Mitrofanoff for Valve Bladder Syndrome: Effect on Urinary Tract and Renal Function

2014 ◽  
Vol 191 (5S) ◽  
pp. 1517-1522 ◽  
Author(s):  
Thomas King ◽  
Robert Coleman ◽  
Karan Parashar
2021 ◽  
pp. 1-6
Author(s):  
Joseph Stavas ◽  
Maria Diaz-Gonzalez de Ferris ◽  
Ashley Johns ◽  
Deepak Jain ◽  
Tim Bertram

Background: Advanced cell therapies with autologous, homologous cells show promise to affect reparative and restorative changes in the chronic kidney disease (CKD) nephron. We present our protocol and preliminary analysis of an IRB-approved, phase I single-group, open-label trial that tests the safety and efficacy of Renal Autologous Cell Therapy (REACT; NCT 04115345) in adults with congenital anomalies of the kidney and urinary tract (CAKUT). Methods: Adults with surgically corrected CAKUT and CKD stages 3 and 4 signed an informed consent and served as their “own” baseline control. REACT is an active biological ingredient acquired from a percutaneous tissue acquisition from the patient’s kidney cortex. The specimen undergoes a GMP-compliant manufacturing process that harvests the selected renal cells composed of progenitors for renal repair, followed by image-guided locoregional reinjection into the patient’s renal cortex. Participants receive 2 doses at 6-month intervals. Primary outcomes are stable renal function and stable/improved quality of life. Additional exploratory endpoints include the impact of REACT on blood pressure, vitamin D levels, hemoglobin, hematocrit and kidney volume by MRI analysis. Results: Four men and 1 woman were enrolled and underwent 5 cell injections. Their characteristics were as follows: mean 52.8 years (SD 17.7 years), 1 Hispanic, 4 non-Hispanic, and 5 white. There were no renal tissue acquisition, cell injection, or cell product-related complications at baseline. Conclusion: REACT is demonstrating feasibility and patient safety in preliminary analysis. Autologous cell therapy treatment has the potential to stabilize or improve renal function in CAKUT-associated CKD to delay or avert dialysis. Patient enrollment and follow-up are underway.


2021 ◽  
Vol 71 (11) ◽  
pp. 2662-2664
Author(s):  
Lubna Razzak ◽  
Sherjeel Saulat

Uterovaginal prolapse is the downward descent of the pelvic organ, resulting in protrusion of the vagina, uterus, bladder or rectum. The association between POP and hydronephrosis has been shown by various studies, but severe hydronephrosis leads to renal dysfunction are rarely seen. We report a case of 70 years old female with massive vaginal prolapse and chronic renal impairement. She presented with urinary tract infection (UTI) and raised creatinine levels of 4.5mg/dl. After correction of UTI, she surgically managed to relieve her obstructive symptoms. After surgery her creatinine levels drop to 2.0mg/dl but chronic renal failure persisted. Advance stage prolapsed may damage renal function if left untreated. Timely diagnosis and management may prevent irreversible damage to kidneys Continuous...


2020 ◽  
pp. 5065-5073
Author(s):  
D. Joly ◽  
J.P. Grünfeld

There are more than 200 inherited disorders in which the kidney is affected and which display a wide range of renal features. Autosomal dominant polycystic kidney disease— affects about 1/1000 individuals and accounts for 7% of cases of endstage renal failure in Western countries. Inheritance is autosomal dominant, with mutations in polycystin 1 responsible for 75% of cases and mutations in polycystin 2 accounting for most of the remainder. May present with renal pain, haematuria, urinary tract infection, or hypertension, or be discovered incidentally on physical examination or abdominal imaging, or by family screening, or after routine measurement of renal function. Commonly progresses to endstage renal failure between 40 and 80 years of age. Main extrarenal manifestations are intracranial aneurysms, liver cysts, and mitral valve prolapse. Alport’s syndrome—X-linked dominant inheritance in 85% of kindreds, with molecular defects involving the gene encoding the α‎-5 chain of the type IV collagen molecule. Males typically present with visible haematuria in childhood, followed by permanent nonvisible haematuria, and later by proteinuria and renal failure. Extrarenal manifestations include perceptive deafness of variable severity and ocular abnormalities. Carrier women often have slight or intermittent urinary abnormalities, but may develop mild impairment of renal function late in life, and a few develop endstage renal disease. In the autosomal recessive form of Alport’s syndrome, renal disease progresses to endstage before 20 to 30 years of age at a similar rate in both affected men and women. Other disorders covered in this chapter include hereditary tubulointerstitial nephritis, hereditary tumours, glomerular structural diseases, metabolic diseases with glomerular involvement (Fabry’s disease), congenital anomalies of the kidney and urinary tract, and other genetic diseases with kidney involvement.


