Maintenance Hemodialysis (maintenance + hemodialysis)

Distribution by Scientific Domains


Selected Abstracts


Lipoprotein (a) in Chronic Renal Failure: Effect of Maintenance Hemodialysis

HEMODIALYSIS INTERNATIONAL, Issue 4 2003
Om Prakash Kalra
Background:,Coronary artery disease accounts for significant morbidity and mortality in patients with chronic kidney disease (CKD). Besides the higher prevalence of traditional risk factors, several uremia-related factors may play a role in accelerated atherosclerosis, such as elevated levels of lipoprotein (a) (Lp(a)). The effect of maintenance hemodialysis (MHD) on Lp(a) levels is not well understood. The present work was carried out to study the Lp(a) levels in Stage 4 and Stage 5 CKD patients as well as the effect of MHD on Lp(a) levels in patients with Stage 5 CKD. Methods:,The study subjects included 15 patients with Stage 4 CKD, 15 patients with Stage 5 CKD, and 15 age- and sex-matched healthy controls. Plasma Lp(a) was measured by ELISA in all the subjects at the time of entry into the study and after 4 weeks of MHD in patients with Stage 5 CKD. Patients on MHD were dialyzed two to three times weekly for 4 hr during each session. Results:,Mean Lp(a) levels were significantly higher in patients with CKD than in control patients. In patients with Stage 4 CKD, the Lp(a) level was 34.0 ± 19.5 mg/dL, whereas in Stage 5 CKD the level was 49.0 ± 30.9 and in healthy controls it was 22.2 ± 16.4. In patients with Stage 5 CKD, 4 weeks of MHD led to a significant fall in Lp(a) levels by 23.6% (P < 0.001). Conclusions:,The results of this study show that increases in Lp(a) levels start early during the course of CKD and become more pronounced with increased severity of disease. Initiation of MHD lowers Lp(a) levels and may have a long-term beneficial effect on cardiovascular morbidity and mortality. [source]


Ozonated Autohemotherapy in Patients on Maintenance Hemodialysis: Influence on Lipid Profile and Endothelium

ARTIFICIAL ORGANS, Issue 2 2004
Leszek Tylicki
Abstract:, Ozonated autohemotherapy (O3-AHT) is used in the treatment of atherosclerotic ischemia of lower limbs (AILL). The impact of ozone on serum lipids and endothelium injury is of particular interest since these factors are important in the development of atherosclerotic lesions. To evaluate this issue, a prospective, placebo-controlled study was designed. Twelve hemodialyzed subjects with AILL received autohemotherapy with oxygen as a control followed by O3-AHT with ozone concentration of 50 µg/ml. Serum lipids and plasma activity of von Willebrand factor (vWF) were measured. After O3-AHT, total cholesterol significantly decreased compared to the baseline (,8.34%) [P < 0.01]. LDL cholesterol was also significantly lower than the initial value (,17.71%) [P < 0.001]. No significant changes in the activity of vWF were found after the first session of O3-AHT and after all nine sessions of O3-AHT. The study demonstrated that O3-AHT did not affect deleteriously the endothelium in patients with chronic renal failure on maintenance hemodialysis. It ,may stimulate beneficial changes in serum lipid profile manifesting as,,a, decrease ,in the total- and LDL-cholesterol ,levels. [source]


Resource settings have a major influence on the outcome of maintenance hemodialysis patients in South India

HEMODIALYSIS INTERNATIONAL, Issue 2 2010
ABRAHAM Georgi
Abstract Chronic kidney disease is reaching epidemic proportions and the number of patients on renal replacement therapy (RRT) is increasing worldwide and also in developing countries. To meet the challenge of providing RRT, a few charity organizations provide hemodialysis units for underprivileged patients, as the private hospitals are unaffordable for the majority. There is a paucity of information on the outcome of dialysis in these patients. Here, we describe the outcome of hemodialysis patients comparing the middle- and upper-class income group with the lower class income group. A retrospective analysis was carried out in 558 CKD patients initiated on maintenance hemodialysis in two different dialysis facilities. Group A (n=247) included those who belonged to the lowermost socioeconomic status and were undergoing dialysis in two nonprofit, charity (TANKER)-run dialysis units, and Group B (n=311) was undergoing dialysis in a nonprofit hospital setting where no subsidy was given. Those patients of a low socioeconomic status, especially those who are diabetics, have a higher death rate (Group A-38.1%, Group B-4.2%) and loss to follow-up (Group A-25.9%, Group B-0.3%) compared with those who are in the middle- and high-income group. Higher EPO use and hence higher hemoglobin levels (Group A-6.4±1.2, Group B-8.9±1.5 P<0.001) were observed in those who were in the middle and the higher income group. Lower serum phosphorus level was observed in the low-socioeconomic group (Group A-4.7±1.5, Group B-5.5±1.9, P<0.001). Patients belonging to the middle and higher socioeconomic group undergo more transplantations compared with the lower socioeconomic group (Group A-2.4%, Group B-65.6%). [source]


The kidney disease wasting: Inflammation, oxidative stress, and diet-gene interaction

HEMODIALYSIS INTERNATIONAL, Issue 4 2006
Kamyar KALANTAR-ZADEH
Abstract The 350,000 maintenance hemodialysis (MHD) patients in the United States have an unacceptably high mortality rate of >20%/year. Almost half of all deaths are assumed to be cardiovascular. Markers of kidney disease wasting (KDW) such as hypoalbuminemia, anorexia, body weight and fat loss, rather than traditional cardiovascular risk factors, appear to be the strongest predictors of early death in these patients. The KDW is closely related to oxidative stress (SOX). Such SOX markers as serum myeloperoxidase are associated with pro-inflammatory cytokines and poor survival in MHD patients. Identifying the conditions that modulate the KDW/SOX-axis may be the key to improving outcomes in MHD patients. Dysfunctional lipoproteins such as a higher ratio of the high-density lipoprotein inflammatory index (HII) may engender or aggravate the KDW, whereas functionally intact or larger lipoprotein pools, as in hypercholesterolemia and obesity, may mitigate the KDW in MHD patients. Hence, a reverse epidemiology or "bad-gone-good" phenomenon may be observed. Diet and gene and their complex interaction may lead to higher proportions of pro-inflammatory or oxidative lipoproteins such as HII, resulting in the aggravation of the SOX and inflammatory processes, endothelial dysfunction, and subsequent atherosclerotic cardiovascular disease and death in MHD patients. Understanding the factors that modulate the KDW/SOX complex and their associations with genetic polymorphism, nutrition, and outcomes in MHD patients may lead to developing more effective strategies to improve outcomes in this and the 20 to 30 million Americans with chronic disease states such as individuals with chronic heart failure, advanced age, malignancies, AIDS, or cachexia. [source]


Lipoprotein (a) in Chronic Renal Failure: Effect of Maintenance Hemodialysis

HEMODIALYSIS INTERNATIONAL, Issue 4 2003
Om Prakash Kalra
Background:,Coronary artery disease accounts for significant morbidity and mortality in patients with chronic kidney disease (CKD). Besides the higher prevalence of traditional risk factors, several uremia-related factors may play a role in accelerated atherosclerosis, such as elevated levels of lipoprotein (a) (Lp(a)). The effect of maintenance hemodialysis (MHD) on Lp(a) levels is not well understood. The present work was carried out to study the Lp(a) levels in Stage 4 and Stage 5 CKD patients as well as the effect of MHD on Lp(a) levels in patients with Stage 5 CKD. Methods:,The study subjects included 15 patients with Stage 4 CKD, 15 patients with Stage 5 CKD, and 15 age- and sex-matched healthy controls. Plasma Lp(a) was measured by ELISA in all the subjects at the time of entry into the study and after 4 weeks of MHD in patients with Stage 5 CKD. Patients on MHD were dialyzed two to three times weekly for 4 hr during each session. Results:,Mean Lp(a) levels were significantly higher in patients with CKD than in control patients. In patients with Stage 4 CKD, the Lp(a) level was 34.0 ± 19.5 mg/dL, whereas in Stage 5 CKD the level was 49.0 ± 30.9 and in healthy controls it was 22.2 ± 16.4. In patients with Stage 5 CKD, 4 weeks of MHD led to a significant fall in Lp(a) levels by 23.6% (P < 0.001). Conclusions:,The results of this study show that increases in Lp(a) levels start early during the course of CKD and become more pronounced with increased severity of disease. Initiation of MHD lowers Lp(a) levels and may have a long-term beneficial effect on cardiovascular morbidity and mortality. [source]


