Hemorrhage from an angiomyolipoma (AML) of the kidney can be life threatening and arterial embolization is the primary treatment. Embolization is less invasive than surgery, is well tolerated, and ...major complications are rare. We describe a case of disseminated intravascular coagulation (DIC) after embolization of a bleeding renal AML in a 44-year-old man with massive bilateral AMLs. This report aims to highlight the possibility that acute DIC could be a major complication of embolization itself and so should be considered and screened for because, if present, it requires early and aggressive management.
A 44-year-old man with a history of large bilateral renal AMLs associated with tuberous sclerosis complex presented with visible hematuria and abdominal pain. Renal CT revealed bleeding from the right kidney. Embolization with polyvinyl alcohol and lipiodol was urgently performed. The following day he required multiple blood transfusions and repeat embolization, this time with gelfoam and "tornado" coils. He suddenly developed DIC, cardiovascular collapse and acute renal failure requiring many days in the intensive care unit for inotropic support and renal replacement therapy.
Arterial embolization may be associated with increased risk of DIC in the setting of treating large bleeding renal AMLs. DIC may be a direct or indirect complication of this. The clinician must act quickly to identify this and treat this complication aggressively.
Abstract Xanthogranulomatous pyelonephritis (XGPN) is an atypical long-term pyelonephritis with destruction of renal parenchyma and a long-term inflammatory infiltrate of macrophages. Reported ...presentations of transitional cell carcinoma (TCC) are different. A 73-year-old woman presented with loin pain, prostration, and fever. Computed tomography scan revealed poor cortical enhancement of the kidney, but some of the images bore resemblance to the characteristic “bear's paw” sign, consistent with XGPN with a 7-cm perinephric collection. She was provisionally diagnosed as severe acute pyelonephritis, possibly XGPN, with abscess. In view of the poor clinical condition, decision was made to perform nephrectomy. Histology revealed a G3pT4 high grade TCC with perineural and vascular invasion and reactive xanthogranulomatous inflammatory response. There are few reports of concomitant XGPN and TCC affecting the kidney. However, there has not been any mention of XGPN and TCC presenting as acute pyelonephritis and perinephric abscess so far.
Abstract Objective(s) To examine the association between obstructive sleep apnea (OSA) and other sleep indices using polysomnography (PSG) data and erectile dysfunction (ED) in a representative ...cohort of men. Design Cross-sectional. Setting Community-based. Participants Aged 40+ years (n = 734; mean age SD, 60.8 10.9). Measurements Men with no prior OSA diagnosis who underwent in-home PSG (Embletta X100; 2010-11) and ED assessment (Global Impotence Rating) were selected. Un-adjusted and multi-adjusted regression models of ED were fitted against PSG measures, along with qualifying sociodemographic, lifestyle, and health-related covariates. Mediation effects were examined using the Baron-Kenny method. Results Of the men examined, 24.7% (n = 181) had ED, most notably in men older than 65 years (cf. men 35-49 and 50-64years; P < .001). There was no significant association between ED and any of the PSG measures for allaged men. Given an observed ageinteraction within OSA categories ( P = .005), analyses were repeated in age-stratified samples (<65 years; 65+ years). In men younger than 65 years, only severe OSA was found to have an association with ED (2.01; 1.13-4.69) in unadjusted models. For men aged 65+ years, an independent association with ED was found for apnea-hyponea index (AHI; 1.55;1.02-2.36), moderate (AHI:10.0-19.9; 1.79;1.18-2.43), and severe (AHI:20.0+; 4.84;2.56-9.93) OSA, and oxygen desaturation index (ODI; both continuous 1.48;1.03-1.99 and >16 seconds 2.79;1.23-6.32). The effect of AHI on ED was shown to be primarily mediated through ODI (63.4%, Sobel P value = .29). Conclusions In younger, community-based men, there appeared no independent relationship between objective measures of sleep and ED. However, there appears a strong, independent relationship between OSA, ODI, and ED in men 65 years and older.
