Publications by authors named "Idatte J"

Purpose: Prosthetic valve endocarditis is a dangerous complication of valvular surgery (3-6%). Among involved pathogens, Coxiella burnetii is an occasional agent, though isolated with increasing frequency. We report our experience with this peculiar endocarditis and lay stress on specific diagnostic and therapeutic difficulties.

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Objectives: Ureteral necrosis is a rare complication of renal transplantation, and is seldom cured by endoscopic management alone. To avoid the potential hazard to the graft created by an open ureteral reconstruction in cases of renal transplant ureteral necrosis, we have appiled a new minimally invasive technique of total ureteral replacement, initially described for the palliative treatment of ureteral obstructions. The subcutaneous bypass technique is based on the use of a silicone-PTFE-bonded tube tunnelled underneath the skin.

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We have developed a cooling system for renal transplants designed to eliminate the second period of warm ischaemia corresponding to the vascular anastomosis phase of renal transplantation. This is an autonomous and independent system which forms a shell around the transplant. Following application of the system, cooling is achieved by refrigeration of a Multitherm sponge contained in the wall of the shell.

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Boutonneuse spotted fever is a summer and late spring infection caused by Rickettsia Conorii mainly in Middle East countries adjacent to the mediterranean coast (1). Malignant forms have been described in debilitated patients associated with prerenal azotemia, acute tubular necrosis or renal vasculitis (2, 3). We report for the first time to our knowledge, the association of an extracapillary glomerulonephritis with a Boutonneuse spotted fever.

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Increased intrathoracic pressure with positive pressure breathing (PPB) induces renal hypoperfusion and excretion function impairment the mechanism of which may be partially related to reflex sympathetic nerve activation. The consequences of renal denervation on PPB-induced renal impairment are unknown. This study was conducted to evaluate the effects of increasing intrathoracic pressure with positive end-expiratory pressure (PEEP) on renal blood flow (RBF, pulsed Doppler implantable microprobes) and function in 12 kidney transplantation recipients during the immediate post-transplantation period.

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Background: Hypertension occurs frequently after carotid endarterectomy and may lead to cerebral vascular complications and myocardial infarction. Its pathophysiology has recently been related to surgically induced damage of carotid baroreceptors.

Case Description: A 45-year-old normotensive man with no history of epilepsy was admitted 3 weeks after bilateral carotid endarterectomy for severe repetitive paroxysmal headaches, vomiting, and agitation that were closely associated with attacks of marked hypertension.

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Sixty HIV-infected patients presenting renal symptoms who underwent percutaneous renal biopsies were analysed. According to the CDC classification, 44 patients were staged in group IV, five in group III, and 11 in group II. Patients were divided in two groups according to their ethnic origin (29 black patients and 31 white patients).

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Urine and plasma samples from 39 patients who underwent renal transplantation were analyzed by proton nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) spectroscopy. The most relevant resonances for evaluating renal function after transplantation were those arising from citrate, trimethylamine-N-oxide (TMAO), alanine, and lactate when compared to creatinine. A resonance at 3.

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Toxoplasma encephalitis is the most common opportunistic infection of the central nervous system in patients with AIDS. The treatment of choice is a combination of sulfadiazine and pyrimethamine. We present here four patients with AIDS treated for toxoplasmic encephalitis who developed sulfadiazine-induced crystalluria.

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The clinical classification of malignant hypercalcaemias according to the presence or absence of bone lesions no longer corresponds to the physiopathology of these hypercalcaemias as it is known today. Both focal osteolysis and humoral hypercalcaemia involve a number of substances, such as prostaglandins, cytokines, growth factors, PTH-rp and calcitriol, the action of which is neither specific nor single. A knowledge of their role in the pathogenesis of hypercalcaemia should lead to the development of antagonists for therapeutic purpose and to a better understanding of their individual physiological effects, since some of these mediators are present in non-tumoral tissues.

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Three cases of nephrectomy after transplantation with uretero-ureteral anastomosis are presented: this anastomosis in transplantation looks to be anodyne when the transplant keeps normal function. Complications become when appears a degradation of the renal function.

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The mechanisms of metabolic acidosis and hyperkalemia were investigated in a patient with chronic mineralocorticoid-resistant renal hyperkalemia (5.3-6.9 mmol/l), metabolic acidosis (arterial blood pH 7.

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The mechanisms of metabolic acidosis and hyperkalemia were investigated in a patient with chronic mineralocorticoid-resistant renal hyperkalemia (5.3 to 6.8 mM), metabolic acidosis (arterial blood pH 7.

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