Distinct changing profiles of hepatitis A and E virus infection among patients with acute hepatitis, patients on maintenance hemodialysis and healthy individuals in Japan,

JOURNAL OF MEDICAL VIROLOGY, Issue 8 2006
Takehiro Mitsui
Abstract To compare the epidemiologic profiles of hepatitis A virus (HAV) and hepatitis E virus (HEV) infections in Japan, the prevalence of clinical or subclinical HAV and HEV infections was investigated serologically and molecularly among 128 consecutive patients (age, mean,±,standard deviation, 37.5,±,14.7 years) who contracted acute hepatitis between 1989 and 2005 in a city hospital, and among 416 hemodialysis patients (60.1,±,12.6 years) and 266 medical staff members (34.6,±,11.4 years) at the same hospital, using stored periodic serum samples collected since the start of hemodialysis or employment, respectively. Between 1989 and 1995, among 93 patients with acute hepatitis, 51 (54.8%) were diagnosed with hepatitis A and only one patient with hepatitis E. Between 1996 and 2005, however, among 35 patients, only 3 (8.6%) were diagnosed with hepatitis A and 2 (5.7%) with hepatitis E. Although subclinical HEV infection was recognized in four hemodialysis patients (one each in 1979, 1980, 1988, and 2003) and two medical staff members (1978 and 2003) in previous studies, none of the 191 hemodialysis patients who had been negative for anti-HAV at the start of hemodialysis contracted HAV infection during the observation period of 7.6,±,6.4 years. Only one (0.4%) of the 246 medical staff members who had been negative for anti-HAV at the start of employment acquired hepatitis A during the observation period of 7.9,±,8.0 years: none had subclinical HAV infection. Clinical or subclinical HEV infection has occurred rarely during the last three decades, while HAV infection has markedly decreased at least since 1996. J. Med. Virol. 78:1015,1024, 2006. © 2006 Wiley-Liss, Inc. [source]


Allograft diabetic nephropathy may progress to end-stage renal disease

PEDIATRIC TRANSPLANTATION, Issue 4 2004
Moro O. Salifu
Abstract:, Mesangial expansion and glomerular basement membrane thickening characteristic of diabetic nephropathy recur in diabetic recipients of renal allografts from non-diabetic donors but progression to renal failure is minimally documented. Three female renal allograft recipients (aged 40, 62 and 73 yr), who developed end-stage renal disease (ESRD) due to recurrent diabetic nephropathy (two patients) and de novo diabetes (one patient) are reported. Onset of proteinuria, uncontrolled hypertension, azotemia, renal allograft pathologic findings and the need for hemodialysis were analyzed. None of the kidney donors (one cadaver, two living related) had known diabetes or perturbed glucose metabolism pre-transplantation. The three patients presented had different varieties of diabetes; type 1, type 2 and new onset diabetes after transplantation (NODAT). In each subject, proteinuria was detected by dipstick at a mean of 8.3 yr (range 8,9) post-transplantation and increased to the nephrotic range (3.7,4.8 g/day) inducing hypoalbuminemia and azotemia. A histopathologic diagnosis of allograft diabetic nephropathy was made in a mean of 11.7 yr (range 10,14), based on glomerular basement membrane thickening, nodular and diffuse intercapillary glomerulosclerosis, arteriolosclerosis, and tubular atrophy with marked tubular basement membrane thickening characteristic of advanced diabetic nephropathy. All three patients manifested uremia and resumed hemodialysis. Two patients died from sepsis within 2 months and one patient died 2.5 yr later after resumption of maintenance hemodialysis. We infer that recurrent or de novo diabetic nephropathy in renal allografts follows a clinical decade-long course irrespective of diabetes. Reports of ESRD due to allograft diabetic nephropathy (ADN) have been limited because of shorter survival of diabetic transplant recipients and few kidney biopsies performed in patients with chronic allograft dysfunction. The occurrence of allograft diabetic nephropathy in some, but not all patients, however, suggests that individual genetic variability modulates disease expression. [source]


