The aim of this study was to estimate the incidence of COVID-19 disease in the French national population of dialysis patients, their course of illness and to identify the risk factors associated with mortality. Our study included all patients on dialysis recorded in the French REIN Registry in April 2020. Clinical characteristics at last follow-up and the evolution of COVID-19 illness severity over time were recorded for diagnosed cases (either suspicious clinical symptoms, characteristic signs on the chest scan or a positive reverse transcription polymerase chain reaction) for SARS-CoV-2. A total of 1,621 infected patients were reported on the REIN registry from March 16th, 2020 to May 4th, 2020. Of these, 344 died. The prevalence of COVID-19 patients varied from less than 1% to 10% between regions. The probability of being a case was higher in males, patients with diabetes, those in need of assistance for transfer or treated at a self-care unit. Dialysis at home was associated with a lower probability of being infected as was being a smoker, a former smoker, having an active malignancy, or peripheral vascular disease. Mortality in diagnosed cases (21%) was associated with the same causes as in the general population. Higher age, hypoalbuminemia and the presence of an ischemic heart disease were statistically independently associated with a higher risk of death. Being treated at a selfcare unit was associated with a lower risk. Thus, our study showed a relatively low frequency of COVID-19 among dialysis patients contrary to what might have been assumed.
Background and Purpose:External counterpulsation (ECP) noninvasively improves myocardial and organ perfusion via diastolic augmentation. The effects on cerebral blood flow velocities (CBFV) and hemodynamics are controversial. In this study, the effect of active ECP treatment on CBF in healthy subjects was continuously measured. Methods: In 9 healthy volunteers (mean age 34.1 ± 11.1 years, 4 females), 20-min active ECP treatment was performed. CBFV in the middle cerebral artery were detected via transcranial Doppler. CBFV were registered continuously before, during and after ECP. The protocol was repeated twice. Results: At onset of ECP, immediate changes in CBFV were observed: peak diastolic blood flow velocities increased from baseline to treatment (63 vs. 76 cm/s; p < 0.001) and diastolic blood flow augmentation was maintained throughout ECP. Peak systolic (87 vs. 78 cm/s; p < 0.001) and end-diastolic velocities (40 vs. 28 cm/s; p < 0.001) decreased significantly, while mean CBFV maintained constant (59 vs. 58 cm/s; not significant). The pulsatility index and resistance index as indirect parameters for peripheral vascular resistance increased during ECP (pulsatility index 0.79 vs. 0.89, p < 0.001; resistance index 0.54 vs. 0.64; p < 0.001). Conclusions: ECP did not increase mean CBFV in healthy subjects even though peak diastolic CBFV were significantly augmented. Changes in CBFV and transcranial Doppler waveform characteristics suggest that the mean flow of the middle cerebral artery is maintained stable via cerebrovascular autoregulatory mechanisms.
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