J
Josée Bouchard
Researcher at Université de Montréal
Publications - 89
Citations - 4793
Josée Bouchard is an academic researcher from Université de Montréal. The author has contributed to research in topics: Acute kidney injury & Renal replacement therapy. The author has an hindex of 30, co-authored 85 publications receiving 3750 citations. Previous affiliations of Josée Bouchard include Montreal Heart Institute & University of California, San Diego.
Papers
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Journal ArticleDOI
Fluid accumulation, survival and recovery of kidney function in critically ill patients with acute kidney injury
Josée Bouchard,Sharon B. Soroko,Glenn M. Chertow,Jonathan Himmelfarb,T. Alp Ikizler,Emil P. Paganini,Ravindra L. Mehta +6 more
TL;DR: In patients with acute kidney injury, fluid overload was independently associated with mortality, and patients with fluid overload when their serum creatinine reached its peak were significantly less likely to recover kidney function.
Journal ArticleDOI
Fluid accumulation, recognition and staging of acute kidney injury in critically-ill patients
Etienne Macedo,Josée Bouchard,Sharon Soroko,Glenn M. Chertow,Jonathan Himmelfarb,T. Alp Ikizler,Emil P. Paganini,Ravindra L. Mehta +7 more
TL;DR: In critically-ill patients, the dilution of sCr by fluid accumulation may lead to underestimation of the severity of AKI and increases the time required to identify a 50% relative increase in sCr.
Journal ArticleDOI
Sepsis as a cause and consequence of acute kidney injury: Program to Improve Care in Acute Renal Disease
Ravindra L. Mehta,Josée Bouchard,Sharon B. Soroko,T. Alp Ikizler,Emil P. Paganini,Glenn M. Chertow,Jonathan Himmelfarb +6 more
TL;DR: Sepsis frequently develops after AKI and portends a poor prognosis, with high mortality rates and relatively long LOS, and future studies should evaluate techniques to monitor for and manage this complication to improve overall prognosis.
Book ChapterDOI
Diagnosis of Acute Kidney Injury Using Functional and Injury Biomarkers: Workgroup Statements from the Tenth Acute Dialysis Quality Initiative Consensus Conference
Peter A. McCullough,Andrew D. Shaw,Michael Haase,Josée Bouchard,Sushrut S. Waikar,Edward D. Siew,Patrick T. Murray,Ravindra L. Mehta,Claudio Ronco +8 more
TL;DR: It is recommended that novel damage biomarkers may, in the appropriate clinical setting and context, be used to diagnose AKI even in the absence of changes in serum creatinine or the presence of oliguria as described in the existing RIFLE/AKIN criteria for diagnosis of AKI.
Journal ArticleDOI
Oliguria is an early predictor of higher mortality in critically ill patients.
TL;DR: Oliguria of more than 12 h and oliguria of 3 or more episodes were associated with an increased mortality rate and urine output is a sensitive and early marker for AKI and is associated with adverse outcomes in intensive care unit patients.