Its March. Which means it is NephMadness.
In conjunction with NephMadness - Pain Region discussion, we discuss a recent JAMA Network Open study, reporting higher kidney risk in young men taking NSAIDs.
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?
Summary of the STEPS trial which will be a twitter spaces discussion
This week, we will discuss the HIT trial- a large randomized study challenging one of the most reflexive responses in hospital medicine: see hyponatremia, fix the sodium. But what if correcting the number doesn’t change what actually matters?
Did you know you can get latest from NephJC in Apple News? Follow this link and enjoy.
Sinead Stoneman did a nice visual abstract for this week’s discussion.
Can you convey the findings of this study in one image? We can definitely try. See this visualization from Divya Bajpai
Joel stepped up to the plate this week.
And as a bonus, a promotional infographic by Sinead Stoneman
Aakash Shingada stepped up with a visual abstract for this week’s NephJC Chat.