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172,036 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

The aim of the present study is to gather data on the influence of certain personality factors an adjustment to chronic hemodialysis. One hundred thirty-six patients underwent predialysis personality assessment by clinical evaluation and all those who survived at least 6 months on dialysis were followed up. The follow-ups were carried out by a nephrologist and a psychiatrist 6 months (100 patients), 12 months (87 patients), 24 months (51 patients), and 36 months (28 patients) after commencement of dialysis. The main findings confirmed the assumption that it is possible to predict, at a highly significant statistical level, all of the major aspects of adjustment: compliance with the diet, rehabilitation, and the patients' psychological condition was reflected by four aspects--depression, suicidal tendencies, anxiety, and psychotic complications. A slight tendency was found to overestimate patients' adjustment potential. The possibility that this was due to stresses not taken into account, e.g., the threat of death, is discussed. Analysis of the limited data of our own unit compared with the rest of the group seems to indicate that our patients fulfilled their potential for adjustment to a higher degree than those in other units, especially in regard to compliance and lack of depression. The presence of a psychiatrist and a social worker on the team may have improved adjustment prospects. The question was raised whether this phenomenon is the result of psychotherapy with the patients or of indirect service, e.g., a psychiatrist on the team promoting the development of a realistic team attitude and reducing physicians' denial. Understanding the specific personality traits that cause specific maladjustment may provide a rational basis for focus-oriented psychotherapeutic intervention, while enabling the planning of optional treatment methods for terminal renal failure.
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PMID:The influence of patient's personality on adjustment to chronic dialysis. 81 93

In order to define the possible effects of gentamicin on the course of experimental acute renal failure, the interaction between gentamicin and mercuric chloride was studied in rats. Acute renal failure was induced with 1 mg. of HgCl2 per kilogram intravenously. When given alone, HgCl2 produced a uniform, reproducible, nonoliguric, acute renal failure with a low mortality rate. Animals receiving gentamicin over the course of HgCl2-induced acute renal failure, in doses sufficient to produce a 1 hour postinjection serum concentration of 10 mug/ml., recovered glomerular filtration in a fashion similar to animals receiving only HgCl2(p greater than 0.05). Animals that recovered from HgCl2-induced acute renal failure were given 10 mg./Kg. of gentamicin every 4 hours for 15 days and developed proteinuria and decline in urine osmolality to the same degree as animals given gentamicin alone, but failed to develop azotemia. Nevertheless, morphological changes associated with gentamicin nephrotoxicity were found which were similar in severity to those seen with gentamicin alone. Animals pretreated with 10 mg./Kg. of gentamicin every 4 hours for 7 days were then given HgCl2. Acute renal failure in these animals was more severe than in animals receiving HgCl2 alone, as manifest by a greater degree of azotemia and death (p less than 0.05). The data indicate that in the rat the concomitant administration of gentamicin did not interfere with recovery from HgCl2-induced renal failure. Rats recovering from HgCl2-induced acute renal failure were resistant to a depression in glomerular filtration when given gentamicin. The prior administration of gentamicin enhanced the nephrotoxicity of HgCl2.
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PMID:The effect of concomitant mercuric chloride and gentamicin on kidney function and structure in the rat. 83 19

The early stages of heatstroke in 3 dogs were characterized by hyperthermia, hyperpnea, tachycardia, depression, vomiting, diarrhea, and dehydration. Laboratory signs of hepatocyte degeneration and necrosis were detected. Clinical and laboratory changes characteristic of acute primary renal failure developed several days after overheating. After symptomatic and supportive therapy, 2 of the dogs regained a sufficient degree of renal function to cause remission of signs of renal failure.
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PMID:Heatstroke in the dog: a polysystemic disorder. 84 81

The cardiac response to volume loading was evaluated in fifty severely septic patients. After a rapid infusion of albumin or whole blood the cardiac index (CI) and left ventricular stroke work index (LVSWI) were recorded as the pulmonary arterial wedge pressure (PAWP) increased. Initial values of PAWP, CI, and LVSWI were similar in both the nineteen surviving and thirty-one nonsurviving patients. Surviving patients, however, demonstrated greater increases in CI and LVSWI as PAWP rose. Nearly half of both patient groups developed decreases in CI and LVSWI as the PAWP continued to increase. These downslopes occurred at relatively low PAWP and are taken as evidence of an abnormality of myocardial function in both survivors and nonsurvivors. The lower upslope of the performance curves in nonsurvivors indicates myocardial depression or a negative inotropic effect. Cardiac ischemia, acute respiratory failure, and high affinity red cells were found to diminish the cardiac response to volume loading, whereas hepatic and renal failure were associated with a good CI and LVSWI response.
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PMID:Myocardial depression during sepsis. 84 86

