EMMANUEL DE ALMEIDA BURDMANN

(Fonte: Lattes)
Índice h a partir de 2011
29
Projetos de Pesquisa
Unidades Organizacionais
Departamento de Clínica Médica, Faculdade de Medicina - Docente
LIM/12 - Laboratório de Pesquisa Básica em Doenças Renais, Hospital das Clínicas, Faculdade de Medicina - Líder

Resultados de Busca

Agora exibindo 1 - 10 de 12
  • article 1 Citação(ões) na Scopus
    Acute kidney injury: Global health alert
    (2013) LI, Philip Kam-Tao; BURDMANN, Emmanuel A.; MEHTA, Ravindra L.
    Acute kidney injury (AKI) is increasingly prevalent in developing and developed countries and is associated with severe morbidity and mortality. Most etiologies of AKI can be prevented by interventions at the individual, community, regional, and in-hospital levels. Effective measures must include community-wide efforts to increase an awareness of the devastating effects of AKI and provide guidance on preventive strategies, as well as early recognition and management. Efforts should be focused on minimizing causes of AKI, increasing awareness of the importance of serial measurements of serum creatinine in high-risk patients, and documenting urine volume in acutely ill people to achieve early diagnosis; there is as yet no definitive role for alternative biomarkers. Protocols need to be developed to systematically manage prerenal conditions and specific infections. More accurate data about the true incidence and clinical impact of AKI will help to raise the importance of the disease in the community, increase awareness of AKI by governments, the public, general and family physicians, and other health-care professionals to help prevent the disease. Prevention is the key to avoid the heavy burden of mortality and morbidity associated with AKI.
  • article 8 Citação(ões) na Scopus
    Injúria renal aguda: um alerta global
    (2013) LI, Philip Kam Tao; BURDMANN, Emmanuel A.; MEHTA, Ravindra L.
    A Injúria Renal Aguda (IRA) é cada vez mais prevalente nos países desenvolvidos e nos em desenvolvimento, e está associada com morbidade e mortalidade severas. A maioria das causas da IRA pode ser evitada por meio de intervenções em nível individual, comunitário, regional e intra-hospitalar. Medidas efetivas devem incluir, em toda a comunidade, os esforços para aumentar a consciência dos efeitos devastadores do IRA e fornecer orientações sobre as estratégias de prevenção, bem como o reconhecimento e tratamento precoces. Os esforços devem ser focados em minimizar as causas de IRA, aumentando a consciência da importância de medidas seriadas de creatinina sérica em pacientes de alto risco para IRA, e documentar o volume de urina em pessoas gravemente doentes para obtenção de diagnóstico precoce; até o momento, não há ainda um papel definitivo para outros biomarcadores. Há a necessidade de protocolos para sistematizar a conduta em condições de IRA pré-renal e em infecções específicas. Dados mais precisos sobre a verdadeira incidência e o impacto clínico da IRA ajudarão a melhor conhecer a importância desta doença, a aumentar o conhecimento de IRA por parte dos governantes, dos médicos em geral e de outros profissionais de saúde para ajudar na prevenção da doença. A prevenção é a chave para evitar a pesado ônus de mortalidade e morbidade associada com IRA.
  • article 2 Citação(ões) na Scopus
    Acute kidney injury: global health alert
    (2013) LI, P. K. T.; BURDMANN, E. A.; MEHTA, R. L.
    Acute kidney injury (AKI) is increasingly prevalent in developing and developed countries and is associated with severe morbidity and mortality. Most etiologies of AKI can be prevented by interventions at the individual, community, regional, and in-hospital levels. Effective measures must include community-wide efforts to increase an awareness of the devastating effects of AKI and provide guidance on preventive strategies, as well as early recognition and management. Efforts should be focused on minimizing causes of AKI, increasing awareness of the importance of serial measurements of serum creatinine in high-risk patients, and documenting urine volume in acutely ill people to achieve early diagnosis; there is as yet no definitive role for alternative biomarkers. Protocols need to be developed to systematically manage prerenal conditions and specific infections. More accurate data about the true incidence and clinical impact of AKI will help to raise the importance of the disease in the community, increase awareness of AKI by governments, the public, general and family physicians, and other health-care professionals to help prevent the disease. Prevention is the key to avoid the heavy burden of mortality and morbidity associated with AKI.
  • article 39 Citação(ões) na Scopus
    Acute Kidney Injury: Global Health Alert
    (2013) LI, Philip Kam Tao; BURDMANN, Emmanuel A.; MEHTA, Ravindra L.
    Acute kidney injury (AKI) is increasingly prevalent in developing and developed countries and is associated with severe morbidity and mortality. Most etiologies of AKI can be prevented by interventions at the individual, community, regional, and in-hospital levels. Effective measures must include community-wide efforts to increase an awareness of the devastating effects of AKI and provide guidance on preventive strategies, and early recognition and management. Efforts should be focused on minimizing the causes of AKI, increasing awareness of the importance of serial measurements of serum creatinine in high-risk patients, and documenting urine volume in acutely ill people to achieve early diagnosis; there is as yet no definitive role for alternative biomarkers. Protocols need to be developed to systematically manage prerenal conditions and specific infections. More accurate data about the true incidence and clinical impact of AKI will help raise the importance of the disease in the community and increase awareness of AKI by governments, the public, and general and family physicians and other health care professionals to help prevent the disease. Prevention is the key to avoid the heavy burden of mortality and morbidity associated with AKI.
