To evaluate discordant clinical and pathological diagnoses leading to pediatric enucleations over time. Methods: All pathology reports of pediatric enucleation specimens (subjects aged 0 to 18 years) from 1960 to 2008 were reviewed. Specimens with discordant clinical and pathologic diagnoses were further analyzed. Formalin-fixed, paraffin-embedded sections of enucleated eyes of any misdiagnosed cases were reevaluated. Results: Of 729 pediatric patients (746 eyes) who had enucleation from 1960 to 2008, 29 patients (4.0%) and 30 eyes (4.0%) had discordant clinical and pathological diagnoses. The misdiagnosis enucleation rate decreased with each respective decade studied, with the highest rate of 6.5% (18 of 276 eyes) in the 1960s and no misdiag-noses from 1990 to 2008. Of the 369 eyes enucleated for the clinical indication of malignancy, 22 eyes (6.0%) were misdiagnosed in that no evidence of malignancy was found on histopathological examination. Of the 377 eyes enucleated for benign clinical indications, 7 cases (1.9%) were found to be malignant by histopathology. Conclusions: Misdiagnoses leading to pediatric enucleation have decreased during the past 5 decades, likely owing to improved diagnostic techniques. Benign and malignant intraocular conditions can simulate each other, especially retinoblastoma, Coats disease, nematode and bacterial endophthalmitis, panuveitis, and persistent hyperplastic primary vitreous.
There is a belief that there should be a minimum of 5 cm between two cannulating needles of an arteriovenous fistula. This study examined the effect of reduction of space between needles from 5 cm to 2.5 cm on access recirculation, the measurement of access blood flow rate (by indicator dilution technology), and dialysis efficiency (by effective ionic dialysance). Twelve patients were studied, with half having their dialysis needles placed 2.5 cm apart for five consecutive dialysis treatments followed by placing needles 5 cm apart for a further five consecutive treatments. The other half initiated with 5 cm followed by 2.5 cm distance for a similar number of treatments. All 120 dialyses had successful cannulations with access recirculation excluded. Access blood flow (Qa mL/min) measurement was attempted for each patient twice, with each of the two needle positions. The Qa with needles 2.5 cm apart was 1310.95 ± 525.7 mL/min (M ± SD, n = 21) and was 1001.0 ± 240.4 mL/min when 5 cm apart (n = 22) (p = 0.014). There was a correlation between these two sets of Qa values (r = 0.554; p = 0.011). The effective ionic dialysance values obtained with needles 2.5 cm or 5 cm apart were similar and correlated strongly (r = 0.71; p = 0.000). Hemodialysis treatments using arteriovenous fistulae and two needles as close as 2.5 cm apart are possible without access recirculation and impairment of clearance. Indicator dilution access blood flow measurements are not recommended under these circumstances.
Significance Statement Pregnancies in women with CKD carry greater risk than pregnancies in the general population. The small number of women in prior studies has limited estimates of this risk, especially among those with advanced CKD. We report the results of a population-based cohort study in Ontario, Canada, that assessed more than 500,000 pregnancies, including 600 with a baseline eGFR < 60 ml/min per 1.73 m2. The investigation demonstrates increases in risk of different adverse maternal and fetal outcomes with lower eGFR and further risk elevation with baseline proteinuria. Background CKD is a risk factor for pregnancy complications, but estimates for adverse outcomes come largely from single-center studies with few women with moderate or advanced stage CKD. Methods To investigate the association between maternal baseline eGFR and risk of adverse pregnancy outcomes, we conducted a retrospective, population-based cohort study of women (not on dialysis or having had a kidney transplant) in Ontario, Canada, who delivered between 2007 and 2019. The study included 565,907 pregnancies among 462,053 women. Administrative health databases captured hospital births, outpatient laboratory testing, and pregnancy complications. We analyzed pregnancies with serum creatinine measured within 2 years of conception up to 30 days after conception and assessed the impact of urine protein where available. Results The risk of major maternal morbidity, preterm delivery, and low birthweight increased monotonically across declining eGFR categories, with risk increase most notable as eGFR dropped below 60 ml/min per 1.73 m2. A total of 56 (40%) of the 133 pregnancies with an eGFR <45 ml/min per 1.73 m2 resulted in delivery under 37 weeks, compared with 10% of pregnancies when eGFR exceeded 90 ml/min per 1.73 m2. Greater proteinuria significantly increased risk within each eGFR category. Maternal and neonatal deaths were rare regardless of baseline eGFR (<0.3% of all pregnancies). Only 7% of women with an eGFR <45 ml/min per 1.73 m2 received dialysis during or immediately after pregnancy. Conclusions We observed higher rates of adverse pregnancy outcomes in women with low eGFR with concurrent proteinuria. These results can help inform health care policy, preconception counseling, and pregnancy follow-up in women with CKD.
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