsis, acute respiratory distress syndrome, shock, prerenal causes, circle diuretics and aldosterone antagonists among hyponatremia group, normal serum sodium group and hypernatremia group (all P<0.05). The restricted cubic spline analysis showed a "U"-shaped correlation between serum sodium level at AKI onset and in-hospital mortality. Poisson regression analysis showed that after adjusting for age, gender, number of chronic comorbidities, initial classification of AKI, basal estimated glomerular filtration rate and number of acute disease state, with normal serum sodium as the reference, hyponatremia ( RR=1.56, 95% CI 1.14-2.13) and hypernatremia ( RR=1.71, 95% CI 1.23-2.39) at AKI onset were correlated with an increased risk of in-hospital mortality. Hyponatremia at admission was correlated with an increased risk of in-hospital mortality ( RR=2.13, 95% CI 1.62-2.79), while there was no statistically significant association between hypernatremia and in-hospital mortality ( RR=1.22, 95% CI 0.62-2.44). After further adjusting serum sodium levels at admission and at the occurrence of AKI, the coefficient of variation of serum sodium level was still correlated with an increased risk of in-hospital mortality ( RR=1.23, 95% CI 1.14-1.33). Conclusions:Dysnatremia is common in patients with hospital-acquired AKI. The serum sodium level at AKI onset is correlated with in-hospital death in a "U" shape. Dysnatremia and serum sodium fluctuation are associated with an increased risk of in-hospital mortality.
4.Clinicopathologic features and renin-angiotensin-aldosterone system inhibitor usage of malignant hypertension patients with acute kidney injury
Lingyi XU ; Linger TANG ; Shuo XUE ; Qingqing ZHOU ; Lei JIANG ; Li YANG ; Xizi ZHENG
Chinese Journal of Nephrology 2025;41(4):250-257
Objective:To summarize the clinicopathologic characteristics of malignant hypertension (MHT) patients with acute kidney injury (AKI) and application of renin-angiotensin-aldosterone system inhibitor (RAASi).Methods:It was a retrospective cohort study. The adult patients with MHT and AKI admitted to Peking University First Hospital from January 1, 2012 to July 14, 2022. The patients were categorized into RAASi group and non-RAASi group based on RAASi administration from AKI onset to discharge. The clinicopathological data between the two groups were compared, and application of RAASi was analyzed.Results:A total of 179 patients were enrolled with age of 31 (26, 37) years and 148 males (82.7%). Ninety-five patients (53.1%) received dialysis treatment. The common causes of MHT were essential hypertension (125 patients, 69.8%), renal hypertension (39 patients, 21.8%) and endocrine hypertension (7 patients, 3.9%). AKI severity distribution showed 41 patients (22.9%) in stage 1, 1 patient (0.5%) in stage 2 and 137 patients (76.5%) in stage 3. Among MHT patients, 94 patients (52.5%) had been treated with RAASi before AKI, and 13 patients (7.3%) discontinued RAASi after AKI. Among 85 patients (47.5%) without receiving RAASi treatment before AKI, 68 new patients (38.0%) received RAASi treatment after AKI, and 40 patients (22.3%) were treated with the support of dialysis. Compared with non-RAASI group ( n=30), proportions of chronic kidney disease ( χ2=6.324, P=0.012) and post-AKI hyperkalemia ( χ2=4.048, P=0.044) in RAASi group ( n=149) were lower, and the proportion of dialysis treatment ( χ2=5.638, P=0.018), admission diastolic blood pressure ( Z=-3.609, P<0.001) and maximum diastolic blood pressure during hospitalization ( Z=-1.978, P=0.048) were higher. There were no statistically significant differences in the rates of target blood pressure control and renal function recovery between the two groups during hospitalization (all P>0.05). During hospitalization, 64 patients received renal biopsies, of which 50 patients (78.1%) had typical MHT vascular lesions such as "onion skin" in renal arterioles. Twenty-seven patients (42.2%) were complicated with glomerular diseases, and IgA nephropathy was the most common type (85.2%, 23/27). The proportions of glomerular ischemia and sclerosis, endothelial cell proliferation and acute renal tubular injury in RAASi group ( n=54) were lower than those in non-RAASi group ( n=10), and proportions of thrombosis and "onion skin" change were higher than those in RAASi group ( n=10), but the differences were not statistically significant (all P>0.05). Renal function recovery occurred in 47 patients (26.3%) by discharge. Among 95 dialysis patients, 26 patients (27.4%) achieved dialysis independence at discharge. Conclusions:MHT patients with AKI exhibit severe renal pathology and short-term poor prognosis. RAASi is primarily prescribed to those with relatively better kidney function or those receiving dialysis support.
