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1.
Article | IMSEAR | ID: sea-206991

ABSTRACT

Pregnancy with renal disease is associated with high risk for both mother and fetus with adverse outcomes. Criteria for considering pregnancy in renal transplanted patients include good post-transplant health for 2 years, stable allograft function with a serum creatinine <1.5 mg/dl, absence of rejection, control of blood pressure, absence of proteinuria. Authors report a case of 26-year-old, primigravida had renal transplantation done in NRI Medical College and treated with immunosuppressive therapy with tablets Tacrolimus 1mg twice daily, Azathioprine 50mg twice daily, Prednisolone 10mg once daily and continued till delivery. Developed gestational hypertension treated with tablet Amlodipine 5mg once daily. Elective caesarean section done for contracted pelvis. Post-natal period was uneventful and discharged on immunosuppressive therapy and contraceptive advice. Post-renal transplantation pregnancy should have multidisciplinary approach for. With close medical and obstetric follow up, successful outcome for both mother and infant is possible.

2.
Indian J Pediatr ; 2010 May; 77(5): 555-559
Article in English | IMSEAR | ID: sea-142579

ABSTRACT

Objective. To investigate the relationship between serum leptin and lipid profile in South Indian School children and adolescents, and to evaluate the role of serum leptin in obese, overweight and congenital heart diseased children and adolescents; in South Indian population and its correlation with anthropometric and biochemical parameters. Methods. The study included 185 school going children and adolescents. (52 obese, 49 overweight, 25 congenital heart disease children and adolescents, were compared with 59 normal controls, aged between 10-17 years). Anthropometric variables, lipid profile, fasting serum glucose were analyzed by autoanalyser and serum leptin by ELISA. Results. Serum leptin levels were significantly elevated in obese and overweight children than in control children (36.88±18.60ng/mL, 20.64±11.18ng/mL vs 7.97±2.79ng/mL; p value <0.001), and decreased in congenital heart diseased children than in control children (6.20±4.23 ng/mL vs 7.97±2.79ng/mL; p value <0.005). Conclusions. This study provides a good relationship between serum leptin levels and anthropometric and biochemical parameters, such as total cholesterol, triglycerides and LDL-cholesterol. We observed negative correlation between serum leptin and fasting glucose levels and HDL-cholesterol levels were found to be non-significant among the groups. Further studies with large sample size are needed to ascertain the relationship between serum leptin and lipid profile in different groups of children and adolescents.


Subject(s)
Adolescent , Analysis of Variance , Anthropometry , Biomarkers/blood , Case-Control Studies , Child , Female , Heart Defects, Congenital/blood , Humans , India , Leptin/blood , Lipids/blood , Male , Obesity/blood , Overweight/blood
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