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Strongyloidiasis is a disease that causes significant morbidity and rarely mortality in immunocompromised patients. We report two cases of disseminated strongyloidiasis infection while on steroids. The first patient was a known diabetic, hypertensive, and coronary artery disease who began on steroids with hemodialysis for biopsy-proven rapidly progressive glomerulo nephritis (RPGN). He presented to the emergency department (ED) with fever, loose stools, worsening dyspnea on exertion, cough, conjunctival congestion, and bilateral lower limb pain of 1-week duration while on hemodialysis (HD). He was started on intravenous (IV) antibiotics, suspecting a catheter-related septicemia. Stool and sputum examination revealed strongyloid infection. The patient was treated with Albendazole, Ivermectin, empirical antibiotics, and tapering and stopping of steroids. Symptoms improved and the patient was discharged in stable condition. The second case is a known case of systemic hypertension and biopsy-proven IgAN on maintenance steroids, with recently detected diabetes mellitus. He presented to the ED with tiredness, fever, cough, dyspnea, and occasional hemoptysis of 1-week duration. On evaluation, he had maculopapular rash over the chest and abdomen, along with hypoxia requiring oxygen support, thrombocytopenia, and worsening renal function. He was initially started on IV antibiotics, suspecting a lower respiratory tract infection with sepsis. Bronchoalveolar lavage (BAL) cytology yielded strogyloid larvae. The patient received ivermectin along with empirical IV antibiotics and supportive treatment but succumbed to the infection. These case reports signify the need for an active search for opportunistic infections in patients who are on continuous immunosuppressive therapy.
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La enfermedad renal crónica constituye un problema de salud por su impacto sobre los individuos, la sociedad y la economía. Teniendo en cuenta lo anterior, y luego de una amplia búsqueda bibliográfica, se diseñó una guía de práctica clínica en el Policlínico Luis Augusto Turcios Lima de la provincia de Pinar del Río, dirigida a los profesionales de la atención primaria de salud, con el objetivo de mejorar la calidad de vida de niños y adolescentes con dicha enfermedad. Esta fue elaborada por los métodos de la medicina basada en la evidencia, según el consenso y la opinión de los expertos. Se logró generalizar esta herramienta, emitir recomendaciones y actualizarla acorde con las nuevas evidencias médicas. Finalmente, resultó evaluada por los expertos como muy recomendada.
Chronic renal disease constitutes a health problem due to its impact on individuals, society and economy. Taking into account the above-mentioned, and after a wide literature search, a clinical practice guide was designed in Luis Augusto Turcios Lima Polyclinic from Pinar del Río province, directed to primary health care professionals, aimed at improving the life quality of children and adolescents with this disease. It was elaborated by medicine methods based on the evidence, according to the consent and opinion of experts. It was possible to generalize this tool, give recommendations and up to date according to the new medical evidences. Finally, it was evaluated by experts as very recommended.
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Guia de Prática Clínica , Insuficiência Renal Crônica , Atenção Primária à Saúde , CriançaRESUMO
Renal fibrosis is a common pathological change from development to end-stage renal diseases in all progressive chronic kidney diseases. Renal fibrosis after kidney transplantation will severely affect the renal graft function. Macrophages are characterized with high heterogeneity and plasticity. During the process of kidney injury, macrophages are recruited, activated and polarized by local microenvironment, and participate in the process of renal tissue injury, repair and fibrosis through multiple mechanisms. Recent studies have shown that macrophages may transit into myofibroblasts and directly participate in the formation of renal fibrosis. This process is known as macrophage-myofibroblast transition. Nevertheless, the regulatory mechanism remains elusive. In this article, the role of macrophages in renal fibrosis, the characteristics of macrophage-myofibroblast transition and the possible regulatory mechanism were reviewed, aiming to provide reference for relevant research of renal fibrosis.
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Objective To investigate the clinical effect of LUO's Nephropathy Recipe Ⅲ(composed of Sargassum,Astragali Radix,Salviae Miltiorrhizae Radix et Rhizoma,Rehmanniae Radix Praeparata,calcined Ostreae Concha,Houttuyniae Herba,Schizonepetae Spica,etc.)combined with conventional western medicine in treating stage 3-5 non-dialysis chronic kidney disease(CKD)of spleen-kidney deficiency with turbidity-toxin-stasis obstruction type.Methods A total of 180 patients with stage 3-5 non-dialysis CKD of spleen-kidney deficiency with turbidity-toxin-stasis obstruction type were randomly divided into observation group and control group,with 90 cases in each group.The control group was given conventional western medicine for symptomatic treatment,and the observation group was treated with LUO's Nephropathy RecipeⅢon the basis of treatment for the control group.The course of treatment for the two groups covered one month.Before and after treatment,the levels of serum inflammatory factors,renal function indicators and urine protein parameters in the two groups were observed.After treatment,the clinical efficacy and safety of the two groups were evaluated.Results(1)After one month of treatment,the total effective rate in the observation group was 95.56%(86/90)and that in the control group was 81.11%(73/90).The intergroup comparison(tested by chi-square test)showed that the efficacy of the observation group was significantly superior to that of the control group(P<0.01).(2)After treatment,the serum levels of inflammatory factors of transforming growth factor β1(TGF-β1),monocyte chemotactic protein 1(MCP-1),and tumor necrosis factor α(TNF-α)in the two groups were significantly decreased compared with those before treatment(P<0.05),and the decrease in the observation group was significantly superior to that in the control group(P<0.01).(3)After treatment,the levels of renal function indicators of blood urea nitrogen(BUN),serum creatinine(Scr),blood uric acid(UA),and cystatin C(Cys-C)in the two groups were significantly decreased compared with those before treatment(P<0.05),and the decrease in the observation group was significantly superior to that in the control group(P<0.01).(4)After treatment,the levels of 24-hour urine protein quantification and urine microalbumin in the two groups were significantly decreased compared with those before treatment(P<0.05),and the decrease in the observation group was significantly superior to that in the control group(P<0.01).(5)The incidence of adverse reactions in the observation group was 4.44%(4/90),which was significantly lower than that of 15.56%(14/90)in the control group,and the difference was statistically significant between the two groups(P<0.05).Conclusion LUO's Nephropathy Recipe Ⅲ combined with conventional western medicine exerts satisfactory efficacy in treating stage 3-5 non-dialysis CKD patients with spleen-kidney deficiency with turbidity-toxin-stasis obstruction syndrome type,and the therapy can significantly alleviate the inflammatory response,improve the renal function,decrease the urinary protein excretion of the patients,with high safety profile.
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Objective:To investigate the influencing factors for total number, total volume, and total iron burden of cerebral microbleeds (CMBs) and the relationship between CMBs with cognitive impairment in end-stage renal disease (ESRD) using semi-automatic quantitative susceptibility mapping (QSM).Methods:The study was a cross-sectional study. Clinical and imaging data of 46 ESRD patients with≥1 CMBs who attended Tianjin First Central Hospital from November 2018 to August 2022 were retrospectively analyzed. There were 26 males and 20 females, aged 42-75 years. All patients underwent susceptibility-weighted imaging (SWI) scanning, then SWI data was post-processed to obtain QSM. The semi-automatic dynamic programming algorithm was used to get the volume and mean susceptibility value of each CMB by sketching the boundary of CMBs. The CMBs iron load total volume were calculated. Stepwise linear regression analysis was used to explore independent influencing factors for the number, total volume, and total iron burden of CMBs in ESRD patients. Partial correlation analysis was used to explore the relationship between CMBs and cognitive impairment with the other signs of cerebral small vessel diseases as covariates.Results:In patients with ESRD, CMBs were located in the frontal lobe in 19 cases, parietal lobe in 9 cases, temporal lobe in 19 cases, occipital lobe in 14 cases, basal ganglia in 27 cases, dorsal thalamus in 15 cases, centrum semiovale in 14 cases, cerebellum in 14 cases, and brainstem in 13 cases. C-reactive protein levels (95% CI 101.81-157.85, r=0.96, P=0.001) and creatinine levels (95% CI 5.32-29.61, r=0.71, P=0.010) were influencing factors for the total iron burden of CMBs. C-reactive protein levels (95% CI 0.72-1.15, r=0.99, P=0.001) and creatinine levels (95% CI 0.03-0.22, r=0.89, P=0.014) were influencing factors for the total volume of CMBs. C-reactive protein levels (95% CI 0.10-0.12, r=0.96, P=0.001) and alkaline phosphatase levels (95% CI 0.16-0.38, r=0.59, P=0.001) were influencing factors for the number of CMBs. The total volume ( r=-0.61, P=0.009) and total iron burden ( r=-0.71, P=0.002) of CMBs in the frontal lobe were negatively correlated with cognitive function. However, although the number of CMBs in the frontal lobe was negatively correlated with cognitive function, the statistics analysis was insignificant ( r=-0.53, P=0.063). Conclusions:C-reactive protein and creatinine are influencing factors for CMBs′ total volume and total iron burden; C-reactive protein levels and alkaline phosphatase are influencing factors for the number of CMBs. The total iron burden and total volume of CMBs in the frontal lobe may be the biomarkers of cognitive impairment in patients with end-stage renal disease.