Clinical and experimental studies were carried out in order to evaluate the role of myocardial dysfunction in the genesis of circulatory congestion associated with renal failure. Among the patients with chronic renal failure, those with circulatory congestion had greater blood volume and higher venous pressure while lower cardiac index and stroke work index than those without circulatory congestion. After peritoneal dialysis, although blood volume and venous pressure decreased in both groups, cardiac index increased in the former while it decreased in the latter group. In 15 dogs, acute renal failure was produced by ligating both ureters. As uremia developed, blood volume and left ventricular end-diastolic pressure increased with or without an increase in cardiac index. The depression of ventricular function curve was evident in all the dogs. The peritoneal dialysis performed at this stage resulted in a prompt recovery of left ventricular end-diastolic pressure with minimum change in cardiac index. The measurement of dp/dt/IIT also indicated a depression of myocardial contractility at uremic stage and its recovery after dialysis. We conclude that impairment of myocardial function is implicated in the development of circulatory congestion in renal failure.
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PMID:Changes of cardiac performance in renal failure. 116 Jan 87

This study was designed to determine the incidence, etiology and consequences of severe hypermagnesemia. We retrospectively reviewed all hospital admissions over a 5-year period from 1984 to 1989 and identified 8 cases of severe hypermagnesemia (serum Mg > or = 6.0 mg/dl) due to magnesium ingestion. All but 1 patient were elderly (mean age 70 +/- 6 years). The etiology when identified was due to magnesium-containing cathartics (n = 3) or antacids (n = 3). The total amount of magnesium ingested was not excessive, but bowel disorders that may have enhanced absorption (such as active ulcer disease, gastritis, colitis, perforated viscus, massive gastric dilatation) were present in 7 of the 8 patients. Unexpectedly, only 1 had preexisting renal failure. Renal function was found to be normal in 1, only mildly to moderately impaired in 5 (creatinine < 3.6 mg/dl) and severely impaired in 2 (creatinine 7.6, 15.7 mg/dl). Clinical sequelae of hypermagnesemia were hypotension (n = 7), bradycardia (n = 2), respiratory depression (n = 3), EKG abnormalities (n = 6), depressed mental status (n = 5). Hypocalcemia (range 5.7-7.4 mg/dl) more severe than could be attributed to either hypoalbuminemia or acute renal failure was present in 7. A low anion gap (range-2 to 9) was present in 5. Most striking was the fact that despite clinical sequelae, the hypermagnesemia was unsuspected in 6 of the 8 cases. Hypermagnesemia can occur without severe renal insufficiency in association with bowel disease, particularly in elderly individuals, and may be a clinically unrecognized cause of cardiovascular dysfunction, hypocalcemia and neurologic or respiratory depression.
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PMID:Unsuspected morbid hypermagnesemia in elderly patients. 148 3

In the acute phase of ischemic renal failure, the severe depression of the glomerular filtration rate (GFR) is due to obstruction of the tubules by cells and cell debris rejected from the proximal tubules, a blockade which can be prevented at least partly, by treatment with osmotic diuretics. The isosthenuria, the second typical sign in ischemic acute renal failure, probably derives from the medullary ischemia that results from an intracapillary trapping of red cells. This, in turn, is suggested to be caused by oxygen-derived free radicals, which via increasing the capillary macromolecular permeability result in a massive extravasation of plasma and hence in hemoconcentration. As expected from this hypothesis, scavengers may ameliorate both the trapping and the consequent medullary ischemia. Unfortunately, however, a therapy using both osmotic diuretics and scavengers fails to improve the long-term outcome. Hemodilution would seem more promising, since it will both prevent the medullary ischemia seen in the acute phase and substantially improve the long-term outcome. At a hematocrit of 0.30, rat kidneys exposed to 45-min ischemia will show a GFR 1 month after the insult of more than 50% of the normal GFR as against 15% in untreated animals.
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PMID:Osmotic diuretics and hemodilution in postischemic renal failure. 150 60

