Critical Care

official impact factor 4.60

Open Access

Acute kidney injury is common, parallels organ dysfunction or failure, and carries appreciable mortality in patients with major burns: a prospective exploratory cohort study

I Steinvall*, Z Bak and F Sjoberg

Critical Care 2008, 12:R124 doi:10.1186/cc7032

Accesses  

  • Last 30 days: 67 accesses
  • Last year: 705 accesses
  • All time: 3710 accesses

Cited by

BioMed Central: 5 citations

Research   Open Access Highly Accessed

Acute kidney injury is an independent risk factor for pediatric intensive care unit mortality, longer length of stay and prolonged mechanical ventilation in critically ill children: a two-center retrospective cohort study

Omar Alkandari, K Allen Eddington, Ayaz Hyder, France Gauvin, Thierry Ducruet, Ronald Gottesman, Véronique Phan, Michael Zappitelli Critical Care 2011, 15:R146 (10 June 2011)

Review   Free Highly Accessed

Year in review 2009: Critical Care - nephrology

Zaccaria Ricci, Claudio Ronco Critical Care 2010, 14:241 (5 November 2010)

Review   Free Highly Accessed

Year in review 2008: Critical Care - nephrology

Zaccaria Ricci, Claudio Ronco Critical Care 2009, 13:227 (21 October 2009)

Review   Free Highly Accessed

Year in review 2008: Critical Care - trauma

Jeffery C Metzger, Alexander L Eastman, Paul E Pepe Critical Care 2009, 13:226 (21 October 2009)

Commentary   Free

Acute kidney injury in burns: a story of volume and inflammation

Kirsten Colpaert, Eric A Hoste Critical Care 2008, 12:192 (25 November 2008)