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【Objective】 To explore the correlation between abnormal thalamic functional connectivity (FC) and memory loss in maintenance hemodialysis patients with end-stage renal disease (ESRD). 【Methods】 An auditory verbal learning test (AVLT-H) was conducted on 22 patients with ESRD and 28 age-, sex-, and education-matched healthy controls (HC) to evaluate memory function. After that, resting-state functional magnetic resonance imaging (rs-fMRI) data were gathered, and a whole-brain FC analysis centered on the thalamus was executed to discern variations in thalamic FC between the two groups. Finally, Pearson and Spearman correlation analyses were carried out. 【Results】 Compared to the HC group, the ESRD group exhibited notably lower scores in IR-S (P=0.002), SR-S (P<0.001), and LR-S (P=0.005). Concurrently, the ESRD group demonstrated diminished FC of the right thalamus with the left superior frontal gyrus, the left parietal lobule, the right suproccipital gyrus, the right anterior cuneus, and the right middle frontal gyrus (P<0.05, TFCE correction). Additionally, reduced FC were observed between the left thalamus and the left gyrus rectus, the left parietal lobule, and the right parietal lobule in the ESRD group (P<0.05, TFCE correction). Moreover, the FC values between the left thalamus and the left gyrus rectus in the ESRD group displayed significant negative correlations with IR-S (r=-0.499), SR-S (r=-0.458), and LR-S (r=-0.455) (all P<0.05). 【Conclusion】 Memory impairment is evident in ESRD patients undergoing maintenance hemodialysis, and it appears to be intricately linked to anomalous FC within the left thalamus and the left gyrus rectus. These findings offer potential imaging markers for monitoring memory dysfunction in individuals with ESRD.
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Objective @#To explore the correlation between serum fibroblast growth factor⁃23 (FGF23) concentration and heart failure and all⁃cause death in patients with end⁃stage renal disease (ESRD) . @*Methods @#The prospective cohort study design was used in the present study. The ESRD patients who were admitted to the department of nephropathy in the Hospital and without heart failure symptoms were recruited in this study. The data of patients was collected through baseline questionnaires , physical examinations , echocardiography , and laboratory examinations. The serum FGF23 levels were measured by enzyme⁃linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA) . The follow⁃up time was 2 years. The onset of heart failure (ACC/AHA stage C ⁃D) and all⁃cause death were composite endpoint events. The Cox proportional risk model was used to explore the risk factors of outcome events. Through subgroup analyses and interaction analyses , further exploration was conducted to determine whether there was heterogeneity in the association between FGF23 and outcome events in different subgroups.@*Results @#Ultimately , 107 ESRD patients were included in this study , with an average age of (52. 00 ± 12. 51) years. There were 39 males (36. 45% ) , and the median follow⁃up time was 23 months (21 , 25 months) . There were 32 (29. 9% ) outcome events , of which 22 (20. 6% ) onset of heart failure and 10 (9. 3% ) all⁃cause of deaths. The results of this study showed that the concentration of FGF23 in the outcome event group was significantly higher than that in the non⁃event group [(4. 40 ± 1. 16) pmol/ml vs (3. 85 ± 0. 82) pmol/ml ,P < 0. 05] . The Cox proportional risk model showed that the elevated FGF23 was associated with increased risk of the composite endpoint events in ESRD patients (HR = 1. 730 , 95% CI: 1. 164 - 2. 570 , P = 0. 007 ) . Subgroup analyses showed that there was an interactive effect between FGF23 levels and gender on the risk of cardiovascular outcome events. Especially in male ESRD patients , the increased FGF23 level was correlated with a higher risk of cardiovascular events (P⁃interaction < 0. 05) .@*Conclusion @#Elevated serum FGF23 is an independent risk factor for the onset of heart failure and all⁃cause of mortality in ESRD patients , especially in male patients.
