Publications by authors named "FRIES D"

Acute reversible renal failure is a widely recognized potential complication of angiotensin-converting enzyme inhibitor (ACEI) administration in renovascular hypertension, particularly in bilateral artery stenosis or stenosis involving a solitary kidney. We report herein 2 cases of a rare but severe complication, i.e.

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One hundred thirty-eight patients with transplant renal artery stenosis (TRAS) were identified among 1200 patients undergoing renal transplantation in our university hospital. Severe systemic hypertension was the main symptom leading to a diagnosis of TRAS. Only 88 TRAS patients were given interventional treatment consisting of percutaneous angioplasty (PTA; n = 49) or surgical repair (SR; n = 39).

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The activity of lymphokine-activated killer cells, measured either by a clonal or polyclonal technique, was assessed in 30 kidney transplant recipients (TX), in 13 hemodialyzed patients (HD-CRI), and in 18 normal (N) controls. A highly significant decrease of the LAK activity in TX in comparison with HD-CRI or N (P = 0.0001) was observed.

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The low reactivity to donor alloantigens reported in PBL from kidney transplant recipients might be related to clonal deletion and/or suppression of donor-specific alloreactive cells. To discriminate between these two hypotheses, we quantified the number of IL-2 secreting cells (IL-2-SC) and of cytotoxic precursors (CTLp) in the T cells from tolerant recipients when stimulated with either donor specific or nonrelated third-party LCL. To eliminate the irrelevant reactivity, we used as responding cells high-density T cells that had been depleted of such reactivity by 4 days preculture with autologous lymphoblastoid cell line in the presence of bromodeoxyuridine.

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The development of organ transplants is limited by the shortage of organs. The improvement of this situation depends on two factors: increased awareness by the general public that refraining from refusing the removal of organs from the body of a patient with brain death is the most modern form of solidarity; and increased awareness by the medical profession that removal of organs should be proposed for every patient with brain death and that adequate resuscitative techniques should be used to preserve the organs in these patients. When the decision to harvest organs is taken, the transplant specialists must decide whether an organ should be used or not.

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Seventy-six patients with polycystic kidneys were followed in the Bicêtre renal transplantation unit. Fifty four were transplanted. Fifty two nephrectomies were performed in these patients essentially because of the size of the kidney and for renal infections.

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The disposition of the antidepressant tianeptine and its MC5 metabolite (pentanoic acid analogue of tianeptine) was studied following a single 12.5 mg oral dose of tianeptine sodium salt in 20 patients with chronic renal failure. In 12 patients (group I) having a creatinine clearance of less than 19 ml.

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The inhibitory effects of 7-[N-(3-aminopropyl)amino]heptan-2-one (APAH) on N8-acetylspermidine deacetylation were studied. In in vitro studies, APAH produced inhibition (apparent Ki of 0.18 microM) of N8-acetylspermidine deacetylation by the 100,000g supernatant fraction of rat liver.

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Analogues of N8-acetylspermidine (1) were synthesized as potential inhibitors of the cytoplasmic enzyme N8-acetylspermidine deacetylase. The compounds were assayed for their ability to inhibit the deacetylation of 1 in a cytosolic fraction from rat liver. The apparent Ki values were determined by Dixon plots.

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We report on eight kidney-allografted patients treated for delayed ureteral obstruction between January 1986 and January 1987. In all cases, standard endourological dilation was performed using a balloon catheter, and this was followed by insertion of a pigtail stent. All eight cases showed improvement 1 month after dilation (decrease in creatinine and caliceal dilation).

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From 1981 to 1987, 792 renal transplantations were performed in our center: 60 (7.5%) patients were on continuous ambulatory peritoneal dialysis. Patient and graft survivals, are identical to those obtained in hemodialysis patients.

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The authors report fourteen cases of lymphocele in a series of one thousand consecutive renal transplantations (1.4%). The prevention of these lymphoceles depends on rigorous lymphostasis.

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This report describes two patients in whom essential IgG-IgM mixed cryoglobulinemia (EMC) glomerulonephritis led to end-stage renal disease. Both patients underwent primary hemodialysis, and during the period of uremia clinical and biological manifestations of the disease fully resolved. Transplantation was performed, and in both cases cryoglobulinemia quickly recurred (30 days and 6 months after transplantation, respectively) with clinical renal and extrarenal flare, and reappearance of the biological markers of the disease (decrease in C3 and C4 components of serum complement, detection of rheumatoid activity and of cryoglobulinemia in the serum).

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UW (University of Wisconsin) solution, formulated by Belzer's team in Madison, has already been proved to increase cold ischemia time in liver and pancreas preservation. A multicentre clinical trial is being conducted to compare renal preservation in human transplantation using two different solutions: UW and Eurocollins (EC). This paper, whose results will be included in the multicentre trial, reports local comparative results between UW and EC perfused Kidneys.

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The factors affecting graft survival in transplant recipients receiving cyclosporin (CsA) are still being debated. Our report is based on an analysis of 202 successive transplantations performed in our institution from May 1984 to December 1986, using low-dose CsA as the basic means of immunosuppression. A total of 142 patients received the triple combination CsA, azathioprine (AZA), and corticosteroids.

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