Publications by authors named "Cuvelier R"

A few single cases of Mycobacterium chelonae skin infection have been reported in haemodialysis patients. We report three additional cases that share peculiar clinical characteristics, pointing to diagnostic clues. All three cases presented as erythematous nodules developing distally to a proximal arteriovenous fistula (AVF).

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Background And Objectives: Since the first description of pathology of the kidney in Waldenström disease in 1970, there have been few reports on kidney complications of IgM-secreting monoclonal proliferations. Here, we aimed to revisit the spectrum of renal lesions occurring in patients with a serum monoclonal IgM.

Design, Setting, Participants, & Measurements: Fourteen patients with a circulating monoclonal IgM and a kidney disease related to B cell proliferation were identified retrospectively.

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Brevibacterium otitidis is a coryneform rod and, as far as is known, is isolated only from infected ears. We report the first known case of peritonitis caused by B. otitidis in a patient undergoing continuous ambulatory peritoneal dialysis.

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Propionic acid producing strains of Corynebacterium minutissimum were isolated from three patients with opportunistic infections. One neutropenic patient was undergoing chemotherapy for prolymphocytic leukemia; the other two patients were undergoing hemodialysis and peritoneal dialysis respectively. An unusual feature of these three strains was their resistance to several antibiotics, which is seldom seen in diphtheroids other than Corynebacterium jeikeium and CDC group D2.

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The effect of torasemide, a new orally and parenterally active diuretic agent, on the renal mechanisms of dilution and concentration was studied in 6 healthy volunteers. The experimental conditions included water and osmotic diuresis. Torasemide caused maximal chloruresis and natriuresis during the 20-40 min after administration.

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Renal transplantation was performed in five patients with various forms of amyloidosis (familial amyloidosis, Mediterranean fever and Crohn's disease). All grafts were functioning one year after the operation. Only one patient died of cardiac shock more than 10 years after transplantation; the other recipients are alive with a functioning graft from 12 to 67 (mean, 41) months after transplantation.

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We have evaluated the incidence, prevalence, predisposing factors and evolution of urinary tract infection (UTI) developing late after transplantation in 63 patients whose graft had lasted at least 3 months and whose follow-up averaged 7 years. Beyond 3 months after transplantation incidence of UTI decreases progressively, from 25 to 0%, 50% of the patients remaining free of infection throughout the period of observation. Neither the original kidney disease except perhaps diabetic nephropathy nor the presence of vesicoureteral reflux were predisposing factors.

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Prognosis of familial paroxysmal polyserositis is primarily related to the presence of renal insufficiency due to the amyloidosis. Current treatment of terminal renal failure--haemodialysis and renal transplantation--has increased survival in these patients, but prognosis remains relatively poor because of the extrarenal, mainly cardiac deposits which have had time to develop. Preventive treatment is therefore all that can be hoped for, and initial results of the use of colchicine in this amyloid affection, by Israelian authors, appear encouraging.

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