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Titte R. Srinivas

Researcher at Intermountain Healthcare

Publications -  99
Citations -  6163

Titte R. Srinivas is an academic researcher from Intermountain Healthcare. The author has contributed to research in topics: Kidney transplantation & Transplantation. The author has an hindex of 39, co-authored 97 publications receiving 5613 citations. Previous affiliations of Titte R. Srinivas include University of Florida & Case Western Reserve University.

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Lack of Improvement in Renal Allograft Survival Despite a Marked Decrease in Acute Rejection Rates Over the Most Recent Era

TL;DR: This work analyzed data provided by the Scientific Registry of Transplant Recipients regarding all adult first renal transplants between 1995 and 2000 to investigate how acute rejection rates have evolved on a national level in the U.S and how this has impacted graft survival in the most recent era of kidney transplantation.
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Metabolic Syndrome and Kidney Disease: A Systematic Review and Meta-analysis

TL;DR: MetS and its components are associated with the development of eGFR <60 ml/min per 1.73 m(2) and microalbuminuria or overt proteinuria and the strength of this association seemed to increase as the number of components of MetS increased.
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Kidney transplantation halts cardiovascular disease progression in patients with end-stage renal disease.

TL;DR: The data presented in this paper suggest that the development or progression of these lesions could be ameliorated by restoring renal function with a transplant and the CVD rates on the transplant waiting list increased sharply and progressively by wait listing vintage.
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Essential Hypertension, Progressive Renal Disease, and Uric Acid: A Pathogenetic Link?

TL;DR: Understanding the pathogenetic pathways mediating renal progression in hypertensive subjects should help identify those subjects at highest risk and may provide insights into new therapeutic maneuvers to slow or prevent progression.
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The changing causes of graft loss and death after kidney transplantation

TL;DR: The causes of graft loss and death have changed over the last three decades and better addressing the main causes of death, cardiac disease, and stroke with better prevention will help reduce graft loss due to death with a functioning graft.