Part of health promotion is meeting a patient at their definition of health. One person’s health goals and possibilities may differ from another’s. 

Part of health promotion is meeting a patient at their definition of health. One person’s health goals and possibilities may differ from another’s.

Assume you are an intern at a community health clinic. Your supervisor has asked you to prepare a summary of the various definitions of health for the staff at the clinic.

Search the Internet for representations of various definitions of health (e.g., a newborn, a well older adult, a person in a wheelchair, or a person with another disability).

Prepare a 500-word summary of your findings. Include the following in your summary:

  • Description of 6 internet representations of definitions of health for the following types of individuals:
  • Newborn
  • Well adult Asian woman over 55 years of age
  • Disabled 35-year-old African American male veteran
  • Pre-teen white young woman entering middle school
  • Sexually active 20-something Hispanic male
  • Obese 75-year-old white male suffering from debilitating arthritis
  • Explanation regarding the importance of meeting a patient at their definition of health.

Due to the increasing percentage of older adult clients in the U.S., it is imperative that healthcare providers assess and confront their own attitudes and perceptions toward older adults.

Directions:

Due to the increasing percentage of older adult clients in the U.S., it is imperative that healthcare providers assess and confront their own attitudes and perceptions toward older adults.

In your initial post, address the following:

  1. Describe ageism and its impact on societal views of older adult clients.
  2. Explain how ageism can influence the healthcare provisions of older adult clients.
  3. As a healthcare provider, how can one best assess and confront attitudes, perceptions, behaviors, and biases toward older adults?

Respond to at least one of your peers who has different perspectives than your own.

Please make your initial post by midweek, and respond to at least one other student’s post by the end of the week. Please check the Course Calendar for specific due dates.

Write a description of the patient case from your experiences, observations, and/or clinical practice from the last 5 years.

Write a description of the patient case from your experiences, observations, and/or clinical practice from the last 5 years. Then, describe factors that might have influenced pharmacokinetic and pharmacodynamic processes of the patient you identified. Finally, explain details of the personalized plan of care that you would develop based on influencing factors and patient history in your case. Be specific and provide examples.

Tom discusses the difference between fixed mindset versus growth mindset. Do you know someone who functions with a fixed mindset or growth mindset?

• Tom discusses the difference between fixed mindset versus growth mindset. Do you know someone who functions with a fixed mindset or growth mindset?

• Do you think it will be easier to advance in nursing school and practice with a fixed mindset, growth mindset or a little of both? And why?

References

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Evaluate a culture/population of interest to assess a current need.

1. Evaluate a culture/population of interest to assess a current need.  Examples may include patients in various care environments, gender identity groups, racial identity, ethnic identity, etc.

2. Using the population/culture identified, devise a culturally sensitive response plan that addresses a specific need in that population. What objectives will you meet through this response plan?

3. After reading your textbook, consider the role of the DNP in education. Write an educational intervention plan that addresses your objectives. Using scholarly inquiry, discuss cost-effectiveness, feasibility, and the timeline for implementation of your plan.

Part 2, Section 1: Writing Sample: The Connection Between Academic and Professional Integrity

Part 2, Section 1: Writing Sample: The Connection Between Academic and Professional Integrity

Using the Academic and Professional Success Development Template you began in Module 1, write a 2- to 3-paragraph analysis that includes the following:

  • Explanation for the relationship between academic integrity and writing
  • Explanation for the relationship between professional practices and scholarly ethics
  • Cite at least two resources that support your arguments, being sure to use proper APA formatting.
  • Use Grammarly and Turnitin to improve the product.
  • Explain how Grammarly, Turnitin, and paraphrasing contribute to academic integrity.

Part 2, Section 2: Strategies for Maintaining Integrity of Work

Expand on your thoughts from Section 1 by identifying and describing strategies you intend to pursue to maintain integrity and ethics of your:

  1. academic work as a student of the MSN program and
  2. professional work as a nurse throughout your career. Include a review of resources and approaches you propose to use as a student and a professional.

Challenges of targeting vascular stability in acute kidney injury  & The importance of early detection in stopping  acute kidney injury

(1) Read the” Acute kidney injury: Challenges and opportunities “article then the two additional articles (  Challenges of targeting vascular stability in acute kidney injury  & The importance of early detection in stopping  acute kidney injury)

2. After you’ve read the 3 articles (attached) provide an un plagiarized summation of at least 500 words. Include all 3 references. Use APA format throughout the document.