Summary
We report the outcomes of renal transplant patients (n = 43) who received grafts from donors (n = 41) with small (<3 cm) renal tumours removed before transplantation covering the period from ...May 1996 to September 2007. Patient and graft survival were compared with the outcomes of conventional live unrelated transplants (LURTs) (n = 120) and to patient survival on the transplant waiting list for those who did not receive a kidney during this period (n = 153). Patient survival at 1, 3 and 5 years were 92%, 88% and 88% for recipients of tumourectomized kidneys (TKs), 99%, 97% and 97% for LURTs, and 98%, 92% and 74% for dialysis patients waiting for a deceased donor kidney (log rank score 10.4, P = 0.005). One patient experienced a local tumour recurrence at 9 years following transplantation. This patient declined intervention and is currently under active surveillance. Transplantation of tumourectomized kidneys from patients with small, localized, incidentally detected renal tumours results in similar outcomes to conventional LURTs and confers a significant survival advantage for patients who would otherwise be unable to receive a transplant.
Nonheart-beating kidney donation: Current practice and future developments.
Nonheart-beating kidney donation (NHBD) is gaining acceptance as a method of donor pool expansion. However, a number of ...practitioners have concerns over rates of delayed graft function, acute rejection, and long-term graft survival. The ethical issues associated with NHBD are complex and may be a further disincentive. Tailored strategies for preservation, viability prediction, and immunosuppression for kidneys from this source have the potential to maximize the number of available organs. This review article presents the current practice of NHBD kidney transplantation, examines the results and draws comparisons with cadaveric kidneys, and explores some areas of potential development.
A review of the current literature on NHBD kidney donation was performed.
The renewed interest in NHBD kidneys is driven by a continuing shortfall in available organs. Those centers involved in NHBD report an increase in kidney transplants of the order of 16% to 40% and there is no evidence that the financial costs are higher with NHBDs. The majority of experience comes from Maastricht category 2 NHBDs, where an estimation of warm time is possible. This is generally limited to 40 minutes. There are variations in the technique for kidney preservation prior to retrieval, but most centers use an aortic balloon catheter. Much work has looked at the ideal technique for kidney preservation prior to implantation. Evidence suggests that machine perfusion produces the best initial function rates, decreased use of adjuvant immunotherapy and fewer haemodialysis sessions than static cold storage.
Despite being associated with poorer initial graft function, the long-term allograft survival of NHBD kidneys does not differ from the results of transplantation from cadaveric kidneys. Further, serum creatinine levels are generally equivalent. Constant reassessment of the ethical issues is required for donation to be increased while respecting public concerns. Use of viability assessment and tailoring of immune suppression for NHBD kidneys may allow a further increase in donation from this source.
Laparoscopic donor nephrectomy (LapDN) has been widely adopted despite a lack of randomized trials comparing recipient outcomes with open surgery. Review of registry data now seems the most realistic ...mechanism to compare outcomes. The Australia and New Zealand Dialysis and Transplant Registry prospectively captures data on all renal transplants performed in Australia and New Zealand including long-term follow-up of recipients. AIM.: To compare graft outcomes among recipient of kidneys from donors undergoing nephrectomy using open and laparoscopic techniques, through analysis of the Australia and New Zealand Dialysis and Transplant Registry after the introduction of laparoscopic donor surgery in Australia and New Zealand in 1997.
Operative technique data for live donor transplants were collected from all surgeons performing live kidney donation procedures from May 1997 to December 2003; the outcomes of all live donor transplants were examined with follow-up to December 2007. Donor and recipient demographic variables and graft outcomes were compared between the laparoscopic and the open donor groups.
One thousand four hundred seventy-four live donor transplants were performed in 27 transplant centers. Of these, 315 (21%) were performed laparoscopically in 11 centers. Nineteen laparoscopic cases (6%) were converted to open. Total ischemic time was longer in the LapDN group (3.16 hr) than in the open donor group (1.61 hr, P<0.0001). The LapDN group experienced a lower incidence of rejection episodes (29.2% vs. 38.6%, P=0.002). Delayed graft function and technical failure rates were statistically equal across the groups. There were a total of 242 graft failures (175 graft losses and 67 deaths with a functioning graft, NS). Among surviving grafts, there was no consistent difference in serum creatinine at any time point. Graft and patient survivals were similar in both groups during 10-year follow-up.
This study suggests that there is no difference in short- or long-term recipient outcomes for open and laparoscopic live donor nephrectomy.
