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Query: UMLS:C0022672 (acute tubular necrosis)
2,175 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

A case is reported of a patient with renal failure and developing systemic and renal oxalosis due to pyridoxine-resistant type I primary hyperoxaluria. In spite of vigorous haemodialysis and hydration before and after operation, an allografted cadaveric kidney failed because of oxalate deposits in the transplant. The patient was treated by combined hepatic and renal transplantation. The liver allograft functioned well but the kidney had poor function due to primary acute tubular necrosis aggravated by steroid-associated acute pancreatitis, systemic cytomegalovirus infection and high cyclosporin A levels. The patient died from generalised cytomegalovirus infection. The early course after operation was associated with a reduced rate of oxalate production, which would slow the rate of oxalate deposition in the tissues. The size of the oxalate metabolic pool was also diminished. These observations are compatible with the grafted liver having corrected the metabolic lesion.
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PMID:Primary hyperoxaluria (type I): attempted treatment by combined hepatic and renal transplantation. 390 98

Of 2457 patients in the North American Pediatric Renal Transplant Cooperative Study registry who were followed for 5481 patient-years after the index transplantation, we observed 136 deaths, for an average annual rate of 24.8 deaths per 1000 patient-years. Death resulted primarily from infection (n = 55, 40%), cardiovascular causes (n = 28, 21%), hemorrhage (n = 16, 12%), and malignancies (n = 9, 7%). Cadaver-donor source was associated with greater mortality (6.7%) than a living-donor source (4.0%) (P < 0.005). Recipients aged 0-1, 2-5, 6-12, and 13-17 years old had mortality rates of 17.5, 8.0, 3.6, and 4.5%, respectively (P < .001). Mortality rates increased substantially when examined by recipient and cadaver donor ages (mortality rates of up to 45%), the greater the concordance between young donor and recipient ages. Interestingly, acute tubular necrosis and graft failure less than 30 days after transplantation (GH30) were each associated with markedly elevated mortality rates. (The risk ratio for ATN was 3.1 [P < 0.001] and for GF30 it was 6.4 [P < 0.001].) Mortality after transplantation was also affected by the underlying renal disease, with high mortality rates observed for oxalosis (n = 21, 33.3%), congenital nephrotic syndrome (n = 79, 15.2%), pyelo/interstitial nephritis (n = 54, 11.1%), and Drash syndrome (n = 14, 21.4%). When the joint effect of these risk factors was examined in a Cox proportional hazards model, young recipient age (0-1 years old) and GF30 were significant (P < .001) risk factors of mortality for recipients of living-donor organs. For recipients of cadaver kidneys, young recipient age--0-1 years old (P < .001) and 2-5 years old (P = .002)--ATN (P = .029), and GF30 (P < .001) were all significant risk factors. Recipient age is the major determinant of increased mortality after renal transplantation. Avoidance of acute tubular necrosis by reducing cold time and preventing early graft failure by better matching techniques in this vulnerable population may improve the mortality rate.
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PMID:Posttransplant deaths and factors that influence the mortality rate in North American children. 811 40

We evaluated variables associated with improved late graft survival in 290 children transplanted between 11/1/1984 and 12/31/1997, and who had > 1 year graft survival. We studied the following variables: age, gender, race, primary disease (diseases prone to recurrence, i.e. hemolytic uremic syndrome, focal segmental glomerulosclerosis or oxalosis vs. others), primary vs. retransplant; donor source, acute tubular necrosis, acute rejection episodes in the first year, transplant era and discharge serum creatinine. Graft half-life was defined as the time taken for 1/2 of the grafts functioning at 1 year to fail. There were 205 living donor and 85 cadaveric transplant. The cumulative graft survival at 5 and 10 years was 88% and 75% for living donor, and 72% and 46% for cadaveric, respectively. Multivariate analyses showed a higher late graft survival to be associated with: no acute rejection episodes (risk ratio 0.16, p = 0.0001), age 2-5 years (risk ratio 0.24, p = 0.0007), living donor (risk ratio 0.46, p = 0.017), primary nonrecurrent disease (risk ratio 0.29, p = 0.001), Caucasian race (risk ratio 0.40, p = 0.006). A high half-life was seen with living donor transplant (21.3 years) and the age group 2-5 years (27.5 years). Further, living donor patients with no acute rejection episodes had the best half-life of 37.6 years, while children with hemolytic uremic syndrome, focal segmental glomerulosclerosis or oxalosis had the lowest overall half-life of 5.6 years. This study finds that living donor, no acute rejection episodes, age 2-5 years, Caucasian race and having a disease not prone to recurrence are strong predictors of late graft survival. Hence, preferential use of living donor and prevention of acute rejection episodes in the first year are key variables that can improve long-term renal graft survival in children.
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PMID:Improved late graft survival and half-lives in pediatric kidney transplantation: a single center experience. 1248 46

A retrospective analysis of 1592 renal biopsies received from various hospitals all over Kerala over a period of two years was done. Of the 1544 native kidney biopsies majority of cases (300; 18.84%) were focal segmental glomerulosclerosis. Next infrequency was IgA nephropathy (227; 14.26%). The other diagnoses included post infectious glomerulonephritis (GN) (150; 9.42%), lupus nephritis (131; 8.23%), membranous glomerulonephritis (118; 7.41%), minimal change disease (94; 5.94%), interstitial nephritis 87(5.46%), membranoproliferative glomerulonephritis (MPGN) and severe glomerulosclerosis (74; 4.64% each), IgM nephropathy (72; 4.52%), acute tubular necrosis and diabetic glomerulopathy (24; 1.5% each), ANCA-related GN (21;1.32%), amyloidosis (13; 0.82%), Henoch Schonlien purpura (12; 0.75%) atd thrombotic microangiopathy (10; 0.63%). Afew others like myeloma cast nephropathy, cholesterol embolism, Clq nephropathy, oxalosis, mixed connective tissue disorder (MCTD, Wegner's granulomatosis etc. also were seen occasionally. 48 cases were allograft biopsies (3.02%).
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PMID:Non-neoplastic renal diseases in Kerala, India--analysis of 1592 cases, a two year retrospective study. 1788 50