Objectives: To retrospectively assess the incidence and severity of perioperative protamine reactions in adult patients with documented history of fish allergy.
Design: Retrospective observational study.
Setting: Large academic tertiary referral center.
Atypical hemolytic uremic syndrome (aHUS) after kidney transplantation is rare and carries a grave outcome. We present a single-center experience of all aHUS cases since the program's inception. Six patients were diagnosed with aHUS, all after kidney transplants, except for 1 patient.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFEarly technical complications after pancreas transplantation are almost always unsalvageable. The two most common complications are vascular thrombosis and duodenal anastomotic leaks. We present a case of a duodenal stump leak that led to a large abscess and severe sepsis.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPurpose: In patients with loin pain hematuria syndrome (LPHS), a response to percutaneous renal hilar blockade (RHB) and a multidisciplinary team (MDT) evaluation predicts patient's potential renal auto-transplantation (RAT) success.
Methods: A pain assessment was performed using a 0-10 numeric pain rating scale prior to a percutaneous RHB under CT guidance. If the pain score was reduced > 50% immediately after the RHB, patients were evaluated for RAT by a MDT.
Opioid exposure is a concern after live donation for kidney transplant. We theorized that an enhanced recovery after surgery pathway (ERAS) using pregabalin preoperatively to desensitize nerves followed by the nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drug ketorolac, during and after surgery, can control pain, thus requiring less perioperative narcotics. The aim of this study was to determine if the use of a nonopioid analgesic ERAS protocol for donor nephrectomies could decrease the use of narcotics without an increase in complications compared with standard of care (SOC).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe purpose of this study was to retrospectively evaluate if a change in practice from January 2013 to August 2015 affected the rate of surgical-site infections following kidney transplantation at the single academic medical center. More patients were found to have a surgical-site infection when surgical antibiotics were only given intra-operatively despite a lower incidence of risk factors identified in the literature when compared to the cohort who received antibiotics intra-op and post-op for 24 hours.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFUnlike pediatric kidney donors, there is no literature regarding the growth of pediatric donor pancreatic transplant grafts. Our center prospectively followed three pediatric donor grafts after transplant by measuring two dimensions of the graft at postoperative day one and then at one, two, and three months post-transplant surgery with the hypothesis that the grafted pancreas would not grow like pediatric kidney donors given the fundamental physiologic differences between these two organs. Two grafts were stable to minimally larger in size, the third case decreased in size.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe gap between the kidney transplant recipient list and the number of organs available for transplantation continues to grow. Pediatric donors help fill a small and valuable portion of that gap. Normally these organs are transplanted en-bloc by closing the proximal vascular caps and using the distal aorta and distal inferior vena cava (IVC) for inflow.
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