Publications by authors named "M Grignetti"

Background: Renal transplantation is a well established treatment for end-stage renal disease. However, recipients have been shown to develop emotional distress and affective disorders, such as anxiety and depression, associated with a compromised quality of life. Some accounts report an improvement of affective disorders after transplantation, others draw opposite conclusion.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Clinically compromised patients who must undergo chronic dialysis are, in general, at risk because the procedure can be difficult to perform and give poor results in terms of survival and of rehabilitation. However, it is dialysis of the very elderly which is routinely characterized by misgivings about the indication for and limits of the technique. Patients older than 75 years of age currently represent more than 35% of the population that begin dialysis in most European registries.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

A new category of patients aged >75 yrs, namely the elderly, is now being freely admitted to hemodialysis (HD) and this category is becoming predominant. The absence of systematic studies makes this patient category almost indistinguishable from other categories, even though its peculiarity is now evident. At least 30-40% of individuals in this age bracket are expected to be dependent and/or frail, but the incidence of frailty is likely to be higher in the elderly undergoing HD.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Horton giant cell arteritis can present with an atypical clinical picture that often resembles other diseases. In the case described below, the patient initially demonstrated clinical and laboratory evidence of a Candida albicans sepsis, and therefore we started antimycotic treatment with amphotericin B. Because of an adverse reaction to that drug, we added parenteral steroids before every administration of the antimycotic which led to an unexpected improvement of symptoms.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF