84 research outputs found

    When the Earth trembles in the americas: the experience of haiti and chile 2010.

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    The response of the nephrological community to the Haiti and Chile earthquakes which occurred in the first months of 2010 is described. In Haiti, renal support was organized by the Renal Disaster Relief Task Force (RDRTF) of the International Society of Nephrology (ISN) in close collaboration with Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF), and covered both patients with acute kidney injury (AKI) and patients with chronic kidney disease (CKD). The majority of AKI patients (19/27) suffered from crush syndrome and recovered their kidney function. The remaining 8 patients with AKI showed acute-to-chronic renal failure with very low recovery rates. The intervention of the RDRTF-ISN involved 25 volunteers of 9 nationalities, lasted exactly 2 months, and was characterized by major organizational difficulties and problems to create awareness among other rescue teams regarding the availability of dialysis possibilities. Part of the Haitian patients with AKI reached the Dominican Republic (DR) and received their therapy there. The nephrological community in the DR was able to cope with this extra patient load. In both Haiti and the DR, dialysis treatment was able to be prevented in at least 40 patients by screening and adequate fluid administration. Since laboratory facilities were destroyed in Port-au-Prince and were thus lacking during the first weeks of the intervention, the use from the very beginning on of a point-of-care device (i-STAT®) was very efficient for the detection of aberrant kidney function and electrolyte parameters. In Chile, nephrological problems were essentially related to difficulties delivering dialysis treatment to CKD patients, due to the damage to several units. This necessitated the reallocation of patients and the adaptation of their schedules. The problems could be handled by the local nephrologists. These observations illustrate that local and international preparedness might be life-saving if renal problems occur in earthquake circumstances

    Chitinase-like proteins are candidate biomarkers for sepsis-induced acute kidney injury

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    Sepsis-induced acute kidney injury (AKI) is a frequent complication of critically ill patients and leads to high mortality rates. The specificity of currently available urinary biomarkers for AKI in the context of sepsis is questioned. This study aimed to discover urinary biomarkers for septic AKI by contemporary shotgun proteomics in a mouse model for sepsis and to validate these in individual urine samples of mice and human septic patients with and without AKI. At 48 h after uterine ligation and inoculation of Escherichia coli, aged mice (48 weeks) became septic. A subgroup developed AKI, defined by serum creatinine, blood urea nitrogen, and renal histology. Separate pools of urine from septic mice with and without AKI mice were collected during 12 h before and between 36-48 h after infection, and their proteome compositions were quantitatively compared. Candidate biomarkers were validated by Western blot analysis of urine, plasma, and renal tissue homogenates from individual mice, and a limited number of urine samples from human septic patients with and without AKI. Urinary neutrophil gelatinase-associated lipocalin, thioredoxin, gelsolin, chitinase 3-like protein 1 and -3 (CHI3L3) and acidic mammalian chitinase were the most distinctive candidate biomarkers selected for septic AKI. Both neutrophil gelatinase-associated lipocalin and thioredoxin were detected in urine of septic mice and increased with severity of AKI. Acidic mammalian chitinase was only present in urine of septic mice with AKI. Both urinary chitinase 3-like protein 1 and -3 were only detected in septic mice with severe AKI. The human homologue chitinase 3-like protein 1 was found to be more excreted in urine from septic patients with AKI than without. In summary, urinary chitinase 3-like protein 1 and -3 and acidic mammalian chitinase discriminated sepsis from sepsis-induced AKI in mice. Further studies of human chitinase proteins are likely to lead to additional insights in septic AKI. Molecular & Cellular Proteomics 11: 10.1074/mcp.M111.013094, 1-13, 2012

    Fanconi syndrome in lymphoma patients: report of the first case series

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    BACKGROUND: Fanconi syndrome (FS) is a generalized transport defect in the proximal renal tubule leading to renal losses of phosphate, calcium, uric acid, bicarbonates as well as glucose, amino acids and other organic compounds. It is caused by inherited or acquired disorders including low mass or high mass multiple myeloma. OBJECTIVES: To report the first case series of patients with lymphoma and FS. DESIGN, SETTING, PARTICIPANTS, AND MEASUREMENTS: Patients with lymphoma and FS were identified in the nephrology department of two teaching hospitals in Paris, France and Ghent, Belgium. FS was defined by the presence of at least three out of the four following criteria: hypophosphataemia, metabolic acidosis, normoglycaemic glucosuria and hypokalaemia. Patients files were reviewed and relevant data were collected. RESULTS: Eight patients with lymphoma and FS were identified. In six patients, the lymphoma was of the acute T cell leukaemia/lymphoma (ATLL) type, related to human T cell lymphotropic virus 1 (HTLV1) infection. In all patients, FS was severe requiring supplementation. A kidney biopsy performed in a patient with post-transplantation primary renal lymphoma disclosed intense proximal tubule infiltration by lymphomatous cells. In one patient with ATLL, FS features regressed following the successful treatment of lymphoma. CONCLUSION: Patients with lymphoma require careful monitoring for features of FS; lymphoma should also be added to the spectrum of disorders associated to FS. Prospective studies are needed to ascertain the implication of HTLV1 in the genesis of FS
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