Search results for “delayed graft function

About 1 result in articles

Open Access Pub publishes peer-reviewed, free-to-read open-access articles. Showing articles matching delayed graft function — open any to read the full text, or download the PDF or XML.

1 article
Organ Transplantation Open Access

Living Kidney Transplant: The Influence of Intra-Operative Hemodynamics on Delayed Graft Function

Dec 2017 DOI 10.14302/issn.2576-9359.jot-17-1807
J. Schutt RyanCorresponding author Scripps Center for Organ and Cell Transplantation, Scripps Green Hospital, 10666 North Torrey Road, La Jolla, California

Purpose Intra-operative insults may subject living kidney transplants to poor outcomes. Therefore, we investigated whether intra-operative recipient and donor hemodynamics could act as predictors of delayed graft function and subsequent outcomes. Materials and Methods Living kidney donors and recipients from 2010-2016 at this institution underwent a retrospective chart review. Graft function by post-operative day 7 was used to classify recipients as delayed graft function (need for dialysis), slow graft function (creatinine > 2.5) and good function. Groups were analyzed for intra-operative hemodynamic differences and at one year, incidence of rejection, graft function and survival were compared. Results A total of 111 living renal transplants were performed. Average recipient age was 50 and just over halfwere male (53%). 9% (n=10) and 10% (n=11) developed delayed graft function and slow graft function, respectively. Minimum recipient post re-perfusion central venous pressure ≥12 mmHg was associated with poor graft function (delayed graft function/slow graft function/good function=67%/56%/24%, p=0.009), while intra-operative hypotension (systolic <90 mmHg or diastolic <50 mmHg) was not. Delayed graft function and slow graft function had higher incidences of rejection than good function (30% and 36% vs 9%, p=0.012). Graft function and survival were similar. One patient died with a functioning graft. Conclusions This single center retrospective study suggests that a post re-perfusion central venous pressure ≥12 mmHg is associated with delayed graft function.

Frequently asked questions

Are these articles peer-reviewed?
Yes. Articles published at Open Access Pub go through single-blind peer review (double-blind on request) under an editorial board before publication.
Are the articles free to read?
Yes. Every article is open access — read the full text online for free and download the PDF or XML, with no paywall or subscription.
How do I cite an article?
Use the DOI shown on each result and on the article page; it is the permanent, citable link to the article.
How do I read or download an article?
Click "Read full text" to open the article HTML, or use the PDF / XML buttons on each card to download it.