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Debasish Banerjee

Researcher at St George’s University Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust

Publications -  123
Citations -  2734

Debasish Banerjee is an academic researcher from St George’s University Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust. The author has contributed to research in topics: Kidney disease & Medicine. The author has an hindex of 21, co-authored 97 publications receiving 2140 citations. Previous affiliations of Debasish Banerjee include St. George's University & University of Miami.

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Journal ArticleDOI

COVID-19 infection in kidney transplant recipients.

TL;DR: The findings suggest COVID-19 infection in kidney transplant patients may be severe, requiring intensive care admission, and associated with fever.
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The Reno-Protective Effect of Hydration With Sodium Bicarbonate Plus N-Acetylcysteine in Patients Undergoing Emergency Percutaneous Coronary Intervention: The RENO Study

TL;DR: Rapid intravenous hydration with sodium bicarbonate plus N-AC before contrast injection is effective and safe in the prevention of CIN in patients undergoing emergency PCI.
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Endothelial dysfunction, inflammation and atherosclerosis in chronic kidney disease--a cross-sectional study of predialysis, dialysis and kidney-transplantation patients.

TL;DR: The findings suggest that CKD patients taken together have a higher inflammatory status compared to controls and increased CRP levels were an independent predictor of both abnormal FMD and IMT values after adjusting for age, systolic and diastolic BP and total cholesterol.
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Assessment of GFR by four methods in adults in Ashanti, Ghana: the need for an eGFR equation for lean African populations

TL;DR: The MDRD-4 appeared to underestimate the fall in GFR with age compared with the three other measurements; the fall with CKD-EPI without the adjustment for race was the closest to that of Ccr, and the Cockcroft–Gault equation underestimated GFR compared with Ccr.
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Vitamin D deficiency and endothelial dysfunction in non-dialysis chronic kidney disease patients

TL;DR: This is the first demonstration of an association of vitamin D deficiency with abnormal vascular endothelial function in non-dialysis CKD patients and further studies with intervention and exploration of the mechanism are needed to establish a cause effect relationship.