Background: Chronic kidney disease (CKD) is a worldwide health problem due to its morbidity and mortality, and cost. World Kidney Day (WKD) has been planned to improve disease prevention. The aim of this study was to evaluate CKD risk factors and urinary abnormalities, collected on WKD along several years, in men and women.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBackground: Chronic kidney disease (CKD) is a worldwide health problem, and promotion of the World Kidney Day has improved general population education and awareness of renal illnesses aimed at ameliorating disease prevention. The Kidney Day was also an opportunity for us to investigate risk factors for CKD in an Italian population.
Patients And Methods: A total of 1,341 subjects from the general population living in the area of Ferrara, a town in the northeast of Italy, aged 50-70 years, were investigated.
Aim: During uraemia, an increase of middle molecules and acetylpolyamines occurs. In vitro the middle molecules produce cell toxicity, while the acetylpolyamines stimulate cell proliferation and differentiation. These phenomena are related to protein and extracellular glycosaminoglycan production.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBackground: Polyamines are involved in normal and pathological cell proliferation and differentiation. Like acid radicals, they play an important role in remodelling the extracellular matrix and are considered "uremic toxins". Proteins and glycosaminoglycans are essential components of the extracellular matrix, and contribute to normal mature organ functions.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFDe novo systemic vasculitis after renal transplant is a rare complication. We report a patient who developed rapid, catastrophic necrotizing vasculitis of the gastrointestinal tract 11 months after renal transplant. A 60-year-old man was admitted for persistent pain in the right abdomen and mild intestinal hemorrhage.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFCutaneous periarteritis nodosa (PAN) is a clinical feature characterized by chronic, benign course; its pathogenesis is unknown. In patients submitted to renal transplantation cutaneous PAN is a rare complication. We report a case of cutaneous PAN associated with the reappearance of hepatitis B antigen 16 years after kidney transplantation.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBackground/aim: The clearest benefit of recombinant human erythropoietin (rHuEPO) in end-stage renal disease is a substantial reduction in transfusion dependency and an improved quality of life. In this report, we describe the efficacy of weekly subcutaneous administration of rHuEPO in 11 elderly patients with anemia secondary to chronic renal failure.
Methods: The role of rHuEPO therapy in increasing the patient's quality of life and in decreasing the hospitalization rates secondary to cardiac morbidity was verified in 11 elderly patients (age range between 66 and 85 years) with anemia due to chronic renal failure.
In order to have a model for studying the possible implications of 2-ethylhexyl-phthalate and dialysate on connective tissue, we evaluated their direct effects on the air pouch lining tissue and on fibroblast cultures. Air pouches were formed on the backs of 60 ten-week-old Wistar rats by subcutaneous injections of 10 ml sterile air. On the tenth day 2 ml sterile air, or 2 ml 5 microg/L or 2 ml 10 microg/L 2-ethylhexyl-phthalate in olive oil, or 2 ml olive oil alone, or 2 ml 5 mg/ml or 12 mg/ml lyophilized dialysate were injected into the air pouches.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBackground: Because of chronic immunosuppressive therapy, the skin of renal transplant recipients (RTR) is considered more liable to fungal infections.
Aim: The aim of the study was to analyze the prevalence of superficial dermatomycoses in a chronically immunosuppressed group of RTR who live in northern Italy and to verify the eventual relationship between the onset of mycoses, the immunosuppressive regimen and the interval of time elapsed after the transplantation.
Methods: 73 RTR were submitted to a complete dermatological examination for fungal infection.
Patients treated with immunosuppressive drugs can develop cancers. The authors present two cases of Kaposi's sarcoma in kidney transplant patients who had been treated with azathioprine, steroids and cyclosporin-A; during this treatment the Langerhans cells decreased and Kaposi's sarcoma appeared. Discontinuation or reduction of the dosage of cyclosporin-A led to complete regression of the illness, and the Langerhans cells reappeared.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFGlycosaminoglycans have generalized antibacterial anti-adherent activity, and cooperate with secretory immunoglobulin-A in anti-infection defense mechanisms of the urinary tract. Cyclosporin A modulates T-lymphocytes and fibroblast functions. In this report we analyze urinary glycosaminoglycans and secretory immunoglobulin-A in renal transplant patients with recurrent urinary tract infections treated with cyclosporin.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFRecenti Prog Med
November 1998
The most widely studied hyperlipidemies in patients affected by renal insufficiency or subsequent to kidney transplant present phenotype IIa, IIb or IV. The lipidic alteration most frequently observed in chronic renal insufficiency and/or dialytic treatment is represented by hypertrigliceridemia as a result of: 1) altered VLDL metabolism; 2) reduced activity of lecithin cholesterol acyltransferase (LCAT); 3) decrease in Apo-A1 and HDL3. Furthermore, marked anomalies in lipoprotein Lp (a) have been reported in hemodialysis.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Eur Acad Dermatol Venereol
July 1998
Several types of soft tissue calcification can be detected from radiographic evaluation of patients with end-stage renal failure. The factors that predispose to such calcification include an increase in CaxP product in serum, the degree of secondary hyperparathyroidism, the level of blood magnesium, the degree of alkalosis, and the presence of local tissue injury. Three major varieties include calcification of medium-sized arteries, periarticular or tumoral calcification and visceral calcification.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFInt J Artif Organs
February 1998
The direct effects of D(2-ethylhexyl)phthalate (DEHP), on subcutaneous tissue were studied in the rat, using the air pouch technique. Two ml of DEHP either undiluted or diluted in olive oil (10 microm/ml), were introduced into a previously created air pouch in the rats. The air pouch was removed and specimens of the lining tissue examined by optical and electron microscopy.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFForty-five patients affected with chronic renal failure (29 men and 16 women; mean age: 47.8 years), treated with hemodialysis for 4 to 245 months (mean: 66.9 months) were examined with panoramic and skeletal radiographs-the latter of the skull, hands, shoulders and clavicles, pelvis and spine.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFTo understand how to prevent the diffusion of hepatitis C virus (HCV) in dialysis units, 289 chronic dialysis patients treated in a renal department from the beginning of 1990 to June 30, 1993, were studied. Patients were screened monthly for alanine aminotransferase values and every 3 months for anti-HCV antibodies. At the beginning of the study the prevalence of anti-HCV antibodies was 24.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe skeletal status was investigated with noninvasive diagnostic procedures in 44 renal transplant patients (mean time since intervention: 5 to 195 months) treated with steroid and azathioprine (21 cases) or with steroid, azathioprine and cyclosporine (23 cases). 38.6% of the patients had reduced renal function (creatininemia: 1.
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