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Target Concepts:
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Query: UMLS:C0022672 (
acute tubular necrosis
)
2,175
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Renovascular disease in a solitary kidney is a difficult and challenging problem. In six patients, with a mean age of 62 years, revascularisation was undertaken. In four of them, one to three attempts at PTA were made before the operation but all were unsuccessful. The preoperative mean serum creatine (Cr) was 3.52 mg% (range 2.5-5.5). The stenoses were caused by atherosclerosis in five cases and fibromuscular dysplasia (FMD) in one. Two methods of revascularisation were used: aortorenal bypass with saphenous vein (three patients) or PTFE (two patients), and transaortic renal endarterectomy with a venous patch (one patient). One patient with an
aortic aneurysm
underwent simultaneous aortic repair with a PTFE graft. There was no mortality or major complications in our series and no patient suffered
acute tubular necrosis
(
ATN
) after surgery. The mean follow-up period was 51 months (15-84 months). Postoperative Cr and blood pressure improved in all patients. Four patients no longer required any medication and the other two only needed reduced doses of antihypertensive drugs. Based on our experience of patients with poor single kidney function, we do not recommend PTA in this specific group of patients and suggest an aggressive surgical approach, which can effectively improve solitary kidney function, thus eliminating further haemodialysis.
...
PMID:Revascularisation for a poorly functioning solitary kidney. 191 7
Complications after aortic replacement that result from prolonged graft insertion time and technical difficulties with suturing through friable, diseased aortic tissue can be addressed with use of the sutureless intraluminal ring graft. Between 1978 and 1989, we replaced the ascending aorta or aortic arch with this device in 49 patients. At no time were we unable to use a sutureless graft during a procedure. Twenty-eight cases of aneurysmal disease and 21 cases of acute or chronic dissection were treated. Twenty-six patients required replacement of the aortic valve, with annuloartic ectasia being the most common indication (71%). Ten patients underwent concomitant coronary artery bypass grafting. The operative mortality rate for ascending
aortic aneurysm
repairs was 4%, and that for dissections was 18%. Five of 8 patients requiring aortic arch replacement survived. Most patients were studied angiographically before discharge. No complications were related to anastomotic hemorrhage, pseudoaneurysm formation, graft migration, or thromboemboli. Individual cases of phrenic nerve palsy,
acute tubular necrosis
, and transient ischemic attack, all of which resolved completely, were identified. The actuarial 5-year survival rate is 64%. We conclude that modification of the sutureless intraluminal ring graft to suit the pathology encountered at operation allows the quickest repair with the least chance of anastomotic complication.
...
PMID:Sutureless ring graft replacement of ascending aorta and aortic arch. 219 20