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Objective To summarize the experience and practical value of living donor kidney harvesting in Bama miniature pigs with six gene modified. Methods The left kidney of Bama miniature pigs with six gene modified was obtained by living donor kidney harvesting technique. First, the ureter was occluded, and then the inferior vena cava and abdominal aorta were freed. During the harvesting process, the ureter, renal vein and renal artery were exposed and freed in sequence. The vascular forceps were used at the abdominal aorta and inferior vena cava, and the renal artery and vein were immediately perfused with 4℃ renal preservation solution, and stored in ice normal saline for subsequent transplantation. Simultaneously, the donor abdominal aorta and inferior vena cava gap were sutured. The operation time, blood loss, warm and cold ischemia time, postoperative complications and the survival of donors and recipients were recorded. Results The left kidney of the genetically modified pig was successfully harvested. Intraoperative bleeding was 5 mL, warm ischemia time was 45 s, and cold ischemia time was 2.5 h. Neither donor nor recipient pig received blood transfusion, and urinary function of the kidney transplanted into the recipient was recovered. The donor survived for more than 8 months after the left kidney was resected. Conclusions Living donor kidney harvesting is safe and reliable in genetically modified pigs. Branch blood vessels could be processed during kidney harvesting, which shortens the process of kidney repair and the time of cold ischemia. Living donor kidney harvesting contributes to subsequent survival of donors and other scientific researches.
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Abstract Background: End-stage renal diseases patients have a high risk of postoperative nausea and vomiting (PONV), which is multifactorial and need acute attention after renal transplantation for a successful outcome in term of an uneventful postoperative period. The study was done to compare the efficacy of palonosetron and ondansetron in preventing early and late-onset PONV in live donor renal transplantation recipients (LDRT). Methods: The prospective randomized double-blinded study was done on 112 consecutive patients planned for live donor renal transplantation. Patients of both sexes in the age group of 18-60 years were randomly divided into two groups: Group O (Ondansetron) and Group P (Palonosetron) with 56 patients in each group by computer-generated randomization. The study drug was administered intravenously (IV) slowly over 30 seconds, one hour before extubation. Postoperatively, the patients were accessed for PONV at 6, 24, and 72 hours using the Visual Analogue Scale (VAS) nausea score and PONV intensity scale. Results: The incidence of PONV in the study was found to be 30.35%. There was significant difference in incidence of PONV between Group P and Group O at 6 hours (12.5% vs. 32.1%, p = 0.013) and 72 hours (1.8% vs. 33.9%, p < 0.001), but insignificant difference at 24 hours (1.8% vs. 10.7%, p = 0.113). VAS-nausea score was significantly lower in Group P as compared to Group O at a time point of 24 hours (45.54 ± 12.64 vs. 51.96 ± 14.70, p = 0.015) and 72 hours (39.11 ± 10.32 vs. 45.7 ± 15.12, p = 0.015). Conclusion: Palonosetron is clinically superior to ondansetron in preventing early and delayed onset postoperative nausea and vomiting in live-related renal transplant recipients.
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Renal cell carcinoma (RCC) is the most common subtype of adult renal tumors, and its detection rate in the early stages has been increased in the dawn of advanced imaging modalities. Nephrectomy is the mainstay of treatment; determination of tumor category and staging is the primary concern of oncopathologists. Non-neoplastic renal parenchyma is overlooked majority of times and thus misses the opportunity to detect concomitant medical renal diseases which also predict the renal outcome in the postoperative era. Although any kind of glomerular or extraglomerular pathology may be encountered, vascular changes in the form of arterionephrosclerosis are the commonest one. Here, we take the opportunity to report an unusual association of heavy chain deposition disease (HCDD) with clear cell subtypes of renal cell carcinoma in a 48-year-old male of Indian ethnicity.
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The development of chronic kidney disease and its progression to End Stage Renal Disease requiring renal replacement therapy remains a significant source of reduced quality of life and premature mortality. The global dialysis population and treatment gap is growing, especially in low- and middle- income countries. In India, 70% of those starting dialysis, die or discontinue treatment in the initial period due to the high cost of treatment and lack of access to dialysis therapy. Achieving health equity requires ensuring access to the resources that needs to be healthy, and addressing social determinants of health involves needs factors that influence the health outcomes. Universal Health Coverage requires an alternate model to address the substantial Out-Of-Pocket-Expenditure borne by these patients for traveling and medications.
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From an ethical perspective, resource limitations provide a challenge for healthcare providers. Handling disclosure of the financial details of treatment options in a way that empowers patients, even in the face of extreme poverty, requires careful consideration of the personal preferences and motivations of each patient. This article will consider the high costs of dialysis for patients experiencing extreme poverty in light of various ethical principles, including informed consent and truth-telling. It will conclude that a graduated method of disclosing the physical and financial burdens of each treatment option is the best way forward, particularly for healthcare workers engaged in resource-limited settings.
