One wonders whether the use of cyclosporin, histamine receptor antagonists, low doses of steroids, and early diagnosis and treatment actually modify the incidence, morbidity, and mortality of gastrointestinal (GI) and pancreatic complications in renal transplantation. To find out, we reviewed 614 kidney transplant recipients between January 1984 and December 1988. One hundred patients (16.2%) were found to have GI and/or pancreatic complications in the following distribution: 9.6% gastroduodenal, 1.3% pancreatic, 4% colonic, and 0.4% small bowel. None of the patients presenting a gastroduodenal ulcer had perforation or bleeding. Fifty-five percent of the patients with this complication had a past history of eso-gastroduodenal disease, compared to 19.6% in recipients without gastroduodenal complications. Some 4.4% of the patients had a small bowel or a colonic complication and four died of peritonitis due to bowel perforation. Mortality was 35% in those having intestinal resection and/or perforation with peritonitis. Sixteen percent of patients with colonic complications had a known history of diverticula, compared to 3% for those without colonic complications. The incidence of GI and/or pancreatic complications in renal transplant recipients remains high and has caused 1.1% of the deaths in our series. Mortality is essentially due to upper GI bleeding, peritonitis following perforation, and infectious colitis. Better detection of gastroduodenal and colonic disease before transplantation seems to be mandatory. Prevention with histamine H2 receptor antagonists and early surgical treatment of complicated colonic diverticula help to reduce the morbidity and mortality in kidney graft recipients.
One hundred thirty-eight patients with transplant renal artery stenosis (TRAS) were identified among 1200 patients undergoing renal transplantation in our university hospital. Severe systemic hypertension was the main symptom leading to a diagnosis of TRAS. Only 88 TRAS patients were given interventional treatment consisting of percutaneous angioplasty (PTA; n = 49) or surgical repair (SR; n = 39). The immediate success rate was 92.1% for SR and 69% for PTA. The long-term success rate was 81.5% for SR and 40.8% for PTA, with a follow-up period of 56.7 +/- 22.4 months (SR group) and 32 +/- 28.1 months (PTA group). PTA morbidity reached 28%, compared to 7.6% in the SR group. In spite of these results, we still favor PTA as a first line interventional treatment when TRAS is recent, linear, and distal and primary SR in cases of kinking and proximal TRAS.
The effectiveness of long-term treatment of Alzheimer’s disease with cholinesterase inhibitors is a matter of controversy. We evaluated the effects of prolonged treatment with eptastigmine in 176 patients with mild to moderate Alzheimer’s disease participating in the open-label extension phase of a 25-week double-blind, placebo-controlled trial of eptastigmine. The effects of eptastigmine on cognition and daily functioning were evaluated with the cognitive portion of the Alzheimer’s Disease Assessment Scale (ADAS-Cog) and the Instrumental Activities of Daily Living (IADL) scale, respectively. Safety was monitored by physical examination, laboratory tests, vital functions and electrocardiogram measurements and by the assessment of adverse events. One hundred and fifty-three patients (87%) completed 1 year of treatment, 77 patients (44%) 18 months and 33 patients (19%) 2 years of treatment. Patients treated for 2 years showed an improvement of mean ADAS-Cog scores compared to baseline for 31 weeks and mean IADL scores remained close to baseline for 25 weeks. Cognitive and functional scores then worsened as expected in this progressive disease. After 2 years, patients deteriorated compared to baseline by 13.4 points on the ADAS-Cog and 6.1 points on IADL. Historical untreated controls with identical disease severity are expected to have an annual worsening of approximately 10.9 points on ADAS-Cog and 4.9 points on IADL. Thus patients treated with eptastigmine for 2 years had a benefit of 8.5 points on ADAS-Cog and 3.8 points on IADL. These benefits translate to about 9 months difference between eptastigmine-treated patients and untreated historical patients. The drug was generally well tolerated with 14 patients (7.9%) withdrawing due to adverse events. Adverse events, not necessarily drug-related, were recorded in 66 patients (37.5%) and were transient and generally mild in severity. This study indicates that prolonged treatment with eptastigmine is safe and produced a clinically long-term benefit in patients with Alzheimer’s disease.
One wonders whether the use of cyclosporin, histamine receptor antagonists, low doses of steroids, and early diagnosis and treatment actually modify the incidence, morbidity, and mortality of gastrointestinal (GI) and pancreatic complications in renal transplantation. To find out, we reviewed 614 kidney transplant recipients between January 1984 and December 1988. One hundred patients (16.2%) were found to have GI and/or pancreatic complications in the following distribution: 9.6% gastroduodenal, 1.3% pancreatic, 4% colonic, and 0.4% small bowel. None of the patients presenting a gastroduodenal ulcer had perforation or bleeding. Fifty-five percent of the patients with this complication had a past history of eso-gastroduodenal disease, compared to 19.6% in recipients without gastroduodenal complications. Some 4.4% of the patients had a small bowel or a colonic complication and four died of peritonitis due to bowel perforation. Mortality was 35% in those having intestinal resection and/or perforation with peritonitis. Sixteen percent of patients with colonic complications had a known history of diverticula, compared to 3% for those without colonic complications. The incidence of GI and/or pancreatic complications in renal transplant recipients remains high and has caused 1.1% of the deaths in our series. Mortality is essentially due to upper GI bleeding, peritonitis following perforation, and infectious colitis. Better detection of gastroduodenal and colonic disease before transplantation seems to be mandatory. Prevention with histamine H2 receptor antagonists and early surgical treatment of complicated colonic diverticula help to reduce the morbidity and mortality in kidney graft recipients.
One hundred thirty-eight patients with transplant renal artery stenosis (TRAS) were identified among 1200 patients undergoing renal transplantation in our university hospital. Severe systemic hypertension was the main symptom leading to ? diagnosis of TRAS. Only 88 TRAS patients were given interventional treatment consisting of percutaneous angioplasty (PTA; n = 49) or surgical repair (SR; n = 39). The immediate success rate was 92.1 YO for SR and 60% for PTA. The long-term success rate was 81.5% for SR and 40.8% for PTA, with a follow-up period of 56.7 f22.4 months (SR group) and 32 k 28.1 months (PTA group). PTA morbidity reached 28%. compared to 7.6% in the SR group. In spite of these results, we still favor PTA as a first line interventional treatment when TRAS is recent, linear, and distal and primary SR in cases of kinking and proximal TRAS.
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