Memokath 051™ stents are increasingly used for management of benign and malignant ureteral strictures refractory to management with single or tandem polymeric Double-J ureteral stents. Migration, ...encrustation, and difficulty in extraction during stent exchange are the chief problems reported so far with these thermoexpandable metallic stents. We report an unusual complication of ureteroexternal iliac artery fistula (UEAF) caused by Memokath stent inserted for radiation-induced ureteral stricture.
A 71-year-old male with history of colorectal cancer (underwent extirpative surgery + chemoradiotherapy) and subsequently radiation-induced ureteral stricture had bilateral Memokath ureteral stents inserted. Three months later, he presented with sepsis and hemodynamic instability secondary to UEAF, confirmed on angiography. A covered vascular stent was inserted as an immediate management.
Memokath stent insertion in radiation-induced ureteral strictures may be associated with an increased risk of erosion and the rare potential complication of UEAF. This potential risk needs to be considered in the overall setting of such strictures and the difficulty in treating them. Prompt imaging (angiography) and placement of an endovascular stent are the ideal immediate options in such cases.
Pulsatile machine perfusion offers theoretical advantages as a method of preserving kidneys before transplantation. This may be particularly the case for organs taken from non-heart-beating donors ...(NHBD), but there is still a lack of data to support this view. The aim of this study was to compare the effectiveness of static cold storage in ice (CS) and hypothermic pulsatile machine perfusion (MP) as methods of renal transplant preservation.
Groups of large white pigs (n=5) underwent left nephrectomy after warm ischemic times (WIT) of 0 or 30 min. Kidneys were preserved by CS or by cold (3degrees-8degreesC) MP for 24 hr. The left kidney was then autotransplanted into the right iliac fossa and an immediate right nephrectomy was performed. Renal function was assessed daily for 14 days.
Fourteen-day animal survival rates for 0 and 30 min WIT were four of five and one of five after both CS and MP. In the zero WIT groups, there was improved recovery of renal function after MP (area under the creatinine curve, 4,722+/-2,496 MP vs. 8,849+/-2,379 CS; P<0.05). MP did not improve renal function after 30 min of WIT (mean daily area under the creatinine curve, 1,077+/-145 MP vs. 1,049+/-265 CS).
In this model, MP improved 24-hr preservation of kidneys not subjected to warm ischemia (heart-beating donor model), but there was no evidence that MP was a better method of preservation than CS for kidneys exposed to 30 min of WIT (NHBD model).
Summary
Desensitization protocols reduce donor‐specific anti‐HLA antibodies (DSA) and enable renal transplantation in patients with a positive complement‐dependent cytotoxic cross‐match (CDC‐CXM). ...The effect of this treatment on protective antibody and immunoglobulin levels is unknown. Thirteen patients with end‐stage renal disease, DSA and positive CDC‐CXM underwent desensitization. Sera collected pre‐ and post‐transplantation were analysed for anti‐tetanus and anti‐pneumococcal antibodies, total immunoglobulin (Ig) levels and IgG subclasses and were compared to healthy controls and contemporaneous renal transplant recipients treated with standard immunosuppression alone. Ten patients developed negative CDC‐CXM and enzyme‐linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA) and underwent successful transplantation. Eight recipients achieved good graft function without antibody‐mediated or late rejection, BK virus or cytomegalovirus infection. One patient had primary non‐function due to recurrent oxalosis, and one patient with immediate graft function died from septicaemia. Seven recipients required post‐operative transfusion and three developed septicaemia. DSA remained negative by ELISA at 12 months, but were detectable by Luminex®. Anti‐tetanus and anti‐pneumococcal antibodies, total Ig and IgG subclasses were below the normal range but comparable to levels in renal transplant recipients who had not undergone desensitization. Desensitization protocols effectively reduce DSA and allow successful transplantation. Post‐operative bleeding and short‐term infectious risk is increased. Protective antibody and serum immunoglobulin levels are relatively preserved.
Non-directed live kidney donation Brook, Nicholas R; Nicholson, Michael L
The Lancet (British edition),
07/2006, Letnik:
368, Številka:
9533
Journal Article
Recenzirano
Advantages of live donation include better post-transplant outcome for the recipient than with cadaveric kidneys,3 the potential for transplantation before dialysis (offering medical advantages to ...the donor), and the ability to plan the procedure (allowing optimisation of the recipient's condition).