FUTURE BUZZ ACU T E K IDNE Y INJURY

FUTURE BUZZ ACU T E K IDNE Y INJURY

The importance of early detection in stopping acute kidney injury By Salvatore Di Somma, MD

A cute kidney injury (AKI) is as serious and common as a heart attack, and it can strike without any warning signs or symptoms. It affects as many one in fi ve hospital pa-

tients in the United States1 and can rapidly develop into chronic kidney disease (CKD) or kidney failure, leading in more severe cases to the need for permanent dialysis treatment with com- promised quality of life or even to death. Sometimes called a silent killer, AKI is often overlooked as the true cause of mortal- ity. AKI is also one of the costliest health issues both in the U.S. and around the world.

Compounding the problem is that the medical community has been slow to recognize the disease and implement a stan- dard of care. However, recent developments and research have led to new testing that can detect AKI much earlier than other commonly used tests and is expected to improve clinical and economic outcomes for patients and hospitals.

What is AKI? AKI is the rapid deterioration of kidney function within hours or days. It is often diagnosed in the context of other acute ill- nesses.2 It indicates initial subclinical kidney cell injury that can be reversible if the condition is detected early, before dysfunc- tion. AKI is most commonly brought on by an infl ux of drugs or toxins or contrast-induced substances, a blockage of urine, serious infection, trauma, acute heart failure, major surgery, or chronic illness. Up to 50 percent of critically ill patients will develop some stage of AKI.3 Patients most at risk are those in intensive care, as well as the elderly and diabetic patients.

AKI can cause the accumulation of waste products, electro- lytes, and fl uid in the body as well as reduced immunity and dysfunction of other organs.2 Prevention through proper test- ing is the best measure to address AKI. Treatment of AKI can include many different therapeutic strategies such as reducing the intake of antibiotics or other drugs, managing fl uids and diuretic dosages, and monitoring urine output. Other treat- ments or surgeries could be delayed until the kidneys are functioning normally. If detection of the risks of AKI occurs early enough and changes to treatment are made, the kid- neys can sometimes normalize themselves; consequently, it is crucial to immediately recognize all phases of AKI occurrence.

More cases, more costs While AKI is a preventable disease, it is a growing problem around the world. A 2014 report by the National Confi den- tial Enquiry into Patient Outcome and Death (NCEPOD), a London-based nonprofi t that reviews the management of pa- tients through research and surveys, found that 30 percent of AKI cases that occurred during hospital admission were avoid- able. The same report established that only 50 percent of pa- tients with AKI received an overall standard of care considered good. Rates for AKI and mortality in ICU patients with AKI are quite similar across the continents. Current strategies to reduce AKI in developed countries have been found to be ineffective or have not been adequately implemented. It is also remarkable that the different levels of healthcare systems across the conti- nents, from the most to the least advanced, do not infl uence the mortality rate of AKI.

AKI has been known to the medical community for at least the past century. Over the past two decades, however, the avail- ability of electronic health records and large cohorts of patients with AKI have made studying the disease in different settings possible. Studies show that both the number of cases and the severity of the disease have been increasing. People are living longer, so there are more patients at risk of developing AKI worldwide, particularly those with chronic conditions and those undergoing major surgery. As a result, there have been rapid increases in the incidence of AKI reported, highlighting a growing impact on the public health burden of advanced kidney disease in the U.S. and beyond. In fact, a 2014 study published in Kidney International showed that AKI occurs in 18 percent of all general hospitalizations and up to 50 percent of all ICU cases worldwide.4 AKI cases requiring dialysis have also become more prevalent.4

The mortality rate of hospitalized patients with AKI is remaining steady, continuing to be high at about 50 percent.5 In the U.S. alone, AKI is responsible for two million deaths per year6 and $10 billion in costs to the healthcare system.7 The later AKI is detected, the greater the associated costs. For pa- tients, AKI can lead to longer hospital stays and higher hospi- tal bills, particularly when they are referred to chronic dialy- sis treatment. As a consequence, for hospitals detecting AKI early is critical to improving care and patient outcomes and reducing costs.

Despite the disease’s prevalence and severity, AKI awareness among patients and those in the medical community, including doctors and hospital administrators, is still relatively low. AKI has been identifi ed by different methodologies, and there was no standardization of care until 2012, when the global nonprofi t Kidney Disease Improving Global Outcomes (KDIGO), dedi- cated to improving the care and outcomes of kidney disease patients around the world, created the KDIGO Clinical Practice Guidelines for Acute Kidney Injury. This development has con- tributed to more widespread discussion and awareness about the disease.

