42 research outputs found

    Associations between depressive symptoms and disease progression in older patients with chronic kidney disease: results of the EQUAL study

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    Background Depressive symptoms are associated with adverse clinical outcomes in patients with end-stage kidney disease; however, few small studies have examined this association in patients with earlier phases of chronic kidney disease (CKD). We studied associations between baseline depressive symptoms and clinical outcomes in older patients with advanced CKD and examined whether these associations differed depending on sex. Methods CKD patients (>= 65 years; estimated glomerular filtration rate <= 20 mL/min/1.73 m(2)) were included from a European multicentre prospective cohort between 2012 and 2019. Depressive symptoms were measured by the five-item Mental Health Inventory (cut-off <= 70; 0-100 scale). Cox proportional hazard analysis was used to study associations between depressive symptoms and time to dialysis initiation, all-cause mortality and these outcomes combined. A joint model was used to study the association between depressive symptoms and kidney function over time. Analyses were adjusted for potential baseline confounders. Results Overall kidney function decline in 1326 patients was -0.12 mL/min/1.73 m(2)/month. A total of 515 patients showed depressive symptoms. No significant association was found between depressive symptoms and kidney function over time (P = 0.08). Unlike women, men with depressive symptoms had an increased mortality rate compared with those without symptoms [adjusted hazard ratio 1.41 (95% confidence interval 1.03-1.93)]. Depressive symptoms were not significantly associated with a higher hazard of dialysis initiation, or with the combined outcome (i.e. dialysis initiation and all-cause mortality). Conclusions There was no significant association between depressive symptoms at baseline and decline in kidney function over time in older patients with advanced CKD. Depressive symptoms at baseline were associated with a higher mortality rate in men

    Effects of nadolol on systemic and renal hemodynamics in patients with renoparenchymal hypertension and various degrees of renal function

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    It has been shown that renal hemodynamic changes following the decrease in cardiac output (CO) after therapy with beta-blockers may affect glomerular filtration rate (GFR), therefore limiting the effectiveness of these drugs; obviously more serious effects might be expected in nephropathic patients with previously reduced renal function. Recent clinical studies have demonstrated that nadolol, a non-cardioselective beta-blocker, preserves the renal blood flow (RBF) and the GFR. In this study, the drug was administered alone (80 mg once daily) for 2 months to 9 male renal parenchymal hypertensive patients with normal or moderately reduced renal function. Systemic and renal hemodynamics, plasma volume (PV), plasma renin activity (PRA) and urinary aldosterone excretion (UA) were evaluated before and after treatment. As blood pressure (BP) fell so did the cardiac index (4.27 +/- 1.05 l/min/m2 to 3.14 +/- 0.48 p less than 0.01), while the peripheral resistance index (TPRI) rose slightly (2257 +/- 658 to 2459 +/- 498 p = NS). No change in PV, RBF, GFR and renal vascular resistance was observed. An increasing trend in PRA (0.81 +/- 0.56 to 1.27 +/- 0.95 ng/ml/h) and no change in UA were observed. Our data show that nadolol was both well tolerated and effective in lowering BP, that it caused systemic hemodynamic alterations similar to those described for other beta-blockers, and preserved RBF and GFR also in renal hypertensive patients with reduced non-azotemic renal function

    Hypertension in primary immunoglobulin A nephropathy (Berger's disease): hemodynamic alterations and mechanisms

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    Twenty-two patients with primary IgA nephropathy (Berger's disease), 12 with normal and 10 with high blood pressure, were studied. The mean intra-arterial pressure was 88 +/- 6 mm Hg in the normotensive group and 113 +/- 10mm Hg in hypertensive patients; plasma renin activity was high in normotensives and normal in hypertensives. The glomerular filtration rate was 83 +/- 23 and 73 +/- 26 ml/m in 1.73 m2 in normotensive and hypertensive patients, respectively (p = n.s.). Blood volume was high in IgA nephropathy patients: 82 +/- 12 ml/kg body weight in normotensives and 96 +/- 7 ml/kg body weight in hypertensives. Mean arterial pressure was significantly correlated with blood volume (r = 0.541, p less than 0.01), but not with plasma renin activity and glomerular filtration rate. The cardiac index was high in both groups: 4.20 +/- 0.88 liters/min/m2 in normotensive and 3.95 +/- 0.87 liters/min/m2 in hypertensive patients. The total peripheral resistance index was significantly lower than normal in normotensives (1,659 +/- 387 dyn/s/cm-5/m2) and significantly higher (2,419 +/- 562 dyn/s/cm-5 m2) in hypertensives. The cardiac index did not correlate with blood volume and mean arterial pressure; a positive correlation was found between mean arterial pressure and peripheral vascular resistance (r = 0.630, p less than 0.01). No correlation was observed between blood volume and plasma renin activity. Our study indicates that hypertension in IgA nephropathy is primarily volume dependent, and that this increase in blood volume is not related to the deterioration of renal function. The role of the renin-angiotensin system in the maintenance of the hypertension is not well-defined.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS

    Miti e altre storie. La grande decorazione a Brescia 1680-1830

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    Un atlante storico-artistico illustrato: cinquanta palazzi e ville del bresciano rivelano la ricchezza del loro apparato decorativo. Il libro \ue8 l\u2019esito di un lungo e complesso lavoro di schedatura e ricerca, promosso dall\u2019Universit\ue0 degli Studi di Verona in collaborazione con il Centro di ricerca \u201cRossana Bossaglia\u201d e dedicato alla grande decorazione settecentesca a tema profano presente nei palazzi di Brescia e in alcune ville poste a corona della citt\ue0. A tutti gli edifici sono dedicate ampie schede di approfondimento, corredate da un ricco apparato fotografico
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