6 results match your criteria: "Universitätsspital Zürich. Roger.Lehmann@usz.ch[Affiliation]"
Ther Umsch
December 2011
Klinik für Endokrinologie, Diabetologie und klinische Ernährung, Universitätsspital Zürich, Zurich.
Due to the recent changes in reimbursement politics in islet and pancreas transplantation in Switzerland, the question, which patients with type 1-diabetes mellitus get which form of beta-cell replacement, is of utmost importance for referring physicians. As of July 1, 2010 all forms of islet- or pancreas-transplantations are reimbursed by the Swiss health care system. The limited availability of donor organs and the necessity of transplantation of the islets of several pancreata in order to achieve insulin independence has led to a change in paradigms in Switzerland, where insulin independence by multiple islet transplantations is not the key goal in islet transplantation any longer.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFTher Umsch
October 2009
Klinik für Endokrinologie, Diabetologie und klinische Ernährung, Universitätsspital Zürich.
Physiology and current knowledge about gestational diabetes which led to the adoption of new diagnostic criterias and blood glucose target levels during pregnancy by the Swiss Society for Endocrinology and Diabetes are reviewed. The 6th International Workshop Conference on Gestational Diabetes mellitus in Pasedena (2008) defined new diagnostic criteria based on the results of the HAPO-Trial. These criteria were during the ADA congress in New Orleans in 2009 presented.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAm J Transplant
June 2008
University Hospital Zurich, Islet Transplant Program, Zurich, Switzerland.
The enthusiasm regarding clinical islet transplantation has been dampened by the long-term results. Concerns about the associated risks of life-long immunosuppression and the striking imbalance between potential recipients and available donor pancreata warrant changes in some of the current goals. Islet transplantation will never be a cure of type 1 diabetes in the majority of patients with no secondary complications, but is a valid option for a limited number of patients with brittle diabetes waiting for an organ or after organ transplantation.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFDiabetes
March 2007
Clinical Islet Transplantation Program, Department of Endocrinology and Diabetes, University Hospital Zurich, Raemistrasse 100, CH-8091 Zurich, Switzerland.
Many factors influence the outcome of islet transplantation. As islets in the early posttransplant setting are supplied with oxygen by diffusion only and are in a hypoxic state in the portal system, we tested whether small human islets are superior to large islets both in vitro and in vivo. We assessed insulin secretion of large and small islets and quantified cell death during hypoxic conditions simulating the intraportal transplant environment.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFTher Umsch
July 2005
Abteilung Endokrinologie und Diabetologie, Departement für Innere Medizin Universitätsspital Zürich, Zürich.
Type 1 diabetes mellitus results from autoimmune destruction of the insulin-secreting cells in the pancreas. The dramatic breakthrough in 2000 with the "Edmonton protocol" for successful solitary islet transplantation has restored optimism for the application of islet transplantation as a treatment for type I diabetes. Due to the recent successes, islet transplantation has evolved from a theoretical concept to its current status as a therapeutic option for patients with type 1 diabetes.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAm J Transplant
July 2004
Departments of Radiology and Visceral Surgery, University Hospital, CH-8091 Zurich, Switzerland.
We report on the feasibility of a glucocorticoid-free immunosuppression (sirolimus, low-dose tacrolimus, and daclizumab) in simultaneous islet-kidney transplantation in nine patients with type 1 diabetes. There was one renal primary nonfunction. Renal function (n = 8) as assessed by creatinine and creatinine clearance over time was 103 +/- 6 micromol/L and 64 +/- 6 mL/min/1.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF