6 results match your criteria: "Nephro-Urology Institute of the University[Affiliation]"

The increase in the incidence of elderly patients starting dialysis has been as sharp, during the 1980s-1990s, as an epidemic (+70%, +150% in different settings). According to this study, performed in Piemonte, northern Italy, the process is still ongoing. During the period 1981-93, according to the Regional Registry of Dialysis and Transplantation (RPDT: data on 100% of centres and patients), the cohort on treatment increased by 79.

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Albumin and cholesterol are considered reliable outcome markers in dialysis patients; their influence, however, may also be related to non-independent factors, such as age and presence of co-morbid conditions. The aim of the study was an analysis of four outcome markers, assessed at start of dialysis: age, high risk conditions, cholesterol and albumin levels. Data were obtained from the Piedmont Dialysis and Transplantation Registry (northern Italy, about 4,400,000 inhabitants, 21 dialysis centres, open acceptance since mid-1970s, 5661 patients on file at 31 December 1992).

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Analysis of long-term dialysis results is the cornerstone of renal replacement therapy evaluation. Elderly patients may be considered a crucial cohort, since subtle differences may be enhanced in a population of lower life expectancy. The aim of the study was an analysis, from the Piedmont Registry of Dialysis and Transplantation, of the results obtained in 1981-1992 (northern Italy, about 4,400,000 inhabitants, 21 dialysis centres, open acceptance since mid-1970s) in patients aged > or = 65 years (475 patients started treatment in 1981-1985, 1026 in 1986-1992).

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Prevalence of diabetic patients on dialysis is often considered a marker of overall acceptance rate for dialysis; however, even when acceptance policy is open, incidence of diabetic patients varies widely. Epidemiological differences of diabetes incidence all over the world partly explain the discrepancies. Incidence of diabetic patients accepted for dialysis (1981 to 82: 6 p.

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A derangement of magnesium homeostasis with hypermagnesemia and increased intraerythrocyte Mg content [Mgi] has been described in uremic patients, and could play a pathogenetic role in both alterations of bone metabolism and vascular reactivity, observed in these patients. Recently Féray and Garay described in human erythrocytes a transport system which catalyzes outward Mg movements in the presence of external Na. These fluxes may be responsible for maintaining and regulating a low [Mgi].

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