Association of Serum Pentosidine With Arterial Stiffness in Hemodialysis Patients

ARTIFICIAL ORGANS, Issue 3 2010
YiLun Zhou
Abstract Pentosidine is an advanced glycation end product (AGE). The present study was undertaken to investigate the association of serum pentosidine with carotid distensibility as a measure of arterial stiffness in hemodialysis patients. One hundred and three patients on maintenance hemodialysis were recruited. The distensibility coefficient of the common carotid artery was evaluated by an ultrasonic phase-locked echo-tracking system. Serum pentosidine was measured by competitive enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay. Serum albumin, lipid profile, calcium, phosphorus, intact parathyroid hormone (iPTH), high-sensitivity C-reactive protein (hs-CRP), and oxidized low-density lipoprotein (ox-LDL) levels were also measured. Correlation was determined by linear and multiple stepwise regression analysis. Serum pentosidine level studied in hemodialysis patients was 0.54 ± 0.13 µg/mL. No significant difference in serum pentosidine level was noted between patients with and without diabetes (0.59 ± 0.10 µg/mL vs. 0.53 ± 0.13 µg/mL, P = 0.062) as well as between patients with and without prior cardiovascular disease (CVD) history (0.56 ± 0.14 µg/mL vs. 0.53 ± 0.12 µg/mL, P = 0.206). In multivariate regression analysis, only age (, = 0.363, P < 0.001) and ox-LDL (, = 0.262, P = 0.004) were identified as independent determinants for serum pentosidine. Serum pentosidine was significantly correlated with carotid distensibility (r = ,0.387, P < 0.001), as well as age, ox-LDL, and hs-CRP. After adjustment for age, blood pressure, history of diabetes, prior CVD history, lipid profile, calcium, phosphorus, iPTH, hs-CRP, and ox-LDL, serum pentosidine was still negatively correlated with distensibility (, = ,0.175, P = 0.044). Serum pentosidine was independently associated with carotid distensibility in hemodialysis patients. This finding suggested that the accumulation of AGE might be an important pathway in the development of arterial stiffness in end-stage renal disease. [source]


Association Among Serum Fetuin-A Level, Coronary Artery Calcification, and Bone Mineral Densitometry in Maintenance Hemodialysis Patients

