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Query: UMLS:C0022672 (
acute tubular necrosis
)
2,175
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Ten patients received kidneys from living, related donors, the transplants having multiple renal arteries; a retrospective analysis of the postoperative
Hippuran
renograms is presented. All seven kidneys that had the large artery reopened before anastomosis of the smaller, developed scintigram findings suggestive of
acute tubular necrosis
(
ATN
) in the region with the more prolonged ischemia. Three similar kidneys with simultaneous recanalization of both renal arteries had normal
Hippuran
scintiphotos. Electron photomicrographs from upper- and lower-pole biopsies--in one case undergoing sequential revascularization--confirm the development of ischemic changes consistent with
ATN
in the half of the kidney developing scan findings of
ATN
.
...
PMID:Segmental acute tubular necrosis in kidneys with multiple renal arteries transplanted from living related donors. 33 16
During the last seven years we encountered 117 cases of acute renal failure after 492 renal transplants. The affected patients fall into two general groups that can be broadly identified by an 131I-
Hippuran
renogram: Those in whom low or no uptake is evident on the renogram (group 1) and those in whom good uptake is evident on the renogram (group 2). Fifty per cent of the patients in group 1 have renal arterial thrombosis or hyperacute rejection. These patients should have a renal arteriogram, and immediate nephrectomy may be necessary. The prognosis in these patients is very grave. In group 2, 89 per cent of the patients have
acute tubular necrosis
, and they do not differ prognostically from patients who experience immediate renal function. Invasive diagnostic procedures should be avoided in this group because they may increase the mortality rate. We believe that repeated renograms, a reduction in azathioprine dosage and careful dialysis is the only treatment necessary.
...
PMID:Etiology and prognosis in acute post-transplant renal failure. 78 39
Experimental examinations were performed in 22 dogs to find out the mechanism which leads to a permanent or a reversible damage of the renal parenchyma after normo- and hypothermic ischemia. For this reason the perfusion and the distribution were examined with 133Xe, the vascular changes by angiography, and the parenchymal function with 131I-
Hippuran
. After normothermic ischemia a short-term reactive hyperemia appeared, which however could not compensate the damage of the renal tubular cells and the resulting excretory insufficiency. After hypothermic ischemia the perfusion was reduced, probably as a consequence of a vasconstriction by cold, however, the function of the tubular cells remained intact, because of the protective mechanism of the hypothermia. The importance of these findings for the development of the so-called "shock-kidney" (
acute tubular necrosis
) and for the conservative renal surgery in hypothermia is discussed and the application of measures beneficial to perfusion, are suggested.
...
PMID:[Changes in perfusion and blood flow distribution following normo- and hypothermic ischemia of the kidneys]. 98 Jul 93
A group of 40 cadaveric kidneys was studied just prior to planned transplantation to further assess the applicability of 31P-MRS in the analysis of clinical renal transplant viability. Renal intracellular high-energy phosphorus metabolites (ATP [or NADP], phosphomonoester [PME] and inorganic phosphate [Pi]) and pH were measured noninvasively with MRS surface coils external to cold storage containers. Pretransplant MRS parameters were correlated with subsequent renal function in recipient patients (measured one week postoperatively by the need of dialysis, drop in serum creatinine, urine output, and 123I or 131I
Hippuran
assessed renal tubular function). ATP and NADP was detected in eleven kidneys and was significantly (P less than 0.001) associated with the best renal function posttransplantation. These kidneys also had the highest PME/Pi ratios (1.66-0.54), while lower ratios (0.36-0.10) were associated with prolonged
acute tubular necrosis
. The PME/Pi ratios significantly (P less than 0.0001) correlated with subsequent clinical renal function, whereas cold storage times (37 +/- 10 hr) or intracellular renal pH (6.53-7.91) did not. These preliminary data suggest that MRS is a noninvasive, nondestructive and sterile method for assessing clinical viability during hypothermic storage of human cadaver kidneys and the subsequent recovery of renal function postrenal transplantation.
...
PMID:Pretransplant assessment of renal viability by phosphorus-31 magnetic resonance spectroscopy. Clinical experience in 40 recipient patients. 266 35
Post transplant
acute tubular necrosis
(
ATN
) is responsible for approximately 90% of acute renal failure episodes occurring within the first few weeks following renal transplantation. This phenomenon is observed in 34% of cadaver transplant recipients and 9% of those with live donor kidneys. Although the exact cause of post transplant
ATN
remains unknown, the following factors are thought to be associated with a higher incidence of
ATN
: 1) donor hypotension, 2) prolonged "warm ischemia time", 3) increased vascular resistance with poor perfusate flow, 4) presence of "ligandin" or excess lactate in the renal perfusate, 5) reduced allograft blood flow, 6) cold lymphocytotoxins in the patient's serum and 7) administration of nephrotoxic drugs particularly to the hypovolemic graft recipients. Therapeutic maneuvers such as hydration of the donors and recipients, harvesting the kidneys from heart beating cadavers, donor pretreatment with massive doses of corticosteroids and alpha-adrenergic blocking agents and warming of the graft immediately after vascular anastomosis, seem to reduce the incidence of
ATN
. Since the management differs significantly, post transplant
ATN
has to be distinguished from other causes of acute renal failure such as the renal artery thrombosis, hyperacute rejection and obstruction of the urinary tract. The tests which are of use in the differential diagnosis include, 131-I
Hippuran
renogram, transplant ultrasound, renal angiogram, retrograde pyelogram and renal transplant biopsy. Patients with established
ATN
should undergo every other day dialysis, under low dose or regional heparinization, until the creatinine clearance improves to 20 ml/min. The dose of azathioprine has to be reduced to prevent bone marrow toxicity. Even though there are short term disadvantages, the post transplant
ATN
does not appear to exert any detrimental effects in the long run. However, this issue remains controversial in the published reports.
...
PMID:Post transplant acute renal failure: a review. 634 76
A retrospective review of 27 patients with nonvisualization on 131I-orthoiodohippurate (
Hippuran
) renal scan during 1972--1977 was carried out. 5 patients had renal failure caused by urinary tract obstruction and of these, 4 were submitted to surgical relief. Varying levels of life-sustaining renal function were recovered in all 4 patients. 16 had chronic intrinsic renal disease, of whom 7 were admitted for reasons not directly related to renal failure. All of these required chronic dialysis within 3--6 months. The remaining 7 patients had acute renal failure (clinically,
acute tubular necrosis
) and none of them survived. It had been well established that the prognosis for recoverability of renal function is extremely poor in patients with nonvisualization on hippuran scan. It is important, therefore, to emphasize that nonvisualization on 131I-orthoiodohippurate renal scan in patients with urinary tract obstruction does not exclude the potential for recoverable renal function. Therefore, even in the absence of renal visualization, the need to definitively rule out urinary tract obstruction remains.
...
PMID:Obstructive uropathy in patients with nonvisualization on renal scan. 735 84