The species of bile pigments secreted in T-tube fistula bile after liver transplantation were ascertained by high-performance liquid chromatography in 15 patients for 10 days after liver transplant. Nine glycosidic conjugates and unconjugated bilirubin were resolved by the analytical procedure. The principal pigments in bile and their proportions in normal patients were the following: bilirubin diglucuronide = 83.0% +/- 3.1% (S.D.); bilirubin monoglucuronide = 9.7% +/- 1.4% (S.D.); bilirubin monoglucuronide monoglucoside = 4.0% +/- 2.8% (S.D.); and bilirubin monoglucuronide monoxyloside = 1.5% +/- 1.8% (S.D.). All of the other possible glucuronide, glucose and xylose monoconjugates and diconjugates and unconjugated bilirubin were also found, but each was normally less than 1% of the total. In 13 of the 15 transplant patients, a significant depression in proportions of bilirubin diglucuronide and elevation in proportions of bilirubin monoglucuronide were found after the transplant, with an accompanying but generally small increase in the proportions of the minor conjugates. In two patients with rejection of the transplant, the changes were of larger magnitude, with improvement occurring only with recovery from the rejection. In one of these patients, kidney failure was present, and in addition to the diglucuronide and monoglucuronide conjugates, diglucoside and monoglucoside monoxyloside conjugates were found in plasma. The underlying metabolic abnormalities are not clear but likely reflect underlying abnormal intracellular cofactor levels for conjugation. Glycogen depletion with reduction of UDP-glucuronate levels or reduced UDP-glucuronate formation from UDP-glucose, secondary to elevation of UDP-xylose, could potentially account for the changes in pigment excretion.
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PMID:Changes in bilirubin pigments secreted in bile after liver transplantation. 156 26

Congenital urinary tract obstruction is a common cause of renal failure accounting for up to 20% of end-stage renal disease cases. Intrauterine obstruction often results in parenchymal loss and renal dysfunction. The pathophysiology of obstructive nephropathy and its further depression of renal function is related to severe renal vasoconstriction, which is in large part angiotensin mediated. Signs suggestive of urinary obstruction in the newborn may include an abdominal mass, hypertension, oligoanuria/polyuria, urosepsis, and hyperchloremic acidosis. The combination of renal ultrasound, diuretic renal scans, and voiding cystourethrogram are the main diagnostic modalities in infants with hydronephrosis. Nonsurgical management of ureteropelvic junction obstruction has become more popular, particularly in mild to moderate cases. Early fulguration or bypassing the obstruction of urethral valves is essential and a decrease in serum creatinine to below 1 mg/dL within 1 month of relief of obstruction is a favorable prognostic sign. Obstruction complicated by infection is dangerous and requires prompt intervention. Any newborn with a urinary tract infection, regardless of sex, should be presumed to have urinary obstruction or reflux until proven otherwise.
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PMID:Urinary tract obstruction and infection in the neonate. 157 69

Hypovolemic hyponatremia attributable to severe fluid and electrolyte alterations was diagnosed in a foal with diarrhea. Subsequent consumption of water resulted in rapid reduction of serum sodium concentration and serum osmolar depression. Clinical signs of neurologic disease developed including blindness, loss of menace response, and seizures. Treatment of this condition with IV administered fluids included hypertonic saline solution (7.2%; 2 ml/kg of body weight), and frequent monitoring of serum electrolyte concentrations and osmolality resulted in gradual correction of the fluid and electrolyte imbalance and resolution of the neurologic signs. Hyponatremia has been recognized in foals with renal failure, ruptured urinary bladder, and iatrogenic water overload. The key to diagnosis and management of profound hyponatremia is accurate diagnosis of the status of plasma volume and association of the electrolyte imbalance with clinical signs of neurologic disease. This report describes an unusual complication of a commonly encountered problem in equine practice and documents that the severe metabolic and electrolyte abnormalities associated with diarrhea can result in clinical neurologic disease. The differential diagnosis also should include bacterial sepsis, parasitism, thoracic mass, acute renal failure, congenital neurologic deficit, or seizure syndrome. Serum electrolyte disorders should be considered as a potential cause of signs of neurologic disease in foals with diarrhea.
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PMID:Hypovolemic hyponatremia and signs of neurologic disease associated with diarrhea in a foal. 160 18


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