5.Statin prescription before the application of iodine contrast agents is a protective factor against contrast-induced acute kidney injury
Linger TANG ; Xizi ZHENG ; Lingyi XU ; Jinwei WANG ; Youlu ZHAO ; Damin XU ; Li YANG
Chinese Journal of Nephrology 2025;41(6):409-416
Objective:To investigate the correlation between statins and contrast-induced acute kidney injury (CI-AKI) and provide a reference basis for clinical practice.Methods:It was a retrospective cohort study. The adult patients were admitted to Peking University First Hospital from January 1, 2018, to December 31, 2020, and received at least one intravascular iodinated contrast administration during hospitalization. The clinical data of the patients were collected. The enrolled patients were divided into statin group and non-statin group according to statin exposure. The exposure of statins was defined as use of any type of statins within 48 hours before iodinated contrast administration. The primary outcome was in-hospital AKI defined as AKI developed after contrast administration and before discharge, with 30 days as the endpoint observation time, and the secondary outcome was post-contrast AKI (PC-AKI) defined as AKI onset within 72 hours after contrast administration. Cox regression model was applied to investigate the correlation between statin prescription prior to contrast administration and clinical outcomes. Pre-specified interaction analysis was conducted to examine modification effect of age, gender, baseline estimated glomerular filtration rate (eGFR), diabetes and the injection method of contrast.Results:Among 10 321 enrolled patients, the age was 63 (54, 71) years old, and 6 274 (60.8%) patients were males. There were 2 372 (23.0%) patients taking statins before the use of iodinated contrast agents, and the person-time incidence rate of in-hospital AKI was 2.5 per 1 000 person-days. The person-time incidence rate of statin users and statin non-users was 3.2 and 2.4 per 1 000 person-days, respectively. Compared with the non-statin group, age, serum creatinine and the proportions of males, admitted to the intensive care unit, lipid metabolism disorder, hypertension, diabetes, cerebrovascular diseases, cardiovascular diseases, using renin-angiotensin- aldosterone inhibitors, using diuretics, using non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs, using proton pump inhibitors, iodinated contrast administration via artery, eGFR<60 ml·min -1·(1.73 m 2) -1 were higher, while the proportions of general anesthesia surgery, severe liver diseases and tumors, and eGFR were lower in the statin group (all P<0.05). Among 10 321 patients, 5 867 patients had serum creatinine measurement within 72 hours after iodinated contrast administration, among which 70 patients (4.0 per 1 000 person-days) developed PC-AKI. Multivariate Cox regression analysis showed that statin use was an independent protective factor for in-hospital AKI ( HR=0.65, 95% CI 0.45?0.93, P=0.017) and PC-AKI ( HR=0.44, 95% CI 0.22?0.88, P=0.020). Subgroup analysis showed the significant interaction between diabetes and statin use ( P for interaction=0.039), and the protective effect of statins against in-hospital AKI was only observed in non-diabetic group ( HR=0.45, 95% CI 0.26?0.77). There were no significant differences in subgroups stratified by age, sex, baseline eGFR and the injection method of contrast (all P for interaction>0.05). Conclusions:Statin use prior to iodinated contrast administration is correlated with reduced risks of in-hospital AKI and PC-AKI in hospitalized patients, and the correlation between statin use and in-hospital AKI is more significant in non-diabetic patients. It is suggested that statin use before the application of iodinated contrast agents in hospitalized patients may prevent the occurrence of AKI.
6.Association of serum sodium level and its fluctuation with mortality in patients with hospital- acquired acute kidney injury
Shuo XUE ; Lingyi XU ; Shiyue YAN ; Si LIU ; Linger TANG ; Jinwei WANG ; Xizi ZHENG ; Li YANG
Chinese Journal of Nephrology 2025;41(8):587-594
Objective:To investigate the serum sodium level and its fluctuation in patients with hospitalized acquired acute kidney injury (AKI) and explore their impacts on in-hospital mortality.Methods:It was a single-center retrospective study. The adult patients developing hospital-acquired AKI and receiving at least twice serum sodium tests admitted to Peking University First Hospital from January 1, 2018, to December 31, 2020 were included. Dysnatremia included hyponatremia (< 135 mmol/L) and hypernatremia (>145 mmol/L). The patients were divided into hyponatremia group, normal serum sodium group and hypernatremia group, and the differences of clinical data among the three groups were compared. The fluctuation of serum sodium level was evaluated by coefficient of variation. A restricted cubic spline was applied to investigate the association between serum sodium level at AKI onset and mortality. Poisson regression analysis was used to explore the mortality risk of dysnatremia at AKI onset, dysnatremia at admission, and coefficient of variation of serum sodium, respectively.Results:Among the enrolled 1 475 AKI patients, the age was 66.0 (55.0, 78.0) years, and 850 patients (57.6%) were males. The estimated glomerular filtration rate was 77.3 (50.4, 97.6) ml·min -1·(1.73 m 2) -1. The time from admission to AKI onset was 8 (4, 15) days. The incidence of hyponatremia and hypernatremia at admission were 19.6% (289/1 475) and 2.6% (39/1 475), respectively, while the incidence