Publications by authors named "Sieberth H"

Background: Controversy exists about the time course of blood pressure normalization following bilateral nephrectomy. We sought to evaluate the time course of blood pressure normalization following bilateral nephrectomy and after subsequent kidney transplantation.

Methods And Results: Clinical data from 14 hypertensive patients were retrospectively assessed.

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One of the major limitations of biomaterials used in medicine is the adhesion and subsequent activation of platelets upon contact with blood. The development of new or modified materials necessitates adequate methods for the detection and quantification of platelet/material interactions. These interactions are commonly investigated by means of scanning electron microscopy (SEM), radioisotope and immunological techniques, or by quantification of released platelet contents.

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Background: Patients with chronic renal failure under maintenance hemodialysis (HD) present with numerous adverse effects including immunologic alterations. Serious abnormalities of neutrophil function have been reported to be associated with disturbed cell adhesiveness. These adhesion processes are mediated by cytokines and different adhesion molecules.

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Patients who are critically ill with acute renal failure and sepsis have extremely high mortality rates. While it seems reasonable that eliminating the inflammatory mediators (such as cytokines, chemokines, tumor necrosis factor-alpha, etc.) by continuous renal replacement therapy (CRRT) would be effective, studies show that only insubstantial numbers of these mediators are removed in comparison with endogenous clearance.

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Background: Proinflammatory monocytic cytokines such as interleukin-1 (IL-1), tumour necrosis factor-alpha (TNF-alpha) and IL-6 have been incriminated in the pathogenesis of elevated beta2-microglobulin (beta2M) serum concentrations in patients undergoing haemodialysis with so-called bioincompatible dialyser membranes. However, neither the source of the elevated serum beta2M nor the precise role of monocytic cytokines in the expression of the beta2M gene have been elucidated conclusively. The aim of the current study was to evaluate whether monocytic cytokines, and in particular IL-6, are regulators of beta2M gene expression in human hepatoma cells, T-lymphocytes and monocytes.

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Isolation of Mycobacterium xenopi from the respiratory tract may indicate pneumonia, often clinically indistinguishable from tuberculosis. Resistance to the classic antituberculous drugs renders the treatment of these infections problematic. We report on a case of cavernous pneumonia caused by M.

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Acute hepatic failure develops as a disease entity of rather diverse origin. With disease progression, toxic bilirubin levels may cause severe complications which include AV-nodal blockage, cardiac arrhythmia, impaired consciousness, generalized seizures, and status epilepticus. Treatment choices to prevent clinical deterioration comprise of costly and limited available orthotopic liver transplantation, utilization of extracorporeal bioartificial liver support devices and haemoperfusion/plasmaperfusion treatment with activated charcoal/anion exchange filters.

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The tissue expressions of vascular cell adhesion molecule 1 (VCAM-1), intercellular adhesion molecule 1 (ICAM-1) and endothelial leukocyte adhesion molecule 1 (E-selectin-1) were investigated in biopsy specimens from 28 patients with different stages of IgA nephropathy (IgAN) and 20 patients with acute renal failure (ARF) or chronic renal diseases (amyloidosis, Alport's glomerulopathy) by immunohistochemistry. The results were compared with the serum levels of the three adhesion molecules. VCAM-1 expression was significantly increased on parietal/tubular epithelial cells in IgAN and ARF.

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Intense immunosuppressive therapy is used frequently for treatment of systemic vasculitides, collagenoses, rapidly progressive glomerulonephritis, and after organ transplantation. Numerous serious treatment-related side effects include localized or disseminated opportunistic infections, and require careful monitoring of immunosuppressed patients. Gastrointestinal infections with Mycobacterium avium complex (MAC) or other nontuberculous mycobacteria have been previously identified in HIV seropositive patients only.

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A 46-year old female nursing sister was admitted to three different hospitals because of blood pressure crises of 300/150 mmHg which occurred up to six times a day. The rises in blood pressure were accompanied by headache, tachycardia and outbreaks of sweating. Raised catecholamine concentrations were repeatedly measured in the 24-hour urine and in the blood.

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A case of cerebral tuberculoma in a 39-year-old patient who had received a renal graft from a living related donor 11 years previously is reported. The patient had a major seizure, progressive psychiatric signs and fever 5 days prior to admission. The clinical history suggested a neurological cause and rapid diagnosis of a cerebral tuberculoma was made by a computed tomography-guided stereotactic puncture of a space-occupying cerebral lesion.

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Experimental renal disease models establish glomerular hypertension as a crucial determinant in glomerulosclerosis progression and demonstrate that glomerular capillary pressure reduction delays sclerosis development. An oscillating pressure (OP) chamber was constructed as an in vitro model to study human mesangial cells. Cell cultures were grown under atmospheric pressure (AP) and a controlled OP corresponding to intraglomerular capillary pressure.

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Background: It is not known whether smoking increases the risk of end-stage renal failure (ESRF) in patients with primary renal disease.

Methods: We performed a retrospective multicenter case-control study including 582 patients from nine centers in Germany, Italy and Austria. The diseases investigated were IgA glomerulonephritis (IgA-GN) as a model of inflammatory renal disease and autosomal dominant polycystic kidney disease (ADPKD) as a model of non-inflammatory renal disease.

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Patients with acquired cystic kidney disease (ACKD) are at an increased risk of renal neoplasms. Frequent tumors are adenomas and renal cell carcinomas. However, renal oncocytomas may occur in patients with ACKD.

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Purpose: To demonstrate the usefulness of B-scan ultrasonography and color Doppler ultrasonography (CCDS) in the diagnosis of lumbal and splenorenal collateral veins in patients with liver cirrhosis.

Method: 46 patients with histologically proven liver cirrhosis were examined by means of B-scan ultrasonography. CCDS was used to demonstrate the vascular character of mass-like lesions or tortuous tubular structures.

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Background: Detection of renal artery stenoses (RAS) by means of duplex Doppler ultrasound with direct scanning of the main renal arteries is subject to numerous limitations. Using semiquantitative analysis of the Doppler curve, which can be recorded from intrarenal arteries, it is possible to detect RAS unaffected by the problems of direct Doppler scanning of the renal arteries.

Methods: Both angiography of the renal arteries and colour duplex ultrasonography (US) of the intrarenal vessels (interlobar arteries) were performed in 214 patients (53.

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Background: Developments in accelerator mass spectrometry (AMS) now permit the determination of femtogram amounts of 26Al in blood and in various tissues with good precision and free of external contamination.

Methods: In the present study we used trace quantities of 26Al to investigate the intestinal absorption and compartmentalization of aluminium in rats with renal failure (Nx, 5/6 nephrectomy) and in pair-fed controls (C). Single oral doses of 20 ng 26Al were administered to six animals in each group and, subsequently, 24-h post-load 26Al was analysed in serum, urine, bone, liver, and spleen by means of AMS.

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A renal transplant recipient with isolated cerebral aspergilloma 4 months after allograft transplantation is reported. On admission cerebral computed tomography showed a ring-enhancing mass in the left frontal hemisphere and aspirated purulent material revealed A. fumigatus hyphae.

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