3,067 research outputs found
Charcoal for the management of pruritus and uremic toxins in patients with chronic kidney disease
Purpose of review: Pruritus is an important, prevalent but often neglected symptom in patients with advanced chronic kidney disease (CKD) or on dialysis. This review addresses the use of activated charcoal and its analogs in the treatment of uremic pruritus, which can be a sign of uremic toxicity.
Recent findings: When common causes are corrected and dialysis efficiency is optimized, pruritus is mainly ascribed to the retention of middle and protein-bound molecules, of which indoxyl sulfate and p-cresyl sulfate are the best studied. While hemodialysis and hemodiafiltration are of limited use, activated charcoal and its analogs offer interesting alternatives. Oral preparations are associated with symptom improvement and a better metabolic pattern, probably via a combination of absorption and modification of the intestinal microbiota. Large studies, in well phenotyped populations, are needed. Hemoperfusion, commonly used in poisoning and intoxication, could be an interesting alternative in hemodialysis patients. The treatment has proved promising in some preliminary and small studies; more research is now needed to test its validity.
Summary: Oral activated charcoal and hemoperfusion can be proposed to patients with severe refractory pruritus based on positive, albeit scattered evidence. They also contribute to reducing uremic toxins. Research on their implementation associated with well established treatments is needed to understand whether they can be used as 'uremic detoxifiers'
Patients' wishes, pregnancy and vascular access: When one size does not fit all
Pregnancy in dialysis patients is a rare but important event that challenges our knowledge and demands re-thinking many aspects of our practice, including vascular access. This editorial briefly discusses some open questions on vascular access in this situation that challenge the motto ‘fistula first’ and underline the need for personalised approaches. Information on vascular access in pregnant women is scant. Different approaches may be considered between women on dialysis already on a well-functioning tunnelled catheter and newly placed catheters: while a tunnelled catheter in a woman already stabilised on outpatient dialysis, who has shown being able to take correct care of it and who has freely chosen this option, is a reasonable choice, central venous catheters placed during pregnancy, especially in the hospital setting, may have a high risk of complications. Conversely, pregnancy may increase the risk of development of fistula aneurysms, but the frequency of this complication is still unknown. The problem of whether or not shifting pregnant patients on peritoneal dialysis to daily haemodialysis sessions is still open, as well as the role of patients’ preference for avoidance of an invasive procedure, or refuse of pain. In the wait for answers, reflecting on the problems encountered by pregnant women on dialysis should make us reflect on how to improve vascular access management for all our patients
Evolution of Structure and Superconductivity in Ba(NiCo)As
The effects of Co-substitution on Ba(NiCo)As () single crystals grown out of Pb flux are investigated via
transport, magnetic, and thermodynamic measurements. BaNiAs exhibits a
first order tetragonal to triclinic structural phase transition at
upon cooling, and enters a superconducting phase below . The
structural phase transition is sensitive to cobalt content and is suppressed
completely by . The superconducting critical temperature, ,
increases continuously with , reaching a maximum of at the
structural critical point and then decreases monotonically until
superconductivity is no longer observable well into the tetragonal phase. In
contrast to similar BaNiAs substitutional studies, which show an abrupt
change in at the triclinic-tetragonal boundary that extends far into the
tetragonal phase, Ba(NiCo)As exhibits a dome-like phase
diagram centered around the first-order critical point. Together with an
anomalously large heat capacity jump at optimal
doping, the smooth evolution of in the Ba(NiCo)As
system suggests a mechanism for pairing enhancement other than phonon
softening.Comment: 7 pages, 8 figure
[MeNC5H5]2[TCNE]2 (TCNE = tetracyanoethylene). Single crystal X-ray and neutron diffraction characterization of an exceptionally long 2.8 Ã… C-C bond
Journal ArticleThe reaction of N-methylpyridinium iodide, Mepy+I-, and tetracyanoethylene (TCNE) forms [Mepy]2[TCNE]2, which possesses [TCNE]2 2' with an intradimer C-C bond distance of 2.806(1)Ã… at 50 K from X-ray diffraction, and 2.801(4)Ã… at 50 K from neutron diffraction. In the IR it exhibits nChN absorptions at 2191, 2174, 2169, 2163 and a nCC absorption at 1366 cm-1, with UV/Vis absorption bands at 26,880 and 18,520 cm-1. Analysis of the cation-hydrogen to [TCNE]2 2- interactions do not provide evidence that the cation stabilizes formation of the [TCNE]2 2- dimer, which is stabilized by the intradimer 2e--4 center C-C bonding interaction
INDUZIONE SELETTIVA DI MORTE CELLULARE PER CATASTROFE MITOTICA IN CELLULE TUMORALI: EFFETTI DELLA PURINA SINTETICA REVERSINA
Reversine, a synthetic purine isolated from a combinatorial library, has been shown to induce the de-differentiation of adult cells, including fibroblasts, to stem-cell-like progenitors, as treated cells could be induced to differentiate into several cell types, thus creating a new stem cell source for tissue regeneration. The observation that reversine treatment, while inducing cell reprogramming, also caused growth arrest, suggested its possible application as an anticancer agent. Herein we reported reversine lethal effects on several tumor cells from different tissues and we clarified the mechanism of cell death induced by the molecule. Moreover, this molecule seems to be selective for cancer cells because of the lack of the induction of cell death in normal fibroblast with the same condition of treatment. Comparison of reversine effects on the cell cycle of normal and cancer cells also elucidated the mechanism of its dual activity as de-differentiating or anti-cancer drug, depending on the cell type and the status of the cell cycle checkpoints
- …