Author(s):  
Nao Kawaguchi ◽  
Takayuki Katsube ◽  
Roger Echols ◽  
Toshihiro Wajima

Cefiderocol is a novel siderophore cephalosporin with antibacterial activity against Gramnegative bacteria including carbapenemresistant strains. The standard dosing regimen of cefiderocol is 2 g administered every 8 hours over 3 hours infusion in patients with creatinine clearance (CrCL) of 60 to 119 mL/min, and it is adjusted for patients with < 60 mL/min or ≥ 120 mL/min CrCL. A population pharmacokinetic (PK) model was constructed using 3427 plasma concentrations from 91 uninfected subjects and 425 infected patients with pneumonia, bloodstream infection/sepsis (BSI/sepsis), and complicated urinary tract infection (cUTI). Plasma cefiderocol concentrations were adequately described by the population PK model, and CrCL was the most significant covariate. No other factors including infection sites and mechanical ventilation were clinically relevant, although the effect of infection sites was identified as a statistically significant covariate in the population PK analysis. No clear pharmacokinetic/pharmacodynamic relationship was found for any of the microbiological outcome, clinical outcome, or vital status. This is because the estimated percentage of time for which free plasma concentrations exceed the minimum inhibitory concentration (MIC) over dosing interval (%fT>MIC) was 100% in most of the enrolled patients. The probability of target attainment (PTA) for 100% fT>MIC was > 90% against MICs ≤ 4 μg/mL for all infection sites and renal function groups except for BSI/sepsis patients with normal renal function (85%). These study results support adequate plasma exposure can be achieved at the cefiderocol recommended dosing regimen for the infected patients including the patients with augmented renal function, ventilation, and/or severe illness.


2012 ◽  
Vol 35 (2) ◽  
pp. 59-61
Author(s):  
Gazi Zahirul Hasan ◽  
AKM Zahid Hossain ◽  
Md Ruhul Amin ◽  
Shafiqul Hoque ◽  
MTH Siddiqui

Objective: To compare between nonintubated versus intubated Anderson-Hynes (AH) pyeloplasty in children.Study Design: Prospective studyStudy place: Department of Paediatric Surgery, Bangabandhu Sheikh Mujib Medical University (BSMMU), Dhaka, Bangladesh and some private clinics of Dhaka city. Study period: March 2001 to December 2008.Subjects: A total of 75 patients were included in this study. They were divided in two groups. Nonintubated Anderson-Hynes pyeloplasty was done in 45 patients and intubated Anderson-Hynes pyeloplasty was done in 30 patients.Results: The anastomotic leakage of urine, urinary tract infection, hospital stay and improvement of differential renal function were assessed post operatively in both nonintubated and intubated groups. This study showed that there was no anastomotic failure and no post operative urinary tract infection in either group. The percentage of improvement of differential renal function is almost same in both the groups. The post operative hospital stay was markedly reduced in nonintubated Anderson-Hynes pyeloplasty. In this study the post operative hospital stay in nonintubated group was average 6 days and it was average 16.5 days in intubated group.Conclusion: From this study it may be concluded that the effects of nonintubated AH pyeloplasty is as good as intubated one but an additional advantage of significantly less post operative hospital stay was observed in nonintubated group.DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.3329/bjch.v35i2.10378  Bangladesh J Child Health 2011; Vol 35 (2): 59-61


Author(s):  
Aron Chakera ◽  
William G. Herrington ◽  
Christopher A. O’Callaghan

The kidney is a vital organ with multiple functions. Without kidney function, death will occur in a matter of days. Fortunately, several forms of effective renal replacement therapy are available. This chapter gives a concise introduction to basic urinary tract structure, kidney/glomerulus/tubular function and assessment of kidney function.