Testing is the answer Addressing both the clinical and economic concerns related to AKI requires prevention by early detection and treatment of patients at risk for developing the disease. Since 1917, the way to test for AKI has been by serum creatinine (SCr). Today, AKI is still most commonly detected by SCr and urine output tests, based on RIFLE (Risk, Injury, Failure, Loss of kidney func- tion, and End-stage kidney disease), AKIN (Acute Kidney In- jury Network), or KDIGO methods. The problem with using SCr for detection of AKI, however, is that the diagnosis comes too late. The time required to detect a rise in SCr as a conse- quence of kidney damage is 24 to 48 hours, and during this pe- riod of initial renal cellular damage, before SCr rises, almost 50 percent of kidney function can be lost.8 Serum creatinine lev- els also can be abnormal due to factors that are not related to kidney function, since it is coming as degradation of muscle cells, and from the liver, independent of kidney function.

The SCr and urine output tests measure the function of the kidney, so it should be noted that these tests detect

continued on page 40

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FUTURE BUZZ ACU T E K IDNE Y INJURY

Salvatore Di Somma, MD, serves as

Director Emergency Medicine, Faculty

of Medicine and Psychology, Sapienza

University of Rome, Sant’Andrea

Hospital Rome. He is also an Associ-

ate Professor of Medicine, Faculty of

Medicine and Psychology, Sapienza

University of Rome, Department of

Medical-Surgery Sciences and Translational Medicine,

and Chairman Postgraduate School of Emergency

Medicine, Faculty of Medicine and Psychology,

Sapienza University of Rome.

dysfunction, not injury. Because of this, the medical community has been able to diagnose the disease only after the kidney has been damaged and there is already a higher risk of mortality. The goal should be to identify patients who are suffering an injury, so clinicians can intervene and remove the cause of the injury before it causes dysfunction.

One assay that recently became commercially available in the U.S. and Europe detects injury before the loss of function. It is a urine test that provides lab results in 16 minutes, allow- ing clinicians to assess the risk of AKI and proactively inter- vene before damage occurs. While SCr is a fi ltration function marker, the new test measures the TIMP2 and IGFBP7 proteins that are upregulated in response to cellular/tissue injury. Com- pared to SCr, the new test is more sensitive, accurate, and, most important, faster in indicating AKI.

Biomarkers are traditionally identifi ed through theoretical discovery but are often proven not to have viable applications in a clinical setting. The discovery of the TIMP2 and IGFBP7 biomarkers was different in that it was the result of a dedicated study created to identify and validate new biomarkers of AKI. The study isolated a group of more than 522 critically ill adults in three distinct cohorts—including patients with sepsis, shock, trauma, and major surgery—and a comparison group, and ex- amined more than 300 biomarkers. As a result, the two novel biomarkers, the TIMP2 and IGFBP7, were clinically validated as the best indicators of patients at risk for AKI.

All healthcare professionals need to know that AKI is detect- able and preventable. Incorporating best practices and new methods for testing for AKI should be part of any quality care protocol. Improving the clinical and economic outcomes of AKI begins with detection.

REFERENCES

1. Kidney Disease: Improving Global Outcomes (KDIGO) Acute Kidney Injury Work Group. Kidney Inter., Suppl. 2012;2:1-138.1. 2. Ostermann M, Joannidas M. Acute kidney injury 2016: diagnosis and diagnostic workup. Crit Care. 2016;20:299. 3. Mandelbaum T, Scott D, Lee J, et al. Outcome of critically ill patients with acute kidney injury using the AKIN Criteria. Crit Care Med. 2011;39(12)2659-2664. 4. Siew ED, Davenport A. The growth of acute kidney injury: a rising tide or just closer attention to details? Kidney Int. 2015;87(1):46–61. 5. Ympa YP, Skar Y, Reinhart K, Vincent JL. Has mortality from acute renal failure de- creased? A systematic review of the literature. Am J Med. 2005;118(8):827-832. 6. Ali T, Khan I, Simpson W, et al. Incidence and outcomes in acute kidney injury: a comprehensive population-based study. J Am Soc Nephrol. 2007;18(4):1292-1298. 7. Chertow GM, Burdick E, Honour M, Bonventre JV, Bates DW. Acute kidney in- jury, mortality, length of stay, and costs in hospitalized patients. J Am Soc Nephrol. 2005:16:3365-3370. 8. Ramanathan L. Acute Kidney Injury Risk Assessment, Challenges and Opportunities. Ortho on Demand. 2015.

continued from page 38

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Reproduced with permission of copyright owner. Further reproduction prohibited without permission.

