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During the congress, E-Posters will be accessible to all participants on the congress website 24/7, as well as in the E-poster stations in the congress center.
Preparing your E-Poster
Please review the E-Poster format requirements carefully when preparing your E-Poster. Should your E-Poster not meet the mentioned requirements, it may not be displayed as described above.
E-Poster Submission Deadline
Please prepare and upload your E-Poster no later than March 14, 2026 11.59PM CET. After this date, you will no longer be able to prepare and upload your E-poster and it will not be displayed and accessible on the congress website.
Please follow the instructions below to input your abstract title.
Abstract titles should be brief and reflect the content of the abstract.
Acute kidney injury (AKI) is a life-threatening condition characterized by a rapid decline in kidney function over a short period of time. Our study aims to determine the clinical results of hemodialysis (HD) treatment performed on acute kidney injury (AKI) patients at Orkhon province hospital of Mongolia over the period of 15 years, and to identify the influencing factors. Continuous renal replacement therapy (CRRT) has not yet initiated in rural area in Mongolia.
Quantitative and qualitative analyses are done based on the medical archive, medical history data from November 20, 2009 to August 1, 2025. We studied the effectiveness of those HD treatment and analyzed the factors such as age, gender, cause, number of HD sessions.
We have provided HD treatment for a total of 827 patients. 679 were chronic kidney disease patients who maintained on HD. 148 were AKI patients who required HD. Out of those, 112 AKI patients (82 males and 30 females) were enrolled in this study. The mean age was 49.8 year. 83% of the patients recovered from AKI with HD treatment and showed improvement in kidney function. Deceased patients accounted 17%. The main causes of those deceased were delayed visit to hospital, severity of patient's condition, and presence of multiple organ failure. The leading cause of AKI was alcohol intoxication (46.4%), followed by drug-induced (10.7%), sepsis (9.8%), chemotherapy induced (8%), Crush syndrome (4.5%), acute pancreatitis (4.5%) and others (16.1%). Most patients (76.8%) recovered after 1-5 HD sessions, and some of them (16.8%) recovered after 6-10 HD sessions, however in severe cases (6.4%), more than 10 sessions were needed.
Our study shows that HD is essential treatment option for those with AKI. Further, CRRT is necessary in severe AKI patients in rural area in our country.