Publications by authors named "Cristina Lopez-Martin"

Objectives: Our aims were to explore current intubation practices in Spanish ICUs to determine the incidence and risk factors of peri-intubation complications (primary outcome measure: major adverse events), the rate and factors associated with first-pass success, and their impact on mortality as well as the changes of the intubation procedure observed in the COVID-19 pandemic.

Design: Prospective, observational, and cohort study.

Setting: Forty-three Spanish ICU.

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The impact of Covid-19 pneumonia caused by SARS-CoV-2 on transplanted populations under chronic immunosuppression seems to be greater than in normal population. Clinical management of the disease, particularly in those patients worsening after a cytokine storm, with or without allograft impairment and using available therapeutic approaches in the absence of specific drugs to fight against the virus, involves a major challenge for physicians. We herein provide evidence of the usefulness of high-dose intravenous immunoglobulin (IVIG) combined with steroid pulses to successfully treat a case of Covid-19 pneumonia in a single-kidney transplanted patient with mechanical ventilation and hemodialysis requirements in the setting of a cytokine storm.

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Background: Thiopurine immunomodulators are the most commonly used immunosuppressants in inflammatory bowel disease.

Aims: To evaluate the incidence of adverse events (AE) in patients with inflammatory bowel disease treated with azathioprine (AZA) or 6-mercaptopurine (MP) in our hospital, the features of these effects, the distribution of socio-demographic factors, and the possible predisposing factors.

Methods: We included 377 patients with inflammatory bowel disease who were diagnosed through 2008 and who received AZA or MP during the course of their disease.

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We report the case of a 53-year-old man with Crohn's disease who developed azathioprine-induced nodular regenerative hyperplasia of the liver. The diagnosis was suspected when abnormalities in liver function tests were observed and transabdominal ultrasonography and upper gastrointestinal endoscopy showed signs of portal hypertension. The final diagnosis was established by liver biopsy, showing the characteristic alterations in liver architecture.

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