Acute kidney injury: Challenges and opportunities

(1)Read “Acute kidney injury: Challenges and opportunities” article then the two additional article files (Challenges Acute Kidney Injury and Acute Kidney Injury Cancer Patients.)

(2)After you’ve read the 3 articles (attached) provide an unplagiarized summation of at least 500 words. Include all 3 references.  Use APA format throughout the document.

Kidney International

Kidney International (2008) 74 257

commentar yhttp://www.kidney-international.org

© 2008 International Society of Nephrology

The compromise of renal microvascular structure has received considerable atten- tion as a central and possibly causative feature of the development of chronic fibrotic kidney diseases. The reduction in capillary number has been reported in a number of chronic diseases and has been suggested to promote fibrosis in a variety of different ways, including the exacerbation of hypoxia.1,2 However, in the case of chronic kidney disease, the reduction of renal microvessels repre- sents a chicken-and-egg dilemma: does microvessel dropout contribute to renal fibrosis, or does developing renal fibro- sis impinge on renal capillary stability? The answer to this is not known, but data derived from acute or subtle injury mod- els (folate, ischemia, nephrotoxin, tran- sient angiotensin II) demonstrate a loss of capillaries that typically precedes the development of prominent fibrosis.3–5

These observations suggest that pres- ervation or reversal of microvascular loss in a reversible injury model represents a sound strategy for ameliorating the

Challenges of targeting vascular stability in acute kidney injury David P. Basile1

Acute kidney injury following folate administration is characterized by a vascular remodeling that is initially proliferative but subsequently results in vascular endothelial loss. Interventions directed toward promoting endothelial growth may preserve vascular structure and therefore renal function. However, angiopoietin-1 therapy in the setting of folate-induced acute kidney injury resulted in an expanded fibrotic response despite apparent preservation of the vasculature, indicating that renal repair responses are complex and vascular-directed therapies should be approached with caution. Kidney International (2008) 74, 257–258. doi:10.1038/ki.2008.243

development of renal interstitial fibrosis, as well as addressing the role of vascular dropout as an antecedent event in pro- gressing disease. We and others have dem- onstrated that a number of factors with potential to influence vascular growth are altered in the early course of renal injury (in our experience using ischemia/reper- fusion) and have argued that replacement or enhancement of these factors should maintain blood vessel structure and influ- ence long-term outcome.1,6,7

Angiopoietin-1 is a potent angiogenic factor that interacts with the Tie-2 recep- tor on endothelial cells. Angiopoietin-1 has little or no proliferative potential but is a potent inhibitor of endothelial apop- tosis.8 Angiopoietin-1 has promigratory effects on endothelial cells, and this may relate to its important activity facilitat- ing tube formation during angiogenesis. Angiopoietin-1 stimulation also tightens endothelial junctions to reduce vascular leakiness, and this activity may be related to its anti-inflammatory effects. In general, angiopoietin-1 is considered a prominent vascular stabilizing factor in the develop- ment of new blood vessels. Although the effects of angiopoietin-1 are complicated by the sometimes antagonistic activity of the related protein angiopoietin-2, the activities suggest that angiopoietin-1 is ideally suited as a molecule with potential to preserve blood vessels therapeutically.8

The regenerating kidney after an acute insult provides an opportunity to intervene at a potentially critical window of time in which remodeling events may influence vascular integrity and affect long-term function. Angiopoietin-1 expression is increased in a model of acute kidney injury induced by folate administration9 and recently was also shown to be increased in a model of ischemic acute kidney injury.7 It is reasonable to hypothesize that such alterations in expression may represent an attempt to preserve the renal vascula- ture undergoing active injury. It could be suggested that further enhancement of angiopoietin-1 would enhance vascular preservation following acute injury. As it turns out, it also represents an invitation for unanticipated complications.

