Background: While living kidney donation is considered safe in healthy individuals, perioperative complications can occur due to several factors.
Objective: We explored associations between the incidence of perioperative complications and donor characteristics, surgical technique, and surgeon's experience in a large contemporary cohort of living kidney donors.
Design: Living kidney donors enrolled prospectively in a multicenter cohort study with some data collected retrospectively after enrollment was complete (eg, surgeon characteristics).
Background: Abnormalities of vascular function and accumulation of oxidative stress have been associated with chronic kidney disease (CKD). Dialysis modalities, peritoneal dialysis (PD) and haemodialysis (HD) may differentially impact on vascular function and oxidative stress.
Methods: Patients undergoing living donor transplantation were studied for vascular stiffness using pulse wave velocity measurements, and inferior epigastric arteries were harvested to examine in vitro stiffness and functional properties and evidence of oxidative stress.
We hypothesized that there was differential vasomotor dysfunction in the microcirculation between nondialyzed and dialyzed chronic kidney disease (CKD) patients. During live donor kidney transplantation procedures, skin arterioles (SkA; internal diameter = 120 +/- 5 microm) from donors (n = 27) and recipients (nondialysis = 15; dialysis = 20) were dissected from the abdominal wall at the incision site. In vivo aortic pulse wave velocity (PWV) was also measured.
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