Publications by authors named "Camilo Cortesi"

Article Synopsis
  • Kidney transplant biopsies are crucial for assessing issues with kidney transplants and are performed under ultrasound guidance by either nephrologists or radiologists.
  • A study analyzing 678 biopsies found similar complication rates between the two specialties, with 8% overall complications and no statistically significant difference in outcomes.
  • Factors like blood pressure control and anticoagulation use significantly affected complications and transfusions, but the specialist performing the biopsy did not impact these rates.
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Objectives: Renal grafts from hepatitis C virus-positive deceased donors, which were once discarded, can now be transplanted into recipients and treated posttransplant due to the emergence of direct-acting antivirals, significantly improving wait list time and organ shortages. Here, we compared outcomes in hepatitis C virus-positive patients who received kidneys from hepatitis C virus-positive versus -negative donors.

Materials And Methods: In this single-center retrospective study, we divided 52 kidney transplant recipients who were viremic for hepatitis C virus pretransplant into 2 groups based on donors' hepatitis C virus serostatus (positive/negative).

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Objectives: Percutaneous kidney transplant biopsy is typically performed using ultrasonographic guidance; computed tomography is an alternative modality used to obtain kidney allografttissuewhen ultrasonographyguided percutaneous kidney transplant biopsy is technically challenging. Studies examining postbiopsy outcomes in kidney transplant patients using a computed tomography-guided approach are scarce. Our goal was to reportthe incidence of nonsevere and severe complications in computed tomographyguided percutaneous kidney transplant biopsies and the potential risk factors.

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Left ventricular hypertrophy (LVH) is a multifactorial complication frequently seen in patients with advanced chronic kidney disease. An arteriovenous fistula (AVF) is the preferred method for hemodialysis access. Once functional, AVFs demonstrate better patency rates and fewer complications when compared to other forms of vascular access.

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