Eyewitness News
Local News
Pinpoint Weather
Eyewitness Sports
HealthBeat
Call For Action
Investigators
Technology
Entertainment
Community
What's On WPRI
What's On Fox
Feedback
Contests
Station Info
Online Store



MARKETPLACE:  Auto | Jobs | Personals | Yellow Pages  November 22, 2003
LIFESTYLE:  Holiday Helper | House & Home | Money | Pets | Recipes | Relationships | Travel | Weddings
Kidney Failure after Non-Kidney Transplants
Email to a Friend Printer Friendly Version  

(Ivanhoe Newswire) -- Doctors have long known that kidney failure is a complication of organ transplantation. Now, they know more about which types of transplants are most likely to lead to chronic kidney failure. Researchers from the University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, report patients who have intestine transplants are more likely to have kidney failure compared to those who receive heart-lung transplants.

Doctors studied more than 11,000 patients who received transplants. Of these patients, nearly 29 percent eventually required maintenance dialysis or a kidney transplant. The risk of kidney failure differed according to the type of transplant originally received. Nearly 7 percent of heart-lung transplant patients developed kidney failure, while nearly 22 percent of intestine transplant patients suffered from it. Researchers say older patients are more likely to have complications than younger patients.

Researchers write, "The risk of chronic renal failure and the need for long-term renal-replacement therapy will increase further, given the trend toward increasing longevity in the overall population of recipients of non-renal transplants, which currently numbers more than 100,000." Patients with high blood pressure, diabetes, or preexisting hepatitis C were more likely to have renal failure.

In this study, researchers say chronic kidney failure was associated with an increased risk of death "by a factor of more than four." They say this alarming finding points to the need for doctors to educate patients on the high risk of kidney failure following non-renal transplant surgery.

This article was reported by Ivanhoe.com, who offers Medical Alerts by e-mail every day of the week. To subscribe, go to: http://www.ivanhoe.com/newsalert/.

SOURCE: New England Journal of Medicine, 2003;349:931-940

Health News | Health Encyclopedia | Quizzes and Tools | Women's Health | Men's Health | Children's Health | Seniors' Health | Diet, Fitness and Self Image | Sex and Relationships
Focus on Diabetes: more» 
Islets May Lead to Diabetes Cure
Early Signs of Heart Disease in Children
Have Diabetes, Will Travel
Diabetic Smokers Are More Hardcore
Severe Gum Disease Common in Diabetics
Promising Treatment for Diabetes
Obesity Major Risk Factor for Hispanic Kids
Health Care for College Students
Gastric Bypass Surgery Helps Diabetics
Florida Governor Files Brief in Life-Support Case
Health Encyclopedia: Diabetes
Insulin Treatment
Juvenile Diabetes
Urine Glucose Oxidase Test
Diabetic Retinopathy
Diabetes
Diabetic Neuropathy
Hypoglycemia (Diabetic) & Hyperglycemia

Quick Job Search
Search by keyword, locale, categoryďż˝
Handy Household Tips
Cooking, cleaning, food and more.
Poor People Skills?
Improve the way collegues see you.
Send questions and comments about this website to the .
All content © Copyright 2003, WorldNow, WPRI, WNAC and Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.
For more information on this site, please read our Privacy Policy and Terms of Service.