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The prevalence of chronic kidney disease (CKD) is increasing globally and is one of the noncommunicable diseases associated with increase mortality globally in the last two decades. The prevalence of CKD in Nigeria, it is 1.6% to 12.4%. Ninety percent of end-stage renal disease (ESRD) patients are said to die within 3 months of commencing dialysis. Indices are even worse in resource poor countries like Nigeria where prevention and adequate intervention are usually hampered by funds. In regions like Nigeria, it will be cheaper to prevent CKD than treating its complications. Hence, it is important to identify the common etiologies of CKD in Nigeria and prevent or promptly address them before causing irreversible damage to the kidneys. The most common cause of CKD in Nigeria includes hypertension, glomerulonephritis and diabetes mellitus. Many of these etiologies are preventable/treatable and should be looked for as a major way to reduce the incidence of CKD in Nigeria. Challenges identified in Nigeria, propagating CKD include westernization, inadequate manpower, late presentation, diagnostic challenge and poorly equipped facilities. Interventions like encouraging healthy lifestyle, making available essential drugs, training of health personnel, subsidized cost of treatment, legislation and policies to curb drug abuse. Therefore, resource-poor settings should focus on creating more awareness and making legislations and/or policies focused on these preventable causes of CKD as this is more realistic and effective in these settings.
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Pediatric kidney transplant recipients differ from adult counterparts in primary disease, physiology, psychology, organ function and immune status and their perioperative treatment and nursing management are different from those of adult kidney transplantation. To standardize holistic perioperative nursing regimens for pediatric kidney transplantation, Surgery Nursing Committee of Shanghai Nursing Association organized national medical and nursing experts in the fields of transplantation to jointly draft "expert consensus on perioperative nursing standards for pediatric kidney transplantation " (abbreviated as "consensus"). After three rounds of online expert inquiry, all revised opinions were jointly discussed combined with literature evidence, and the expert consensus was finally reached. The highlights of perioperative treatment and nursing care for pediatric kidney transplantation were summarized and stated, including preoperative evaluation, preoperative and postoperative nursing care, which were of scientific and practical value.
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Kidney transplantation is the most effective treatment for end-stage renal disease in clinical practice. Compared with patients receiving dialysis, kidney transplant recipients may achieve higher survival rate and quality of life, and better clinical outcomes. However, kidney transplant recipients constantly develop physiological and psychological disorders, such as frailty, decreased cardiopulmonary function and cognitive dysfunction, etc. In recent years, with the application of the concept of enhanced recovery after surgery (ERAS), rehabilitation therapy plays a pivotal role in optimizing preoperative baseline function, mitigating perioperative physiological and psychological stress and reducing the incidence of postoperative complications. In this article, the application of ERAS in kidney transplantation was reviewed, and research progress on pre-rehabilitation before kidney transplantation and acute-stage rehabilitation after kidney transplantation was summarized, aiming to provide reference for perioperative rehabilitation of kidney transplantation, enhance the quality of life of kidney transplant recipients and accelerate the development of kidney transplantation techniques.
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Air pollution is a serious global public health problem. Air pollutants, especially fine particulate matter (PM2.5), are associated with increased risks of various diseases. In recent years, studies have confirmed that PM2.5 is closely related to chronic kidney disease, secondary kidney disease, and end-stage renal disease. This review summarized the effects of PM2.5 and its components on kidney diseases, and the potential mechanism of kidney injury induced by PM2.5 exposure from the aspects of inflammatory injury and oxidative stress, renal hemodynamic changes, and DNA damage and methylation, aiming to provide an insight for further mechanism research and the prevention and control of air pollution-induced kidney damage.
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Autosomal dominant polycystic kidney disease (ADPKD) is the most common inherited kidney disease and one of the most common causes for end-stage renal disease (ESRD). Kidney transplantation is the optimal renal replacement therapy for ADPKD patients complicated with ESRD. Currently, scholars at home and abroad have a certain controversy about whether polycystic kidney resection is necessary in ADPKD patients before kidney transplantation, and the criteria and methods for polycystic nephrectomy also differ. To further standardize the clinical technical operation of kidney transplantation in ADPKD patients, experts in organ transplantation organized by Branch of Organ Transplantation of Chinese Medical Association formulated this specification from the aspects of diagnosis of ADPKD, indications and contraindications of kidney transplantation for ADPKD, preoperative evaluation and treatment, polycystic nephrectomy, and postoperative management, etc.
