

Acute kidney injury (AKI) is among the most common organ failures observed in the hospital and can irrevocably alter the trajectory of a patient's short-term and long-term health.1–4 The lack of pharmacological treatments for AKI has generated broad interest in applying supportive care strategies that reduce the condition's development and complications.5,6 Multi-faceted, or so-called bundled-care interventions, have shown promise for reducing the incidence of AKI in single-centre studies, particularly in the perioperative setting, where preventive treatments are more easily timed than with AKI that occurs during acute illness.
General Medicine
|15th Jan, 2026
|The Lancet
General Medicine
|15th Jan, 2026
|The Lancet
General Medicine
|15th Jan, 2026
|The Lancet
General Medicine
|15th Jan, 2026
|The Lancet
General Medicine
|15th Jan, 2026
|The Lancet
General Medicine
|15th Jan, 2026
|The Lancet
General Medicine
|15th Jan, 2026
|The Lancet