Clinical Journal of the American Society of Nephrology (CJASN) American Society of Nephrology
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- Health & Fitness
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Clinical Journal of the American Society of Nephrology (CJASN) publishes high quality research relevant to clinical nephrology. Now one of the most widely-read and referenced kidney journals, physicians read CJASN to learn about the most important advances in clinical and translational research in nephrology.
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Kidney Measures and Venous Thromboembolism
Dr. Zhong Zheng provides an overview of his study, "Association of Estimated Glomerular Filtration Rate and Albuminuria with Venous Thromboembolism," on behalf of his colleagues.
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Participant Experience in the KPMP - Spanish Language
Drs. Angela Maria Victoria-Castro and Celia Pamela Corona-Villalobos summarize the findings from their study, "Participant Experience with Protocol Research Kidney Biopsies in the Kidney Precision Medicine Project," in Spanish.
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Participant Experience in the KPMP
Drs. Angela Maria Victoria-Castro and Celia Pamela Corona-Villalobos summarize the findings from their study, "Participant Experience with Protocol Research Kidney Biopsies in the Kidney Precision Medicine Project," in English.
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Resveratrol in CKD
Dr. Diana I. Jalal and Colin Gimblet discuss the findings of their study, "Effect of Resveratrol on Endothelial Function in Patients with CKD and Diabetes: A Randomized Controlled Trial," on behalf of their colleagues.
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Metabolomics and Neurocognition
Dr. Arthur M. Lee provides an overview of the results of his study, "Circulating Metabolomic Associations with Neurocognitive Outcomes in Pediatric CKD," on behalf of his colleagues.
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Tubular Biomarkers and Kidney Histopathology in Diabetes
Dr. Christine Limonte summarizes the main findings from her study "Associations of Biomarkers of Tubular Injury and Inflammation with Biopsy Features in Type 1 Diabetes," on behalf of her colleagues.
Customer Reviews
Great content but too short.
This seems like a podcast for people that either hate listening to podcasts or hate hearing about medical literature. Open up the time limit and let these investigators really expound on their work. 4 minutes is too short!