at AKI onset was 24.0% (354/1 475) and 12.7% (188/1 475), respectively. There was statistically significant difference in terms of age, the initial classification distribution of AKI, serum sodium at admission, serum sodium at the occurrence of AKI, the lowest serum sodium at hospitalization, the highest serum sodium at hospitalization, the coefficient of variation of serum sodium, and the proportions of heart failure, stroke, disseminated intravascular coagulation, sepsis, acute respiratory distress syndrome, shock, prerenal causes, circle diuretics and aldosterone antagonists among hyponatremia group, normal serum sodium group and hypernatremia group (all P<0.05). The restricted cubic spline analysis showed a "U"-shaped correlation between serum sodium level at AKI onset and in-hospital mortality. Poisson regression analysis showed that after adjusting for age, gender, number of chronic comorbidities, initial classification of AKI, basal estimated glomerular filtration rate and number of acute disease state, with normal serum sodium as the reference, hyponatremia ( RR=1.56, 95% CI 1.14-2.13) and hypernatremia ( RR=1.71, 95% CI 1.23-2.39) at AKI onset were correlated with an increased risk of in-hospital mortality. Hyponatremia at admission was correlated with an increased risk of in-hospital mortality ( RR=2.13, 95% CI 1.62-2.79), while there was no statistically significant association between hypernatremia and in-hospital mortality ( RR=1.22, 95% CI 0.62-2.44). After further adjusting serum sodium levels at admission and at the occurrence of AKI, the coefficient of variation of serum sodium level was still correlated with an increased risk of in-hospital mortality ( RR=1.23, 95% CI 1.14-1.33). Conclusions:Dysnatremia is common in patients with hospital-acquired AKI. The serum sodium level at AKI onset is correlated with in-hospital death in a "U" shape. Dysnatremia and serum sodium fluctuation are associated with an increased risk of in-hospital mortality.
7.A study on the risk prediction model for cryptogenic stroke in patients with right-to-left shunt
Sujuan TANG ; Qingwen WU ; Linger LI ; Daojing LI ; Hongqin ZHAO
Chinese Journal of Behavioral Medicine and Brain Science 2024;33(6):505-512
Objective:To predict the risk of cryptogenic stroke (CS) patients with right-to-left shunt (RLS) by machine learning, and provide potential solutions for accurate and efficient prediction of CS.Methods:A retrospective analysis of clinical data on 289 subjects with positive RLS detected by contrast-enhanced transcranial Doppler tests (c-TCD) treated in the Department of Neurology at Laoshan Campus, the Affiliated Hospital of Qingdao University, from January 2018 to September 2023, including demographic information, medical history, laboratory test indicators, diagnosis, and treatment.The dataset was randomly divided into a training set and a testing set by the machine learning function train_test_split(), with a ratio of 8∶2.Risk prediction models for CS in RLS subjects were constructed by algorithms such as Logistic regression, decision trees, random forests, extreme gradient boosting, artificial neural networks, gradient boosting, extra trees, and adaptive Boosting.The model performance was evaluated by receiver operating characteristic curves (ROC), area under curve (AUC), confusion matrix, precision, recall, accuracy, F1 score, calibration curves, and decision curve analysis.The optimal model was subjected to interpretability analysis by feature importance and SHAP values.The t-test, Mann-Whitney U test and χ2 test were used for data analysis by SPSS 25.0 software.Delong test was used to compare the differences in AUC between the two models. Results:In 289 RLS subjects, there were 166 cases of CS (57.5%) and 123 cases of non-CS (42.5%).The statistical analysis results showed that blood biochemical indicators such as D-dimer, mean platelet volume, and fibrinogen in CS patients were higher than those in non-CS patients (all P<0.01).There were no statistically significant differences in variables between the training and testing sets(all P>0.05).Random forest model achieved the highest AUC (0.885), precision (0.806), recall (0.879), accuracy (0.810), and F1 score (0.841) for CS risk prediction in the testing set.The calibration curve showed that the random forest model was closest to the reference line, and the decision curve analysis indicated that it had a greater net benefit.The interpretability analysis revealed that high-risk factors included mean platelet volume, D-dimer, international normalized ratio, body mass index, and age. Conclusion:The random forest-based prediction tool exhibits excellent performance, demonstrating high accuracy in predicting CS risk in RLS population.
8.Dilemma in management of cervico-facial cystic hygroma
Rajoo Tamil Selvi ; Ing Ping Tang ; Linger Sim ; Mohd Syafwan Mohd Soffian
The Medical Journal of Malaysia 2019;74(5):450-451
Cervico facial cystic hygroma and tongue lymphagioma is
rare representative of spectrum of lymphatic malformations.
Conservative management with sclerosants alone has
proven to be successful. However, sudden enlargement of
these cervico facial lymphangiomas leads to catastrophic
airway obstruction leading to debility in feeding and speech.
Therefore, surgery is indicated in such case to prevent such
a catastrophic problem. We report here the case of a 3-yearold boy with cervico facial hygroma involving the tongue.
We successfully treated him with a combination of surgery
and OK432 injection.


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