Kyle White
Princess Alexandra Hospital
10 Papers
7 Citations
Kyle White is an academic researcher from Princess Alexandra Hospital. The author has contributed to research in topics: Medicine & Interquartile range. The author has an hindex of 3, co-authored 3 publications.
Chat about Author
Papers
Sepsis-associated acute kidney injury in the intensive care unit: incidence, patient characteristics, timing, trajectory, treatment, and associated outcomes. A multicenter, observational study.
Kyle White,Ary Serpa-Neto,R. W. Hurford,Pierre Clement,Kevin B. Laupland,Emily J See,James P. McCullough,Hayden White,Kiran Shekar,Alexis Tabah,Mahesh Ramanan,Peter Garrett,A. Attokaran,Siva Senthuran,Philippa A McIlroy,Rinaldo Bellomo +15 more
TL;DR: SA-AKI occurs in 1 in 6 ICU patients, is diagnosed on day 1 and carries significant morbidity and mortality risk with patients mostly admitted from home via the emergency department, but most SA-AKI is stage 1 and mostly due to low UO, which carries much lower risk than diagnosis by other criteria.
72
Patient characteristics, interventions and outcomes of 1151 rapid response team activations in a tertiary hospital: a prospective study.
TL;DR: The characteristics of mature contemporary rapid response systems are unclear and the need for further study is unclear.
33
Rapid response teams in adult hospitals: Time for another look?
TL;DR: An overview of the current state of play of RRT in hospital practice as they pertain to the care of adult patients is presented and several issues around their implementation and evaluation that should be subject to further research are identified.
27
Derivation and validation of a risk score for predicting mortality among inpatients following rapid response team activation
TL;DR: A validated risk score predicted risk of post-RRT death with more than 80% accuracy, helping to identify patients for whom targeted rescue care may improve survival.
11
Current management of fluid balance in critically ill patients with acute kidney injury: A scoping review
Kyle White,A. Nasser,Michelle L. Gatton,Kevin B. Laupland +3 more
TL;DR: The current body of evidence for the management of FB in critically ill patients with AKI is limited in nature and the current quality of evidence is unable to guide current clinical practice.
3