Renal transplantation in high cardiovascular risk patients
Current transplant success allows recipients with previous contraindications to transplant to have access to this procedure with more frequency and safety. The concept of high-risk patient has changed since the first stages of transplantation. In the first studies, the high-risk concept was based on...
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| Formato: | Artículo PeerReviewed |
| Lenguaje: | Español |
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W.B. Saunders
2009
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| Acceso en línea: | http://pa.bibdigital.ucc.edu.ar/4956/1/A_Bittar.pdf |
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I38-R144-4956 |
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I38-R144-49562025-10-28T14:32:06Z http://pa.bibdigital.ucc.edu.ar/4956/ Renal transplantation in high cardiovascular risk patients Bittar, Julio Arenas, Paula Gabriela Chiurchiu, Carlos De La Fuente, Jorge De Arteaga, Javier Douthat, Walter Guillermo Massari, Pablo U. R Medicina (General) Current transplant success allows recipients with previous contraindications to transplant to have access to this procedure with more frequency and safety. The concept of high-risk patient has changed since the first stages of transplantation. In the first studies, the high-risk concept was based on probability of early graft failure or on a patient's clinical condition to cope with high perioperatory morbimortality. Later on, this concept implied immunological factors that were crucial to ensure transplant success because hypersensitized or polytransfused patients experienced a higher risk of acute rejection and subsequent graft loss. Afterward, the presence of various comorbidities would redefine the high-risk concept for renal transplant mainly considering recipient's clinical aspects. Currently, the change in epidemiological characteristics of patients starting dialysis causes that we now deal with a greater increase of elderly patients, diabetic patients, and patients with history of cardiovascular disease. Today, high-risk patients are those with clinical features that predict an increase in the risk of perioperative morbimortality or death with functioning graft. In this review, we will attempted to analyze currents results of renal transplant outcomes in terms of patients and graft survival in elderly patients, diabe tic patients, and patients with previous cardiovascular disease from the most recent experiences in the literature and from experiences in our center. In any of the groups previously analyzed, survival offered by renal transplant is significantly higher compared to dialysis. Besides, these patients are the recipient group that benefit the most with the transplant because their mortality while remaining on dialysis is extremely high. Hence, renal transplantation should be offered more frequently to older patients, diabetic patients, and patients with pretransplant cardiac and peripheral vascular disease. A positive attitude toward renal transplantation is needed by physicians taking care of these patients from predialysis stages of chronic renal failure. W.B. Saunders 2009-12-31 info:eu-repo/semantics/closedAccess Artículo PeerReviewed application/pdf spa http://pa.bibdigital.ucc.edu.ar/4956/1/A_Bittar.pdf Bittar, Julio, Arenas, Paula Gabriela, Chiurchiu, Carlos, De La Fuente, Jorge, De Arteaga, Javier, Douthat, Walter Guillermo ORCID: https://orcid.org/0000-0002-4644-6003 <https://orcid.org/0000-0002-4644-6003> and Massari, Pablo U. (2009) Renal transplantation in high cardiovascular risk patients. Transplantation Reviews, 23 (4). pp. 224-234. info:eu-repo/semantics/altIdentifier/doi/10.1016/j.trre.2009.02.001 |
| institution |
Universidad Católica de Córdoba |
| institution_str |
I-38 |
| repository_str |
R-144 |
| collection |
Producción Académica Universidad Católica de Córdoba (UCCor) |
| language |
Español |
| orig_language_str_mv |
spa |
| topic |
R Medicina (General) |
| spellingShingle |
R Medicina (General) Bittar, Julio Arenas, Paula Gabriela Chiurchiu, Carlos De La Fuente, Jorge De Arteaga, Javier Douthat, Walter Guillermo Massari, Pablo U. Renal transplantation in high cardiovascular risk patients |
| topic_facet |
R Medicina (General) |
| description |
Current transplant success allows recipients with previous contraindications to transplant to have access to this procedure with more frequency and safety. The concept of high-risk patient has changed since the first stages of transplantation. In the first studies, the high-risk concept was based on probability of early graft failure or on a patient's clinical condition to cope with high perioperatory morbimortality. Later on, this concept implied immunological factors that were crucial to ensure transplant success because hypersensitized or polytransfused patients experienced a higher risk of acute rejection and subsequent graft loss. Afterward, the presence of various comorbidities would redefine the high-risk concept for renal transplant mainly considering recipient's clinical aspects. Currently, the change in epidemiological characteristics of patients starting dialysis causes that we now deal with a greater increase of elderly patients, diabetic patients, and patients with history of cardiovascular disease. Today, high-risk patients are those with clinical features that predict an increase in the risk of perioperative morbimortality or death with functioning graft. In this review, we will attempted to analyze currents results of renal transplant outcomes in terms of patients and graft survival in elderly patients, diabe tic patients, and patients with previous cardiovascular disease from the most recent experiences in the literature and from experiences in our center. In any of the groups previously analyzed, survival offered by renal transplant is significantly higher compared to dialysis. Besides, these patients are the recipient group that benefit the most with the transplant because their mortality while remaining on dialysis is extremely high. Hence, renal transplantation should be offered more frequently to older patients, diabetic patients, and patients with pretransplant cardiac and peripheral vascular disease. A positive attitude toward renal transplantation is needed by physicians taking care of these patients from predialysis stages of chronic renal failure. |
| format |
Artículo PeerReviewed |
| author |
Bittar, Julio Arenas, Paula Gabriela Chiurchiu, Carlos De La Fuente, Jorge De Arteaga, Javier Douthat, Walter Guillermo Massari, Pablo U. |
| author_facet |
Bittar, Julio Arenas, Paula Gabriela Chiurchiu, Carlos De La Fuente, Jorge De Arteaga, Javier Douthat, Walter Guillermo Massari, Pablo U. |
| author_sort |
Bittar, Julio |
| title |
Renal transplantation in high cardiovascular risk patients |
| title_short |
Renal transplantation in high cardiovascular risk patients |
| title_full |
Renal transplantation in high cardiovascular risk patients |
| title_fullStr |
Renal transplantation in high cardiovascular risk patients |
| title_full_unstemmed |
Renal transplantation in high cardiovascular risk patients |
| title_sort |
renal transplantation in high cardiovascular risk patients |
| publisher |
W.B. Saunders |
| publishDate |
2009 |
| url |
http://pa.bibdigital.ucc.edu.ar/4956/1/A_Bittar.pdf |
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