29 research outputs found

    Postpartum progression of chronic kidney disease in patients with chronic glomerulonephritis

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    Background: In the recent years, pregnancy outcomes in women with primary chronic glomerulonephritis (CGN) have been encouraging despite increased incidence of complications and preterm birth. However, the impact of pregnancy on CKD progression in glomerulonephritis remains understudied. Aim: To evaluate the effect of pregnancy on CKD progression in the postpartum period in patients with primary CGN. Materials and methods: This was an observational longitudinal study. The study group included 40 patients with CGN and CKD G1G3b, who had 40 deliveries from January 2009 to November 2022. The control group included 35 patients with CGN who had no pregnancies after CKD was diagnosed. Serum creatinine and estimated glomerular filtration rate (GFR) were assessed during the follow up, recording the development of CKD G5. Results: The annual rate of GFR decline in the study group was -4.6 [-8.0; -2.5] ml/min/1.73 m2, and in the control group -1.8 [-5.8; +1.5] ml/min/1.73 m2 (p = 0.056). After complicated pregnancy (preeclampsia, placental insufficiency, increase in proteinuria, worsening of arterial hypertension, acute kidney injury), the annual rate of GFR decline was -6.4 [-13.4; -3.5] ml/min/1.73 m2, which was higher than in the controls (p = 0.042). There were no significant differences in survival without GFR decrease by 30%, 50% and without CKD G5 between the study and the control groups. However, CKD G5-free survival in the patients with complicated pregnancy was lower than that in the controls (p = 0.022) and in those with uncomplicated pregnancies (p = 0.009). Eleven (11) of 40 patients in the main group and 3/35 in the control group reached CKD G5. The time from delivery to CKD G5 was 4.83 [2.08; 7.07] years. Among women who reached end-stage renal failure after childbirth, there were significantly more patients with CKD G3, proteinuria 1 g/day during pregnancy, arterial hypertension at baseline and during pregnancy, preeclampsia, acute kidney injury, delivery at less than 37 weeks of gestation, with neonates requiring treatment at intensive care unit, and unfavorable pregnancy outcomes. Conclusion: Renal survival in the women with primary CGN who had been pregnant was not significantly different from that in the women who did not have pregnancies; however, complicated pregnancy increased the rate of kidney function decline

    Successful pregnancy in a patient on regular hemodialysis awaiting kidney transplantation

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    Currently, the prevalence of chronic kidney disease in the general population is in the range of 8.7 to 18.4%, being at least 3% in women of childbearing age. Therefore, improvement of pregnancy outcomes in patients with chronic kidney disease is an important medical and social problem. In the past, pregnancy in women receiving the program hemodialysis (HD) was considered impossible. The first successful pregnancy in HD was described in 1971. Recently, pregnancy outcomes in dialysis patients significantly improved with an increase in the live births to 73–79%. It was shown that intensification of the dialysis program plays an important role in the achievement of a  favorable pregnancy outcome, with an increase in the number of sessions to 6 weekly, and the total weekly duration of dialysis of up to 24 hours and more. We present a  clinical case of a  favorable course of pregnancy that was eventually detected in a  patient on program HD during her examination before the kidney transplantation. Her dialysis program was intensified, with no subsequent complications characteristic of pregnancy in chronic kidney disease, such as hypertension, preeclampsia, severe anemia, and serious fetal growth retardation syndrome. At week 38 of gestation, programmed vaginal delivery was performed; a healthy girl was born who did not need any intensive care. The successful outcome of this pregnancy was due to intensive dialysis treatment, a multidisciplinary approach to pregnancy management, and thorough obstetric monitoring

    COMPLICATIONS AND OUTCOMES OF PREGNANCY IN CHRONIC KIDNEY DISEASE

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    Pregnancy in women with kidney disorders, even with preserved renal function, is associated with higher than in the population rates of obstetric and perinatal complications, such as eclampsia, preterm delivery, surgical deliveries and intensive care for newborns.This article presents our own data on complications and outcomes of pregnancies in 156 women with various stages of chronic kidney disease (CKD). From these, 87 patients had CKD stage I, 29 with CKD stage II and 40 with CKD stages III, IV, V. For the first time in Russia, the authors summarize their unique experience in management of pregnancy with CKD, underline a high probability (27,5%) of its primary detection during pregnancy, discuss the algorithms of assessment, prevention and treatment of various gestational complications in CKD (pre-eclampsia, urinary tract infections, feto-placental insufficiency, anemia, acute renal damage), as well as the influence of pregnancy on renal function at long-term post-delivery. A direct correlation between the CKD stage, frequency of pre-eclampsia, feto-placental insufficiency, preterm deliveries, surgical deliveries by caesarean section and babies’ status at birth is demonstrated.Based on their ample clinical material, they confirmprobability of favorable pregnancy outcomes in CKD patients with stable renal function without severe arterial hypertension during pregnancy: for a baby in 87%, for the mother in 90% (maintenance of the same CKD stage). The risk of persistent deterioration of renal function during pregnancy and puerperium in women with CKD is higher in CKD stage IV, as well as in the case of early development of pre-eclampsia; it also correlates with severity of the latter.The probability of a favorable obstetric and nephrological outcome is higher when the pregnancy is planned and intensively co-managed by an obstetrician/gynaecologist and a nephrologist from early weeks of gestation onwards
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