Thirty-eight children (aged 2-16 years) attending a regional kidney unit had a full clinical and radiological dental examination. Twenty had previously undergone a renal transplant, 11 had chronic renal failure and 7 had other renal diseases. Periodontal disease was uncommon The presence of gingival hyperplasia (gum overgrowth), as recorded in 22 of the children, did not show any relationship with the use of immunosuppressant therapy. However, gingival overgrowth was so excessive in 2 patients that surgical removal was required. The prevalence of dental caries was low. Enamel defects were common, and of an unusual pattern, with a much higher prevalence of diffuse opacities and enamel hypoplasia than in the normal child population, 83% and 22%, respectively. This increased prevalence is probably due to disordered calcium and phosphate metabolism. The prevalence of these defects may reflect an early onset of renal disease, since there were a number of very young children in the programme. Dental and medical care should be closely integrated for children with renal disease to avoid the undesirable dental sequelae of, in particular, gingival overgrowth, carcinoma and enamel hypoplasia.
Primary vesicoureteric reflux accounts for approximately 10% of kidney failure requiring dialysis or transplantation, and sibling studies suggest a large genetic component. Here, we report a wholegenome linkage and association scan in primary, nonsyndromic vesicoureteric reflux and reflux nephropathy. We used linkage and family-based association approaches to analyze 320 white families (661 affected individuals, generally from families with two affected siblings) from two populations (United Kingdom and Slovenian). We found modest evidence of linkage but no clear overlap with previous studies. We tested for but did not detect association with six candidate genes (AGTR2, HNF1B, PAX2, RET, ROBO2, and UPK3A). Family-based analysis detected associations with one single-nucleotide polymorphism (SNP) in the UK families, with three SNPs in the Slovenian families, and with three SNPs in the combined families. A case-control analysis detected associations with three additional SNPs. The results of this study, which is the largest to date investigating the genetics of reflux, suggest that major loci may not exist for this common renal tract malformation within European populations.
Context FathersÕ contributions to the management of long-term childhood medical conditions are under-represented in the literature; therefore, the full extent of their involvement is poorly understood by practitioners and researchers, so strategies for promoting their involvement have not yet been fully considered.Objective To review studies of fathersÕ actual contributions in a wide range of conditions, the potential to optimize their contribution through additional interventions by health professionals and a direction for future research.Design Narrative review of the literature.Methods CINAHL, Medline, PsychInfo and ERIC databases were searched electronically between the years 1995-2008. The terms adherence, adjustment, child, chronic, compliance, concordance, condition, coping, disease, father, illness, information, long-term, management ⁄ intervention, mother, role, self-care and treatment were searched for separately and in combination. English language papers reporting primary research were selected and supplemented by handsearching reference lists. Thirty-five papers (arising from 29 studies) met criteria and were selected for narrative review.Results Five themes were identified: (i) the impact of long-term conditions on fathersÕ ability to promote their childÕs well-being, (ii) factors influencing fathersÕ involvement in health care, (iii) personal growth ⁄ beneficial effects for fathers, (iv) the impact of fatherÕs involvement on family functioning and (v) strategies that increase fathersÕ participation in their childÕs health care and in research investigating fathersÕ participation.Conclusions The review suggests that fathersÕ involvement in childrenÕs health care can positively impact on fathersÕ, mothersÕ and childrenÕs well-being and family functioning. A range of strategies are identified to inform the promotion of fathersÕ contributions and future research investigating their input.
Developing skills for home-based caregiving of long-term conditions is a challenging and uncertain process. Both parents often participate in caregiving, and the findings reported here may help professionals decide how best to support both parents in their home-based caregiving.
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