Publications by authors named "Neyrat N"

We report the incidence of urological complications in a series of 1,200 kidney transplant: 3.8 percent of the patients developed a urinary fistula, due to ureteral necrosis in 48 percent of cases, and 6.5 percent had urinary obstruction.

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One hundred and thirty eight patients with renal transplant artery stenosis were reported in a series of 1200 renal transplants. These cases included 47 patients in whom hypertension was well controlled by means of hypotensive drugs, 39 patients treated by surgical repair (SR) and 49 treated by percutaneous angioplasty (PTA). The long-term success rate was 81.

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1,224 renal transplant patients were studied. 50 kidneys were obtained from living related donors. The mean age of the recipients was 34.

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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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A prospective study was conducted on 57 high-risk patients having received cadaver renal transplants between January 1983 and May 1984, and submitted to the triple combination: cyclosporine, azathioprine, and steroids. 23 patients of Group I including 12 pre-sensitized and poorly matched recipients were treated from the Day 1 post-transplant. 34 patients of Group II received the triple combination following a steroid-ALG resistant rejection.

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Cyclosporin A significantly improves patient and graft survival as compared with the conventional corticosteroid-azathioprine treatment. However, the results are the same, or even worse, when the cyclosporin A-corticosteroid regimen is compared with the corticosteroid-azathioprine-antilymphocyte globulin regimen. The authors have investigated a prednisone-azathioprine-low dose cyclosporin A combination in 46 high risk patients from a series of 117 renal transplantations performed in 1983.

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From 1977 to 1982, 170 potential organ donors were referred to "a brain-death unit". A vast majority of these patients were provided by intensive care units of district general hospitals from Ile-de-France. This fact confirms the dispersion of potential organ donors and the usefulness of an organ-procurement structure based in an University Hospital.

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Kidneys of potential donors undergoing sudden cardiac arrest are generally not gathered because the warm ischemia time is too long until nephrectomy. A rapid in situ cold perfusion technique was developed to preserve kidneys in 21 brain-dead patients after cardiac arrest not responding to cardiac resuscitation. In 7 of the 21 potential donors, the in situ perfusion was unsuccessful.

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