Author(s):  
Norbert Lameire ◽  
Raymond Vanholder ◽  
Wim Van Biesen

The prognosis of acute kidney injury (AKI) depends on early diagnosis and therapy. A multitude of causes are classified according to their origin as prerenal, intrinsic (intrarenal), and post-renal.Prerenal AKI means a loss of renal function despite intact nephrons, for example, because of volume depletion and/or hypotension.There is a broad spectrum of intrinsic causes of AKI including acute tubular necrosis (ATN), interstitial nephritis, glomerulonephritis, and vasculitis. Evaluation includes careful review of the patient’s history, physical examination, urinalysis, selected urine chemistries, imaging of the urinary tree, and eventual kidney biopsy. The history should focus on the tempo of loss of function (if known), associated systemic diseases, and symptoms related to the urinary tract (especially those that suggest obstruction). In addition, a review of the medications looking for potentially nephrotoxic drugs is essential. The physical examination is directed towards the identification of findings of a systemic disease and a detailed assessment of the patient’s haemodynamic status. This latter goal may require invasive monitoring, especially in the oliguric patient with conflicting clinical findings, where the physical examination has limited accuracy.Excluding urinary tract obstruction is necessary in all cases and may be established easily by renal ultrasound.Distinction between the two most common causes of AKI (prerenal AKI and ATN) is sometimes difficult, especially because the clinical examination is often misleading in the setting of mild volume depletion or overload. Urinary chemistries, like calculation of the fractional excretion of sodium (FENa), may be used to help in this distinction. In contrast to FENa, the fractional excretion of urea has the advantage of being rather independent of diuretic therapy. Response to fluid repletion is still regarded as the gold standard in the differentiation between prerenal and intrinsic AKI. Return of renal function to baseline or resuming of diuresis within 24 to 72 hours is considered to indicate ‘transient, mostly prerenal AKI’, whereas persistent renal failure usually indicates intrinsic disease. Transient AKI may, however, also occur in short-lived ATN. Furthermore, rapid fluid application is contraindicated in a substantial number of patients, such as those with congestive heart failure.‘Muddy brown’ casts and/or tubular epithelial cell casts in the urine sediment are typically seen in patients with ATN. Their presence is an important tool in the distinction between ATN and prerenal AKI, which is characterized by a normal sediment, or by occasional hyaline casts. There is a possible role for new serum and/or urinary biomarkers in the diagnosis and prognosis of the patient with AKI, including the differential diagnosis between pre-renal AKI and ATN. Further studies are needed before their routine determination can be recommended.When a diagnosis cannot be made with reasonable certainty through this evaluation, renal biopsy should be considered; when intrarenal causes such as crescentic glomerulonephritis or vasculitis are suspected, immediate biopsy to avoid delay in the initiation of therapy is mandatory.


2020 ◽  
Vol 35 (Supplement_3) ◽  
Author(s):  
Bong Gyun Sun ◽  
Hyeon-jin Min ◽  
Young-Bin Son ◽  
Eunho Choi ◽  
Jihyun Yang ◽  
...  

Abstract Background and Aims Urinary tract obstruction (UTO) is a common clinical problem leading to acute or chronic renal impairment. Unlike pediatric population in which congenital anomalies of urinary tract account for a majority of UTO and contribute to end stage renal disease (ESRD), etiologies, clinical manifestation and outcome in adult UTO remain uncertain due to lack of large epidemiological data. Method We performed a multi-center, retrospective study analyzing 1,711 patients who underwent percutaneous nephrostomy (PCN) from 2001 to 2015. Results The most common cause of UTO was malignancies (55.6%) followed by urolithiasis (28.5%) and others. Metastatic colorectal cancer were the most common type of malignancies. Patients with UTO caused by malignancies were significantly older, had more advanced stage acute kidney injury (AKI) and higher mortality rate, while those with urolithiasis had higher prevalence of hypertension, diabetes, cardio-cerebro-vascular diseases. Eighty two percentage of patients developed AKI and 15.2% of patients needed a temporary dialysis. Older age, malignancy associated UTO and high uric acid level were independently associated with AKI. Among patients with AKI, 38.2% patients showed a renal functional recovery defined as eGFR ≥60ml/min/1.73m2 on day 7 after PCN. Multivariate analysis showed that older age and lower hemoglobin level were independent factors predicting a nonrecovery of renal function. During the median follow up period of ∼∼months, overall mortality rate was 33.9% with the highest rate was found in malignancy associated UTO (51.9%), followed by other causes (15.9%) and urolithiasis (8.8%). Malignancy associated UTO (OR 4.754, 95% CI 3.151-7.174, p&lt;0.001), lower albumin level (OR 0.731, 95% CI 0.568-0.942, p&lt;0.001) and stage 3 AKI (OR 2.529, 95% CI 1.332-4.803, p=0.005) were found to be independently associated with mortality. However, the impact of AKI on overall mortality was more prominent in non-malignancy associated UTO with stepwise increase of mortality as KDIGO stage increased. Conclusion In conclusion, malignancy is the most common cause of upper UTO in adults and AKI is frequently associated. Short term renal recovery after PCN was observed only in 38.2% patients and older age, lower hemoglobin level were associated with nonrecovery of renal function. Malignancy associated UTO showed the highest mortality rate compared to urolithiasis or other causes and stage 3 AKI as well as lower hemoglobin and lower albumin level were found to be independent predictors of mortality in UTO.


2000 ◽  
Vol 154 (4) ◽  
pp. 339 ◽  
Author(s):  
Martin Wennerström ◽  
Sverker Hansson ◽  
Ulf Jodal ◽  
Rune Sixt ◽  
Eira Stokland

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