Individuals with chronic kidney disease (CKD) are often not aware that the medical tests they take for other purposes may contain useful information about CKD, and that this information is sometimes not used effectively to tackle the identification of the disease. Therefore, attributes of different medical tests are investigated to identify which attributes may contain useful information about CKD. A database with several attributes of healthy subjects and subjects with CKD are analyzed using different techniques. Common spatial pattern (CSP) filter and linear discriminant analysis are first used to identify the dominant attributes that could contribute in detecting CKD. Here, the CSP filter is applied to optimize a separation between CKD and nonCKD subjects. Then, classification methods are also used to identify the dominant attributes. These analyses suggest that hemoglobin, albumin, specific gravity, hypertension, and diabetes mellitus, together with serum creatinine, are the most important attributes in the early detection of CKD. Further, it suggests that in the absence of information on hypertension and diabetes mellitus, random blood glucose and blood pressure attributes may be used.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/RBME.2017.2787480DOI Listing

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