This study claims that Acute kidney injury was categorized based on duration to transient (48 hr or less) or persistent (more than 48 hr). Transient acute kidney injury occurred in 240 children (77.9%), whereas 68 children (22.1%) had persistent acute kidney injury. Persistent acute kidney injury had a higher proportion of stage 2 and stage 3 acute kidney injury compared with transient acute kidney injury and was more likely to start within 24 hours from PICU admission. Persistent acute kidney injury occurred more frequently in those with higher illness severity and in those admitted with shock, sepsis, or with a history of transplant. Mortality varied significantly according to acute kidney injury status: 1.8% of children with no acute kidney injury, 5.4% with transient acute kidney injury, and 17.6% with persistent acute kidney injury died during hospital stay (p < 0.001). On multivariable analysis adjusting for illness and acute kidney injury severity, transient and persistent acute kidney injury were both associated with fewer ventilation-free days at 28 days.  In critically ill children, persistent and transient acute kidney injury have different clinical characteristics and associations with outcomes. Acute kidney injury, even when its duration is short, carries a significant association with worse outcomes. This risk increases further if acute kidney injury persists longer independent of the degree of its severity.

Reference link- https://journals.lww.com/pccmjournal/fulltext/2021/07000/association_between_acute_kidney_injury_duration.6.aspx

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