Long et al.10 (this issue) have sought to address the potential therapeutic role of angiopoietin-1 using adenoviral delivery of a modified human angiopoietin-1 in a mouse model of folate-induced acute kid- ney injury. This model is typically associ- ated with an early (2–3 days) proliferation of cortical capillary endothelial cells fol- lowed by a gradual regression of these cap- illaries at longer times during recovery.9 It was hypothesized that angiopoietin-1 delivery may prevent the regression of capillaries in this model. This indeed was the case. Interestingly, the investigators also observed the simultaneous enhance- ment of interstitial fibrosis characterized by collagen deposition and increased inflammatory-cell deposition.10

Although the authors may have antici- pated different results, the implications of these findings are profound and impactful among those who are interested in vascu- lar repair processes and their potential to affect kidney function. The study should raise considerable awareness of the com- plicated nature of renal repair character- ized by a complex milieu of cell types and altered chemical signaling. It forces atten- tion to the fact that although angiogenesis may be observed in cultures in response to a given trophic factor, in vivo these molecules are promiscuous and may be highly inflammatory depending on the specific setting. It reminds us that renal injury has a prominent inflammatory

1Department of Cellular & Integrative Physiology, Indiana University School of Medicine, Indianapolis, Indiana, USA Correspondence: David P. Basile, Department of Cellular & Integrative Physiology, Indiana University School of Medicine, 635 Barnhill Drive, Indianapolis, Indiana 46202, USA. E-mail: dpbasile@iupui.edu

see original article on page 300

 

 

258 Kidney International (2008) 74

commentar y

component that cannot be overlooked in the evaluation of potential interventions.

Importantly, angiopoietin-1 did, appar- ently, preserve vascular integrity as would be predicted, but the added inflammatory activity is contradictory to its generally observed anti-inflammatory activity. The reason for this may represent an interesting area of future investigation. However, there is evidence that angiopoietin-1 may activate a cascade of inflammatory cytokines.11

In addition, the results should high- light that therapy geared toward vascular preservation or repair may not be ubiqui- tously applied across pathophysiological conditions. Clearly, as the authors noted,10 there has already been considerable atten- tion paid to the potential utility of vascu- lar endothelial growth factor-A, which is protective to blood vessels and prevents further fibrosis in several, but not all, models investigated.12–14 In the case of angiopoietins, a novel and potent form, termed COMP-angiopoietin-1, has been shown to be effective in limiting fibrosis in a model of ureteral obstruction.15 How- ever, as Long et al. point out,10 factors such as the establishment of an effective dose and the form of angiopoietin-1 adminis- tered may also play an important role in outcome. The point of emphasis is that not all conditions are alike, and several other factors may influence vascular stability in disease models. One molecule is not likely to represent a panacea promoting vascular preservation without complications.

Several other questions are brought to mind in consideration of this area of investigation. The first question is whether therapy that targets the vasculature rep- resents a useful approach at all, and if so, what is the basis for deciding what path- ways should be targeted. Although vessel density is clearly compromised and asso- ciated with hypoxia,1 vascular rarefaction does not occur as the sole and isolated event after injury with the potential to complicate chronic kidney function. Recent studies from our laboratory demonstrated that the manifestation of salt-sensitive hypertension and profound secondary chronic kidney disease was essentially nullified by admin- istration of mycophenolate mofetil after the establishment of vascular injury induced by ischemia/reperfusion in rats.16 We interpret these results to suggest that both hypoxia

occurring secondary to vascular loss and a complexity of infiltrating cells are required for the development of fulminant disease and that any of these may represent useful therapeutic targets.

If, as we believe, targeting the vasculature is important, the choice of molecules to be tested may require more specific informa- tion regarding the nature of vascular drop- out. For example, a more global perspective on the alterations of vasculotrophic fac- tors in specific models is required, and therapies should use combinations of factors to compensate for alterations in the angiogenic milieu of the injured kid- ney. Secondly, and related to the previous point, additional knowledge of the likely mechanism by which endothelial cells are lost would be helpful. Curiously, very little is known of the cellular events that lead to the loss of capillary endothelial cells in the setting of acute injury. Although an obvious hypothesis is that endothelial cells undergo apoptosis, aside from a sepsis model there is little direct evidence to sup- port this contention.

