scholarly journals The Tenckhoff catheter in elderly patients with chronic renal failure: placement in spinal anesthesia with open technique, without required location in the hollow of Douglas

2011 ◽  
Vol 11 (Suppl 1) ◽  
pp. A61
Author(s):  
T Strazzullo ◽  
G Prestieri ◽  
D Di Simone ◽  
G Merola
Author(s):  
B. Z. Khubutiya ◽  
O. N. Rzhevskaya ◽  
A. A. Lisenok

Introduction. All over the world and in Russia, the number of patients requiring dialysis therapy and kidney transplantation for chronic renal failure in the end-stage of the renal disease is increasing. In many countries of the world, the number of dialysis patients over 60 years of age accounts for 30 to 45% of all patients with chronic renal failure. Meantime, taking into account the improved methods for early diagnosis of chronic renal failure and the treatment methods for chronic kidney disease, including the renal replacement therapy, we can expect an increase in the number of elderly potential kidney transplant recipients. The likelihood of receiving a renal graft in elderly patients is significantly lower than in young recipients. Elderly patients are known to have a higher risk of death while waiting for a kidney transplant due to higher morbidity and lethality on dialysis. For this reason, the urgency of increasing the availability of kidney transplantation in elderly patients is growing over time. One of the solutions can be the use of kidneys from suboptimal donors with a far from ideal graft quality, but which could meet the needs for transplant care of the older age group of patients. The older age of a recipient entails a certain risk of developing a graft dysfunction due to the presence of concomitant diseases, and the potential risk increases even more with kidney transplants from expanded criteria donors. If a reduced functional reserve of kidneys removed from donors with extended criteria is identified, two-kidney transplantation is possible, which provides fairly good long-term results. To reduce the risk of a kidney graft loss, a careful selection of recipients is necessary, taking into account their co-morbidities, including the presence of urological diseases that impair the function of the upper and lower urinary tract. Their timely identification and correction makes it possible to raise the availability of kidney transplantation for elderly patients and improve its results. This review presents the results of the studies conducted in various world transplant centers, covers the mortality rates, kidney graft and recipient survival rates.The study purpose was to summarize the actual data and the results of the study on kidney transplantation in elderly patients with urological pathology.


2003 ◽  
Vol 40 (1) ◽  
pp. 41-46 ◽  
Author(s):  
Hiroshi Fujimaki ◽  
Yutaka Kasuya ◽  
Shino Kagami ◽  
Sachiko Kawaguchi ◽  
Shiro Koga ◽  
...  

2005 ◽  
Vol 42 (4) ◽  
pp. 417-422 ◽  
Author(s):  
Hiroshi Fujimaki ◽  
Yutaka Kasuya ◽  
Sachiko Kawaguchi ◽  
Shino Hara ◽  
Shiro Koga ◽  
...  

1997 ◽  
Vol 42 (5) ◽  
pp. 143-144
Author(s):  
R. S. C. Rodger ◽  
J. D. Briggs

Before 1980 few patients over the age of 65 started chronic dialysis, despite the fact that the incidence of advanced chronic renal failure was approximately ten times greater in this group compared to young and middle aged adults.1 Since that time the number of elderly patients starting renal replacement has increased markedly and accounted for 38% of new dialysis patients in Scotland in 1995. (Data supplied by the Scottish Renal Registry). In order to meet the needs of older patients with chronic renal failure there has been considerable expansion in renal services and it has been predicted that this will continue to increase in Scotland until 2010.2 The number of older patients receiving dialysis and transplantation is rising steadily and will continue to rise in the future. There is nowadays no justification for a rigid upper age limit in the selection of patients for dialysis although inevitably more elderly patients will be unsuitable on medical grounds than in the younger age groups in particular due to cardiovascular disease. The majority of elderly patients are best managed by haemodialysis but a considerable number can achieve a reasonable quality of health on peritoneal dialysis. Renal transplantation should be seriously considered in the older patient provided that comorbidity is not present, usually in the form of cardiovascular disease, to a degree which would seriously limit life expectation.


2010 ◽  
Vol 43 (1) ◽  
pp. 257-263 ◽  
Author(s):  
Beyza Macunluoğlu ◽  
İbrahim Gökçe ◽  
Aydın Atakan ◽  
Münir Demirci ◽  
Elif Arı ◽  
...  

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