  • article 0 Citação(ões) na Scopus
    The hidden secret of acute kidney injury: the urologist! Reply
    (2013) LI, Philip Kam Tao; BURDMANN, Emmanuel A.; MEHTA, Ravindra L.
  • article 131 Citação(ões) na Scopus
    Acute kidney injury: global health alert
    (2013) LI, Philip Kam Tao; BURDMANN, Emmanuel A.; MEHTA, Ravindra L.
    Acute kidney injury (AKI) is increasingly prevalent in developing and developed countries and is associated with severe morbidity and mortality. Most etiologies of AKI can be prevented by interventions at the individual, community, regional, and in-hospital levels. Effective measures must include community-wide efforts to increase an awareness of the devastating effects of AKI and provide guidance on preventive strategies, as well as early recognition and management. Efforts should be focused on minimizing causes of AKI, increasing awareness of the importance of serial measurements of serum creatinine in high-risk patients, and documenting urine volume in acutely ill people to achieve early diagnosis; there is as yet no definitive role for alternative biomarkers. Protocols need to be developed to systematically manage prerenal conditions and specific infections. More accurate data about the true incidence and clinical impact of AKI will help to raise the importance of the disease in the community, increase awareness of AKI by governments, the public, general and family physicians, and other health-care professionals to help prevent the disease. Prevention is the key to avoid the heavy burden of mortality and morbidity associated with AKI. Kidney International (2013) 83, 372-376; doi:0.1038/ki.2012.427; published online 9 January 2013
  • article 107 Citação(ões) na Scopus
    The EXTRIP (EXtracorporeal TReatments In Poisoning) workgroup: Guideline methodology
    (2012) LAVERGNE, Valery; NOLIN, Thomas D.; HOFFMAN, Robert S.; ROBERTS, Darren; GOSSELIN, Sophie; GOLDFARB, David S.; KIELSTEIN, Jan T.; MACTIER, Robert; MACLAREN, Robert; MOWRY, James B.; BUNCHMAN, Timothy E.; JUURLINK, David; MEGARBANE, Bruno; ANSEEUW, Kurt; WINCHESTER, James F.; DARGAN, Paul I.; LIU, Kathleen D.; HOEGBERG, Lotte C.; LI, Yi; CALELLO, Diane P.; BURDMANN, Emmanuel A.; YATES, Christopher; LALIBERTE, Martin; DECKER, Brian Scott; MELLO-DA-SILVA, Carlos Augusto; LAVONAS, Eric; GHANNOUM, Marc
    Extracorporeal treatments (ECTRs), such as hemodialysis and hemoperfusion, are used in poisoning despite a lack of controlled human trials demonstrating efficacy. To provide uniform recommendations, the EXTRIP group was formed as an international collaboration among recognized experts from nephrology, clinical toxicology, critical care, or pharmacology and supported by over 30 professional societies. For every poison, the clinical benefit of ECTR is weighed against associated complications, alternative therapies, and costs. Rigorous methodology, using the AGREE instrument, was developed and ratified. Methods rely on evidence appraisal and, in the absence of robust studies, on a thorough and transparent process of consensus statements. Twenty-four poisons were chosen according to their frequency, available evidence, and relevance. A systematic literature search was performed in order to retrieve all original publications regardless of language. Data were extracted on a standardized instrument. Quality of the evidence was assessed by GRADE as: High = A, Moderate = B, Low = C, Very Low = D. For every poison, dialyzability was assessed and clinical effect of ECTR summarized. All pertinent documents were submitted to the workgroup with a list of statements for vote (general statement, indications, timing, ECTR choice). A modified Delphi method with two voting rounds was used, between which deliberation was required. Each statement was voted on a Likert scale (1-9) to establish the strength of recommendation. This approach will permit the production of the first important practice guidelines on this topic.
  • article 3 Citação(ões) na Scopus
    Acute Kidney Injury: Global Health Alert
    (2013) LI, Philip Kam Tao; BURDMARM, Emmanuel A.; MEHTA, Ravindra L.
    Acute kidney injury (AKI) is increasingly prevalent in developing and developed countries and is associated with severe morbidity and mortality. Most etiologies of AKI can be prevented by interventions at the individual, community, regional, and in-hospital levels. Effective measures must include community-wide efforts to increase an awareness of the devastating effects of AKI and provide guidance on preventive strategies, as well as early recognition and management. Efforts should be focused on minimizing causes of AKI, increasing awareness of the importance of serial measurements of serum creatinine in high-risk patients, and documenting urine volume in acutely ill people to achieve early diagnosis; there is as yet no definitive role for alternative biomarkers. Protocols need to be developed to systematically manage prerenal conditions and specific infections. More accurate data about the true incidence and clinical impact of AKI will help to raise the importance of the disease in the community, increase awareness of AKI by governments, the public, general and family physicians, and other health-care professionals to help prevent the disease. Prevention is the key to avoid the heavy burden of mortality and morbidity associated with AKI
  • article 13 Citação(ões) na Scopus
    ACUTE KIDNEY INJURY Acute kidney injury-global health alert
    (2013) LI, Philip Kam-Tao; BURDMANN, Emmanuel A.; MEHTA, Ravindra L.
  • article 28 Citação(ões) na Scopus
    World Kidney Day 2013: Acute Kidney Injury-Global Health Alert
    (2013) LI, Philip Kam Tao; BURDMANN, Emmanuel A.; MEHTA, Ravindra L.