Browsing by Author "Adragão, T"
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- A Comparative Study of Cardiovascular Tolerability with Slow Extended Dialysis Versus Continuous Haemodiafiltration in the Critical PatientPublication . Birne, R; Branco, P; Marcelino, P; Marum, S; Fernandes, AP; Viana, H; Adragão, T; Ferreira, A; Mourão, LBackground: In the haemodynamically unstable patient the method of treatment of acute renal failure is still largely controversial. The purpose of our study was to compare slow extended dialysis with continuous haemodiafiltration in the critical patient with indication for renal replacement therapy and haemodynamic instability. Patients and Methods: This is a cohort study comparing in 63 ventilated critical patients a 12 month period when only continuous haemodiafiltration was used (n=25) with an equal period of slow extended dialysis (n=38). Our primary objective was to evaluate the impact of the dialytic procedure on cardiovascular stability in those patients. As secondary aims we considered system coagulation/thrombosis and predictors of mortality. In the two groups we analysed the first session performed, the second session performed and the average of all the sessions performed in each patient. Results: In these patients, mortality in the intensive care unit was high (68% in the continuous haemodiafiltration group and 63% in the slow extended dialysis group). We did not find any association between the dialytic technique used and death; only the APACHE score was a predictor of death. Slow extended dialysis was a predictor of haemodynamic stability, a negative predictor of sessions that had to be interrupted for haemodynamic instability, and a predictor of achieving the volume removal initially sought. Slow extended dialysis was also associated with less coagulation of the system. Conclusions: Our data suggested that slow extended dialysis use was not inferior to continuous haemodiafiltration use in terms of cardiovascular tolerability.
- Expert Panel Appraisal of the Treatment of Chronic Kidney Disease-Related Mineral and Bone Disorders (CKD-MBD): an Opinion-Based ApproachPublication . Adragão, T; Ferreira, A; Frazão, J; Ponce, P; Vinhas, J
- Gravidez na Transplantação RenalPublication . Branco, P; Pires, A; Adragão, T; Borges, ACom a Transplantação Renal regista-se recuperação da fertilidade. A exposição a fármacos imunossupressores, como a prednisona, a ciclosporina, a azatioprina e o tacrolimus não está associada com um aumento da incidência de malformações congénitas. A Imunossupressão, particularmente com a ciclosporina, está relacionada com recém-nascidos com baixo peso ao nascer. Doentes transplantados têm um risco aumentado de complicações infecciosas, algumas com implicações importantes para o feto, como as infecções por citomegalovírus, herpes simples e toxoplasmose. Esta população tem uma maior frequência de prematuridade, variando a percentagem de nados vivos entre 70 e 100%. Impõe-se a manutenção de esforços continuados para identificar os factores de risco pré-gestacionais, optimizando as estratégias de abordagem neonatal para uma gravidez bem-sucedida.
- High-Grade Urothelial Carcinoma in a Kidney Transplant Recipient After JC Virus Nephropathy: the First Evidence of JC Virus As a Potential Oncovirus in Bladder CancerPublication . Querido, S; Fernandes, I; Weigert, A; Casimiro, S; Albuquerque, C; Ramos, S; Adragão, T; Luz, I; Paixão, P; Chasqueira, M; Santos, M; Machado, DKidney transplant (KT) recipients have an increased risk for urothelial carcinoma. A role for JC virus (JCV) in human cancers is not yet proved but there is an increasingly reported association between BK virus (BKV) nephropathy and renourinary neoplasms. We report a KT recipient who developed a high-grade urothelial carcinoma 5 years after a diagnosis of JCV nephropathy and 9 years after kidney transplantation. Neoplastic tissue was positive for JCV DNA by real-time polymerase chain reaction (PCR). Immunochemical staining showed strong positivity for cell cycle markers (p16, p53, and Ki67) and for early viral protein JCV large T antigen (JCV LTag; using a broad polyomavirus antibody); however, late viral protein (VP1) stained negative. In contrast, in non-neoplastic urothelium, JCV DNA and all immunochemical markers were negative. These facts suggest that malignancy was induced by JCV. To the best of our knowledge, this is the first report of urothelial high-grade carcinoma associated with JCV nephropathy in a KT recipient.
- Insuficiência Renal Aguda na GravidezPublication . Pires, A; Adragão, T; Borges, A; Campos, ANas últimas décadas, houve um declínio marcado da incidência global da insuficiência renal aguda (IRA) associada a causas obstétricas nos países desenvolvidos, devendo-se à melhoria significativa dos cuidados perinatais e à diminuição do número de abortos sépticos. Não obstante, a IRA ainda ocorre, tendo uma mortalidade elevada durante o período agudo, não sendo rara a progressão para insuficiência renal terminal. A IRA durante a gravidez pode ter várias causas, as quais são diferentes na primeira e na segunda metades da gravidez. Numa fase inicial da gravidez os problemas mais comuns são a doença prérenal devido à hiperémese gravídica e a necrose tubular aguda resultante do aborto séptico. Nos estadios mais tardios, pode ser causada por necrose tubular aguda ou necrose cortical renal, as quais podem ser originadas no contexto de várias situações, tais como a pré-eclampsia e/ou eclampsia, o descolamento prematuro da placenta, a placenta prévia, a hemorragia pós parto, o fígado gordo da gravidez e a embolia do líquido amniótico. Pode ainda ser causada pelo síndrome hemolítico-urémico pós-parto e a obstrução do aparelho urinário, entre outras. Na abordagem terapêutica da IRA na gravidez, é preconizada a colaboração estreita entre obstetra e nefrologista, devendo o tratamento ser individualizado.
- Mineral and Bone Disease (MBD) on a Kidney Transplant PatientPublication . Birne, R; Adragão, T; Ferreira, A; Dickson, J; Silva, R; Casqueiro, A; Oliveira, R; Martins, AR; Torres, J; Matias, P; Branco, P; Jorge, C; Weigert, A; Bruges, M; Machado, DA 50-year-old post-menopausal recipient of a kidney allograft with bone pain, osteoporosis, persistent hypercalcaemia and elevated parathormone (PTH) levels, despite a satisfactory graft function, was treated with bisphosphonates and cinacalcet starting, respectively, 5 and 6 months after renal transplantation (RT). Sixteen months after treatment, there was improvement of bone mineral density (BMD) measured by dualenergy X-ray absorptiometry (DEXA). A bone biopsy was taken, unveiling a surprising and worrisome result. Post-RT bone disease is different from classic CKD-MBD and should be managed distinctly, including, in some difficult cases, an invasive evaluation through the performance of a bone biopsy, as suggested in the KDIGO guidelines.