Clinical symptoms as well as the cardiovascular risk profile are not valid predictors of CAD in diabetic patients with chronic renal failure. Therefore coronary angiography should be performed in all diabetic patients prior to renal transplantation.
Objective-To assess the rate of angiographic restenosis in patients with end stage renal disease after elective coronary angioplasty. Design-A retrospective case-control study of 20 patients with end stage renal disease and 20 sex and age matched controls without renal disease, who had undergone primarily successful coronary angioplasty. Control coronary angiography was performed regardless of worsening or renewed incidence of anginal symptoms.
Main outcome measures-Group
Patients with end-stage renal disease have a high prevalence of CAD. In line with the clinical course, CAD patients on maintenance dialysis undergo rapid angiographic progression of CAD, which results in a high rate of subsequent myocardial revascularizations.
Although patients receiving CABG had a more severe coronary artery disease the overall mortality was comparable and clinical and functional outcome was improved compared to patients after coronary angioplasty.
In patients with aprupt onset of acute illness, which include fever and sudden petechial rash, severe meningococcal septicemia has to be taken in consideration without clinical signs of meningitis. The prompt diagnosis, the use of parenteral antiobiotics in suspected meningococcal disease as well as the management of meningococcemia and its complications in intensive care units is crucial for the prognosis of the individual patient.
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