7 research outputs found

    The influence of warm ischemia elimination on kidney injury during transplantation - Clinical and molecular study

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    Kidney surface cooling was used during implantation to assess the effect of warm ischemia elimination on allograft function, histological changes and immune-related gene expression. 23 recipients were randomly assigned to a group operated on with kidney surface cooling during implantation (ice bag technique, IBT group), and the other 23 recipients receiving the contralateral kidney from the same donor were operated on with a standard technique. Three consecutive kidney core biopsies were obtained during the transplantation procedure: after organ recovery, after cold ischemia and after reperfusion. Gene expression levels were determined using low-density arrays (Format 32, TaqMan). The IBT group showed a significantly lower rate of detrimental events (delayed graft function and/or acute rejection, p = 0.015) as well as higher glomerular filtration rate on day 14 (p = 0.026). A greater decrease of MMP9 and LCN2 gene expression was seen in the IBT group during total ischemia (p = 0.003 and p = 0.018). Elimination of second warm ischemia reduced the number of detrimental events after kidney transplantation, and thus had influence on the short-term but not long-term allograft function. Surface cooling of the kidney during vascular anastomosis may reduce some detrimental effects of immune activation resulting from both brain death and ischemia-reperfusion injury

    Predictive value of Banff score of early kidney allograft biopsies for 1-year graft survival

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    The aim of this study was to evaluate the Banff score of early kidney allograft biopsies, taken during the first month after transplantation, seeking an association between early rejection and acute tubular necrosis. We analyzed data from 71 patients transplanted between 2000 and 2004 who had renal allograft biopsies performed within the first posttransplant month (23 women, 48 men), ages 18 to 67 years. All biopsies performed in cases of delayed or deteriorated graft function were graded according to the Banff' 97 classification. Twelve months after transplantation, 19 patients exhibited excellent renal function (group 1, serum creatinine concentration [Scr] ≤ 1.5 mg/dL); 25 patients demonstrated preserved renal function (group II, Scr 1.51-1.99 mg/dL); and 19 patients showed deteriorated renal function (group III, Scr < 2.0 mg/dL). Eight recipients lost their grafts within 1 year after transplantation (group IV). The Banff index was defined as a sum of all components (value of glomerulitis ["g"] + interstitial inflammation ["i"] + tubulitis ["t"] + arteriolar hyaline thickening ["ah"] + intimal arteritis ["v"]). The deterioration of renal function was associated with a higher Banff index; patients who lost their grafts showed the highest values of this index. Scores of "v," "ah," and Banff index were positively correlated with serum creatinine concentrations at 28, 90, 180, and 360 days (P < .05). Glomerulitis ("g") was correlated with creatinine concentrations at 90 and 360 days (P < .05). Tubulitis ("t") and interstitial inflammation ("i") displayed no association with renal function at any time

    DIALYSIS. PROTEIN-ENERGY WASTING, INFLAMMATION AND OXIDATIVE STRESS

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