Friedrich K. Port
University of Michigan
409 Papers
6.4K Citations
Friedrich K. Port is an academic researcher from University of Michigan. The author has contributed to research in topics: Medicine & Dialysis. The author has an hindex of 107, co-authored 403 publications. Previous affiliations of Friedrich K. Port include Amgen & Michigan State University.
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Papers
US Renal Data System 2015 Annual Data Report: Epidemiology of Kidney Disease in the United States.
Rajiv Saran,Yi Li,Bruce G. Robinson,Kevin C. Abbott,Lawrence Y. Agodoa,John Z. Ayanian,Jennifer L. Bragg-Gresham,Rajesh Balkrishnan,Joline L.T. Chen,Elizabeth Cope,Paul W. Eggers,Daniel L. Gillen,Debbie S. Gipson,Susan M. Hailpern,Yoshio N. Hall,Kevin He,William H. Herman,Michael Heung,Richard A. Hirth,David W. Hutton,Steven J. Jacobsen,Kamyar Kalantar-Zadeh,Csaba P. Kovesdy,Yee Lu,Miklos Z. Molnar,Hal Morgenstern,Brahmajee K. Nallamothu,Danh V. Nguyen,Ann M. O’Hare,Brett Plattner,Ronald L. Pisoni,Friedrich K. Port,Panduranga S. Rao,Connie M. Rhee,Ankit Sakhuja,Douglas E. Schaubel,David T. Selewski,Vahakn Shahinian,John J. Sim,Peter X.-K. Song,Elani Streja,Manjula Kurella Tamura,Francesca Tentori,Sarah L. White,Kenneth J. Woodside +44 more
TL;DR: Author(s): Saran, Rajiv; Li, Yi; Robinson, Bruce; Abbott, Kevin C; Agodoa, Lawrence YC; Ayanian, John; Bragg-Gresham, Jennifer; Balkrishnan, Rajesh; Chen, Joline LT; Cope, Elizabeth; Eggers, Paul W; Gillen, Daniel; Gipson, Debbie; Hailpern, Susan M; Hall, Yoshio N; Hirth, Richard A
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Predictors of Loss of Residual Renal Function among New Dialysis Patients
Louise Moist,Friedrich K. Port,Sean M. Orzol,Eric W. Young,Truls Østbye,Robert A. Wolfe,Tempie E. Hulbert-Shearon,Camille A. Jones,Wendy E. Bloembergen +8 more
TL;DR: Predictors of RRF loss were female gender, non-white race, prior history of diabetes, and time to follow-up, and use of a calcium channel blocker, all of which were independently associated with decreased risk ofRRF loss.
605
Pruritus in haemodialysis patients: international results from the Dialysis Outcomes and Practice Patterns Study (DOPPS)
Ronald L. Pisoni,Björn Wikström,Stacey J. Elder,Tadao Akizawa,Yashushi Asano,Marcia L. Keen,Rajiv Saran,David C. Mendelssohn,Eric W. Young,Friedrich K. Port +9 more
TL;DR: The many poor outcomes associated withPruritus underscore the need for better therapeutic agents to provide relief for the 40-50% of HD patients affected by pruritus, and may be substantially attributed to poor sleep quality.
Longer treatment time and slower ultrafiltration in hemodialysis: associations with reduced mortality in the DOPPS.
Rajiv Saran,Jennifer L. Bragg-Gresham,Nathan W. Levin,Zbylut J. Twardowski,Volker Wizemann,Akira Saito,Naoki Kimata,Brenda W. Gillespie,Christian Combe,Jürgen Bommer,T. Akiba,Donna Mapes,Eric W. Young,Friedrich K. Port +13 more
TL;DR: Longer TT and higher Kt/V were independently as well as synergistically associated with lower mortality, and a randomized clinical trial of longer dialysis sessions in thrice-weekly HD is warranted.
557
Disparities in Incidence of Diabetic End-Stage Renal Disease According to Race and Type of Diabetes
Catherine C. Cowie,Friedrich K. Port,Robert A. Wolfe,Peter J. Savage,Patricia P. Moll,Victor M. Hawthorne +5 more
TL;DR: An increased risk of diabetic end-stage renal disease among blacks as compared with whites, particularly blacks with NIDDM is indicated, although the risk of insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus disease is higher in patients with IDDM, the majority of patients with Diabetes mellitus in the population the authors studied had NID DM.
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