ARTIFICIAL ORGANS, Issue 10 2009
Alper Kirkpantur
Abstract Patients with end-stage renal disease have a very high prevalance and extent of arterial calcification. A number of studies suggest that similar pathophysiologic mechanisms are responsible for development and progression of calcification of atherosclerotic plaque and bone formation. Fetuin-A is a potent calcification inhibitor and is expressed in bone, with not-yet well-defined functions. The aim of this study was to investigate the relation between bone mineral densitometry parameters, coronary artery calcification, and serum fetuin-A levels. In a cross-sectional design, we included 72 maintenance hemodialysis (HD) patients and 30 age- and gender- matched healthy controls. Serum fetuin-A levels were studied both in maintenance HD patients and healthy controls. Maintenance HD patients had radius, hip, and lumbar spine bone mineral density (BMD) assessed by dual-energy X-ray absorptiometry and coronary artery calcification score (CACS) measured by electron-beam computed tomography. The associations between site-specific BMD parameters, CACS, and serum fetuin-A levels were studied in maintenance HD patients. CACS, mass, and volume of plaques in coronary arteries were significantly higher in patients with a T-score below ,2.5 than above in the proximal region of the radius, neck and trochanter of the femur, and the lumbar spine. Mean serum fetuin-A concentration was 0.636 ± 0.118 g/L in maintenance HD patients and it was less than healthy controls (0.829 ± 0.100 g/L, P < 0.0001). CACS, mass, and volume of plaques in coronary arteries correlated significantly with the serum fetuin-A levels. Moreover, significant positive correlations were shown between the serum fetuin-A levels, BMD values, and T-scores of proximal radius, neck, and trochanter of the femur, but not with the lumbar spine. The present study demonstrates an association between serum fetuin-A levels, coronary artery calcification, and bone mineral densities,except for the lumbar spine, in maintenance HD patients. However, the results should be interpreted with caution because of the cross-sectional design of the study. [source]


Economic, Social, and Psychological Factors Associated With Health-Related Quality of Life of Chronic Hemodialysis Patients in Northern Taiwan: A Multicenter Study

ARTIFICIAL ORGANS, Issue 1 2009
Tze-Wah Kao
Abstract This study evaluated the associations between economic, social, psychological factors, and health-related quality of life of hemodialysis patients. Cross-sectional study design was used. End-stage renal disease patients who had received maintenance hemodialysis for more than 2 months at 14 centers in northern Taiwan were invited to participate. Demographic, economic, and psychosocial data of patients were collected. Depression was assessed by the Beck Depression Inventory. Health-related quality of life was measured by the Medical Outcomes Study Short-Form 36. Multivariable linear regression analyses were performed. Eight hundred sixty-one patients (373 males, mean age 59.4 ± 13.2 years) completed the study. Higher monthly income was positively associated with role emotional and mental health (P < 0.05), and so was increased frequency of social activities with social functioning (P < 0.05). The more worries, the stronger the inverse associations with social functioning (P < 0.05) and mental health (P < 0.01). Higher depression scores were associated with lower scores of all Short-Form 36 dimensions (P < 0.01). Higher monthly income and increased social activities are associated with better health-related quality of life, whereas more worries and higher depression scores are associated with worse health-related quality of life of hemodialysis patients. [source]


Ozonated Autohemotherapy in Patients on Maintenance Hemodialysis: Influence on Lipid Profile and Endothelium

ARTIFICIAL ORGANS, Issue 2 2004
Leszek Tylicki
Abstract:, Ozonated autohemotherapy (O3-AHT) is used in the treatment of atherosclerotic ischemia of lower limbs (AILL). The impact of ozone on serum lipids and endothelium injury is of particular interest since these factors are important in the development of atherosclerotic lesions. To evaluate this issue, a prospective, placebo-controlled study was designed. Twelve hemodialyzed subjects with AILL received autohemotherapy with oxygen as a control followed by O3-AHT with ozone concentration of 50 µg/ml. Serum lipids and plasma activity of von Willebrand factor (vWF) were measured. After O3-AHT, total cholesterol significantly decreased compared to the baseline (,8.34%) [P < 0.01]. LDL cholesterol was also significantly lower than the initial value (,17.71%) [P < 0.001]. No significant changes in the activity of vWF were found after the first session of O3-AHT and after all nine sessions of O3-AHT. The study demonstrated that O3-AHT did not affect deleteriously the endothelium in patients with chronic renal failure on maintenance hemodialysis. It ,may stimulate beneficial changes in serum lipid profile manifesting as,,a, decrease ,in the total- and LDL-cholesterol ,levels. [source]