Rotator cuff calcific tendinitis is a very common disease and may result in a very painful shoulder. Aetiology of this disease is still poorly understood. When symptoms are mild, this disease may be treated conservatively. Several treatment options have been proposed. Among them, ultrasound-guided procedures have been recently described. All procedures use one or two needles to inject a fluid, to dissolve calcium and to aspirate it. In the present article, we review some tips and tricks that may be useful to improve performance of an ultrasound-guided double-needle procedure.
Little is known about the role of proteinuria in the progression of childhood renal diseases. We analyzed the decline in creatinine clearance ( C(Cr)) and kidney survival in 225 children (185 males) with chronic renal failure (CRF) due to isolated hypodysplasia or hypodysplasia associated with urological abnormalities. The data were based on the information available in the Italian Pediatric Registry of CRF (ItalKid Project), which includes patients from all of Italy aged <20 years with C(Cr )levels of <75 ml/min per 1.73 m(2). Patients aged <2 years and those with C(Cr )levels of <20 ml/min per 1.73 m(2) or a follow-up of <1 year were excluded from the analysis, as were those receiving angiotensin-converting enzyme inhibitors. At baseline, the patients had a mean age of 7.8+/-4.2 years, a mean C(Cr )of 50+/-16.3 ml/min per 1.73 m(2), a median urinary protein/urinary creatinine (uPr/uCr) ratio of 0.38 (range 0.02-7.21), and a mean duration of follow-up of 3.5+/-1.1 years. The patients were divided into three groups on the basis of their baseline proteinuria levels: group A normal (uPr/uCr <0.2) n=83; group B low (uPr/uCr 0.2-0.9) n=71; and group C mild (uPr/uCr >0.9) n=71. Patients in groups A and B showed a significantly slower decline in C(Cr )than those in group C (slope +0.16+/-3.64 and -0.54+/-3.67 vs. -3.61+/-5.47, P<0.0001) and a higher rate of kidney survival after 5 years (96.7% and 94.1% vs. 44.9%, P<0.01). By multivariate analysis, the baseline uPr/uCr ratio ( P<0.01) and age ( P<0.0001) correlated with a faster decline in C(Cr )irrespective of baseline C(Cr). There was no correlation with mean arterial blood pressure. We conclude that proteinuria is an independent predictor of progression to end-stage renal failure also in children whose renal impairment is due to congenital hypodysplasia.
In the past 10 years, many widely accepted concepts relating to aldosterone production and its pathogenetic role have changed. We now know that aldosterone is produced not only by the zona glomerulosa of the adrenal cortex, but also in the heart, blood vessels, kidney and brain; such extra-epithelial production occurs mainly during tissue repair. Also, increased aldosterone levels contribute to vessel inflammation, oxidative stress, endothelial dysfunction and organ damage. As such, aldosterone has a key role in the development of myocardial fibrosis. Anti-aldosterone treatment has proven effective in patients with heart failure. Experimental evidence regarding the role of aldosterone in kidney damage has accumulated. Aldosterone infusion can counteract the beneficial effects of treatment with angiotensin-converting-enzyme inhibitors, causing more-severe proteinuria and an increased number of vascular and glomerular lesions; treatment with aldosterone antagonists can reverse these alterations. Preliminary observations in pilot studies in humans confirm the experimental findings, supporting the hypothesis that aldosterone antagonists are renoprotective in clinical practice. Studies in larger populations with longer follow-up are needed to confirm this theory.
We conclude that ACEi treatment does not significantly modify the naturally progressive course of hypodysplastic nephropathy in children and further studies are necessary before such treatment is routinely proposed for anti-progression purposes in children with CKD.
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