Publications by authors named "Megha Vaid"

The term renal osteodystrophy describes the pathological changes in bone structure in chronic kidney disease (CKD); however, this term fails to describe adequately the adverse changes in mineral and hormonal metabolism in CKD that have grave consequences for patient survival. CKD-mineral and bone disorder (CKD-MBD) is a broader, newly defined term that should be used instead of renal osteodystrophy to define the mineral, bone, hormonal, and calcific cardiovascular abnormalities that are seen in CKD. The new paradigm in the management of renal bone disease is to "think beyond the bones" and strive to improve cardiovascular outcomes and survival.

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Bone disease is common in recipients of kidney, heart, lung, liver, and bone marrow transplants, and causes debilitating complications, such as osteoporosis, osteonecrosis, bone pain, and fractures. The frequency of fractures ranges from 6% to 45% for kidney transplant recipients to 22% to 42% for heart, lung, and liver transplant recipients. Bone disease in transplant patients is the sum of complex mechanisms that involve both preexisting bone disease before transplant and post-transplant bone loss due to the effects of immunosuppressive medications.

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Management of obesity-associated comorbidities costs about $60 billion/year, about 5% of total US healthcare expenditure. Bariatric surgery is the only proven effective weight loss therapy for severely obese patients with a BMI > or =35 kg/m2. Bariatric surgery produces long-term weight loss, improves quality of life, and reduces the number of sick days and medication costs.

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Cardiovascular disease (CVD) is the single largest cause of mortality in patients with chronic kidney disease (CKD), with those patients having a 10-year CVD-related morbidity and mortality of > 20%. This has led to the inclusion of CKD as a CVD equivalent, and justifies the aggressive treatment of modifiable risk factors such as dyslipidemia. Primary care physicians (PCP) often manage patients with CKD in the early stages of the disease and have a pivotal role in affecting long-term outcomes in CKD patients related to cardiovascular and all-cause mortality.

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