The NephJC discussion has two visual abstracts. The first from Divya
And the other by study author Thomas Forbes
In this edition of NephJC, we discuss the largest case series of kidney biopsies in patients with Diabetes.
This week we will discuss whether a bundled, team-based hypertension intervention- featuring intensive BP targets, home monitoring, health coaching, and audit feedback- can overcome poverty, clinical inertia, and fragmented care to improve blood pressure control in low-income patients receiving care at federally qualified health centers.
This week, we will discuss a phase 2 trial of the TRPC6 inhibitor BI 764198 in FSGS—an early signal for a podocyte-targeted therapy showing proteinuria reduction but set against small numbers, heterogeneity, and methodological trade-offs that frame this as direction-finding rather than definitive evidence.
This week, we will discuss why a large registry cohort was needed to move past decades of scattered case reports and clarify the true risk of hydralazine‑associated vasculitis. When rare events hide in noise, only scale can reveal the signal. Can population‑level data finally bring this paradox into focus?
The NephJC discussion has two visual abstracts. The first from Divya
And the other by study author Thomas Forbes
Getting ‘THE CALL’ for a deceased donor organ transplant….and coming to know it is from a high risk or increased risk donor. From someone who was has died of a drug overdose. What does it mean for a patient on dialysis eager to stop dialysis - but worried about receiving a gift that lasts? Susan Kjos explores the dilemma
For this #NephJC, Samira Farouk, from the NSMC class of 2018 and a nephrology fellow from Mount Sinai, NY, has not only written an excellent summary - but also created the visual abstract, and will be hosting the chat next week.
Here is the visual abstract from NSMC intern Sinead Stoneman.
Also new this week: we turn over the reigns of #NephJC even for the hosting duties
Full visual abstract at this link.
We also have a Spanish version of the Visual Abstract, courtesy Pablo Garcia:
Sara Gleeson did this wonderful visual abstract for this week's NephJC discussion
Michelle Lim is killing it with her visual abstracts
NSMC intern, and Visual abstract maestro, Aakash Shingada shines again with a fantastic visual abstract.
For full resolution image, click here.
NSMC intern Aakash Shingada works his magic. Check out the visual abstract! Full size image at link.
Michelle Lim is back with another visual abstract. This is for the NEJM article linking childhood kidney disease with ESKD decades later.
Last week’s #AskASN was all about cardiorenal syndrome. We had a great turnout and really interesting discussion.
Take a look at this visual abstract about diuretic induced “worsening kidney function” (That’s cardiology-speak for AKI). The visual abstract was done by Michelle Lim, NSMC intern.
Visual Abstract for this week’s (tonight’s!) #NephJC by Bea Concepcion
Roopa Shah did this great visual abstract