As a final point of consideration, we would like to bring attention to the meth- odology used by Long et al.10 to establish preserved vessel density in response to angiopoietin-1 treatment. These investi- gators used CD31 immunohistochemistry to beautiful ly demonstrate that angiopoietin-1- exposed animals have a preserved or enhanced vasculature. This technique is well established, and we have used this approach in our own work. Nev- ertheless, in light of the interesting, unex- pected, and paradoxical results, perhaps further analysis is warranted. Because ves- sels exist to support the perfusion needs of the organ, the physiological efficacy of these preserved vessels should be evaluated more thoroughly. In addition, given that there exist several populations of CD31- positive circulating cells, including many that also express markers of monocyte or macrophage lineage, it is possible that the deposition of such cells, which may be termed ‘angiogenic macrophages,’17 could result in an enhanced inflammatory state masquerading as an angiogenic response.

Regardless, this interesting study high- lights the promise and limitations of targeting the vasculature. In so doing, it defines important obstacles and allows us

to generate new and testable paradigms to mitigate this perplexing problem. DISCLOSURE The authors declared no competing interests.

REfEREnCES 1. Basile DP. The endothelial cell in ischemic acute

kidney injury: implications for acute and chronic function. Kidney Int 2007; 72: 151–156.

2. Norman J, Fine LG. Intrarenal oxygenation in chronic renal failure. Clin Exp Pharmacol Physiol 2006; 33: 989–996.

3. Yuan H-T, Li X-Z, Pitera JE et al. Peritubular capillary loss after mouse acute nephrotoxicity correlates with down-regulation of vascular endothelial growth factor-A and hypoxia-inducible factor-1 alpha. Am J Pathol 2003; 163: 2289–2301.

4. Lombardi D, Gordon KL, Polinsky P et al. Salt- sensitive hypertension develops after short-term exposure to angiotensin II. Hypertension 1999; 33: 1013–1019.

5. Basile DP, Donohoe DL, Roethe K et al. Renal ischemic injury results in permanent damage to peritubular capillaries and influences long-term function. Am J Physiol 2001; 281: F887–F899.

6. Basile DP, Fredrich K, Chelladurai B et al. Renal ischemia reperfusion inhibits VEGF expression and induces ADAMTS-1, a novel VEGF inhibitor. Am J Physiol Renal Physiol 2008; 294: F928–F936.

7. Horbelt M, Lee S, Mang H et al. Acute and chronic microvascular alterations in a mouse model of ischemic acute kidney injury. Am J Physiol Renal Physiol 2007; 293: F688–F695.

8. Brindle N, Saharinen P, Alitalo K. Signaling and functions of angiopoietin-1 in vascular protection. Circ Res 2006; 98: 1014–1023.

9. Long DA, Woolf AS, Suda T, Yuan HT. Increased renal angiopoietin-1 expression in folic acid-induced nephrotoxicity in mice. J Am Soc Nephrol 2001; 12: 2721–2731.

10. Long DA, Price KL, Ioffe E et al. Angiopoietin-1 therapy enhances fibrosis and inflammation following folic acid-induced acute renal injury. Kidney Int 2008; 74: 300–309.

11. Aplin A, Gelati M, Fogel E et al. Angiopoietin-1 and vascular endothelial growth factor induce expression of inflammatory cytokines before angiogenesis. Physiol Genomics 2006; 27: 20–28.

12. Long D, Mu W, Price K et al. Vascular endothelial growth factor administration does not improve microvascular disease in the salt-dependent phase of post angiotensin II hypertension. Am J Physiol 2006; 291: F1248–F1254.

13. Kang DH, Hughes J, Mazzali M et al. Impaired angiogenesis in the remnant kidney model. II. Vascular endothelial growth factor administration reduces renal fibrosis and stabilizes renal function. J Am Soc Nephrol 2001; 12: 1448–1457.

14. Kang DH, Anderson S, Kim YG et al. Impaired angiogenesis in the aging kidney: vascular endothelial growth factor and thrombospondin-1 in renal disease. Am J Kidney Dis 2001; 37: 601–611.

15. Kim W, Moon S, Lee S. COMP-angiopoietin-1 ameliorates renal fibrosis in a unilateral ureteral obstruction model. J Am Soc Nephrol 2006; 17: 2474–2483.

16. Pechman KR, Basile DP, Lund H, Mattson DL. Immune suppression blocks sodium-sensitive hypertension following recovery from ischemic acute renal failure. Am J Physiol Regul Integr Comp Physiol 2008; 294: R1234–R1239.

17. Ingram DA, Caplice NM, Yoder MC. Unresolved questions, changing definitions, and novel paradigms for defining endothelial progenitor cells. Blood 2005; 106: 1525–1531.

 

 

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