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10 Medications That May Raise Your Risk of Kidney Damage

Written by Hindu Rao, PharmD, APh, BCACP | Reviewed by Katie E. Golden, MD Updated on May 1, 2024print_outlinedemail_outlined Key takeaways: Access savings on related medications info_outlinedPromotional disclosure IbuprofenNaproxenVancomycinHydrochlorothiazideFurosemide Table of contents NSAIDs Diuretics ACE inhibitors Contrast dyes Vancomycin Aminoglycosides HIV medications Other antivirals Zoledronic acid Calcineurin inhibitors Seeking help Bottom line References Ika84/iStock via Getty Images Plus...

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Study links phosphate levels to kidney damage markers

by University of Tsukuba Credit: Pixabay/CC0 Public Domain Researchers at University of Tsukuba have found that the phosphate concentration in proximal tubule fluid, estimated from urine and blood tests, is associated with elevated renal tubular damage markers. Their findings, published in the Journal of Renal Nutrition, suggest that lifestyle modifications that reduce phosphate concentration in the proximal tubule fluid...

10 Medications That May Raise Your Risk of Kidney Damage
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10 Medications That May Raise Your Risk of Kidney Damage

Written by Hindu Rao, PharmD, APh, BCACP | Reviewed by Katie E. Golden, MD Updated on April 27, 2023 Key takeaways: Certain medications, called nephrotoxic medications, can damage your kidneys. This can make it harder for your kidneys to filter waste and other substances from your bloodstream. Nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (NSAIDs), diuretics, and angiotensin-converting enzyme...

Cell therapy may slow kidney damage from type 2 diabetes
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Cell therapy may slow kidney damage from type 2 diabetes

by National University of Ireland, Galway Credit: Pixabay/CC0 Public Domain University of Galway, in collaboration with the NEPHSTROM Consortium, has announced promising results from a new cell therapy trial for people living with diabetes. The NEPHSTROM clinical trial is taking the first steps to investigate the value of a novel cell therapy for adults who...

Research in human kidney organoids reveals target to prevent irreversible kidney damage
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Research in human kidney organoids reveals target to prevent irreversible kidney damage

by Massachusetts General Hospital Credit: Pixabay/CC0 Public Domain To a certain extent, kidneys have the capacity to repair themselves after being injured, but a switch can occur from such intrinsic repair to incomplete repair that leads to irreversible damage and chronic kidney disease (CKD). A team led by researchers at Massachusetts General Hospital (MGH) recently...

Organoids reveal the tipping point when kidney damage turns irreversible
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Organoids reveal the tipping point when kidney damage turns irreversible

By Elizabeth Cooney March 2, 2022 Reprints Kidney organoids with markers of nephrons (purple, light blue, green) and stroma (red and yellow). Researchers used the miniature models to study when kidney damage turns irreversible.N. GUPTA, ET AL., SCIENCE TRANSLATIONAL MEDICINE Chronic kidney disease is a serious medical problem that changes the lives of about 13%...

Scientists discover mechanism behind how certain osmolytes cause kidney damage
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Scientists discover mechanism behind how certain osmolytes cause kidney damage

TOKYO METROPOLITAN UNIVERSITY IMAGE: HYPEROSMOTIC STRESS LEADS TO A REORGANIZATION OF ACTIN STRUCTURE IN TUBULAR EPITHELIAL CELLS, WITH ELEVATED INCORPORATION OF ALPHA-SMA AND REORGANIZATION OF FOCAL ADHESIONS. THIS LEADS TO EMT, AS EVIDENCED BY A DECREASE IN E-CADHERIN EXPRESSION. (BOTTOM) FLUORESCENCE SIGNAL SHOWING THE DECREASE IN E-CADHERIN (LEFT) AND INCREASE IN ALPHA-SMA (RIGHT) IN KIDNEY...

Southampton-led study shows need for painkiller caution to prevent kidney damage
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Southampton-led study shows need for painkiller caution to prevent kidney damage

UNIVERSITY OF SOUTHAMPTON IMAGE: GRAPHIC SUMMARY OF FINDINGS CREDIT: UNIVERSITY OF SOUTHAMPTON Research has found that prescriptions of non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (NSAIDs) reduced over the two years before the pandemic. However, they were still being given to some people at high risk of kidney damage. The study was led by Dr Simon Fraser, Associate Professor of...

Kidney damage can result from coronavirus infection
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Kidney damage can result from coronavirus infection

by Radboud University Kidney sections from healthy control (left) and COVID-19 patient (right). Scar tissue is blue. Credit: Jitske Jansen and Bart Smeets, Radboudumc The coronavirus SARS-CoV-2 infects the kidneys and contributes to tissue scarring, as shown by researchers from the RWTH Uniklinik Aachen, Germany, and Radboudumc, The Netherlands. The developed scar tissue in the...

Scientists seek to shift treatment of kidney damage caused by cancer drug
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Scientists seek to shift treatment of kidney damage caused by cancer drug

by Jane E. Dee,  Yale University Credit: Unsplash/CC0 Public Domain In a new paper accepted for publication in the Journal of the American Society of Nephrology, researchers at Yale School of Medicine share findings that indicate that, for the first time, there is a potential renal targeted treatment for kidney injury caused by cisplatin, a widely used...