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End-stage renal disease is the final stage of chronic kidney disease, and research on palliative care for end-stage renal disease patients in China is still in its infancy. The research content of palliative care for end-stage renal disease at home and abroad mainly includes identification and management of symptoms, advance care planning, psychosocial and spiritual support, and ethical issues in dialysis decision-making. However, practical experience is still insufficient. By focusing on the overview, development status, patient needs, as well as implementation forms and models of palliative care for endstage renal disease patients, this paper summarized the research progress and application status of related research, with a view to providing references for future domestic research and clinical practice in this field.
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【Objective】 To investigate dynamic regional homogeneity (dReHo) abnormality in end-stage renal disease (ESRD) patients by using resting-state functional magnetic resonance imaging (rs-fMRI). 【Methods】 A total of 26 ESRD patients and 26 healthy controls (HC) matched in gender, education level and age were included. Rs-fMRI scanning was performed in all subjects. All the subjects were tested by using auditory verbal learning test Huashan version (AVLT-H) and Montreal Cognitive Assessment (MoCA) to assess cognitive function before collection of MRI data. T-test was used to observe the difference in dReHo at global level between the two groups. Pearson and Spearman correlation analyses were made to estimate the correlation between abnormal brain regions and clinical scales. 【Results】 Compared with HC group, the dReHo value in ESRD patients reduced on the bilateral superior margin gyrus, left insula, left posterior central gyrus, and left putamen (P<0.05, replacement test correction). The dReHo values of left superior margin gyrus (r=-0.534, P=0.005) and left insula in ESRD patients (r=-0.422, P=0.032) were negatively correlated with the LR-S score, and the dReHo value of the left margin was negatively correlated with the SR-S score (r=-0.468, P=0.016). 【Conclusion】 There are abnormal dReHo values in several brain regions in ESRD patients during resting state, which is related to the patients’ cognitive function. The variation of dReHo value provides a new objective imaging basis for evaluating the cognitive function of ESRD patients.
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Objective To investigate the attitudes and influencing factors of transplantation-related populations towards kidney xenotransplantation. Methods From June 2022 to January 2023, stratified random sampling was performed from patients awaiting kidney transplantation, patients after kidney transplantation, patients' relatives and medical students. Four hundred subjects were collected from each population and 1600 subjects were investigated using a self-designed questionnaire. Baseline data of the respondents, their attitudes towards kidney xenotransplantation and the reasons of rejecting kidney xenotransplantation were analyzed. The influencing factors of attitudes towards kidney xenotransplantation were also identified. Results A total of 1 493 valid questionnaires were collected, and the questionnaire retrieval rate was 93.31%. About 93.10% of the respondents accepted allogeneic kidney transplantation, and 66.78% had heard of kidney xenotransplantation. Seven hundred and ninety-five respondents suggested that they could accept kidney xenotransplantation "when kidney xenotransplantation and allogeneic kidney transplantation yielded the same results and risks". Six hundred and ninety-eight respondents indicated that they were "unable" or "uncertain" whether they could accept kidney xenotransplantation (χ2=16.409,P=0.001). Among these 698 respondents, the proportion of them who were willing to accept kidney xenotransplantation when they did not meet the conditions of allogeneic kidney transplantation was 10.9%. About 35.8% of respondents were willing to accept kidney xenotransplantation if it yielded less risk and better prognosis compared with allogeneic kidney transplantation. If the time of awaiting kidney xenotransplantation was shorter than that of allogeneic kidney transplantation, 21.2% were willing to accept kidney xenotransplantation. If the cost of kidney xenotransplantation was less than that of allogeneic kidney transplantation, 24.5% of them were willing to accept kidney xenotransplantation. The main reasons of rejecting kidney xenotransplantation included surgical risk and other unknown risks. Multivariate analysis showed that respondents residing in cities and towns for a long period of time, those who accept allogeneic kidney transplantation and those who have heard of kidney xenotransplantation showed more positive attitudes towards kidney xenotransplantation. Conclusions Different transplantation-related populations have different attitudes towards kidney xenotransplantation, and the overall attitudes are positive. Active promotion of kidney xenotransplantation research and carrying out relevant popular science education contribute to improving public attitudes towards the acceptance of kidney xenotransplantation.