Surgical complications of renal transplant: experience of a tertiary case Urology institute in Pakistan
PAFMJ-Pakistan Armed Forces Medical Journal. 2018; 68 (6): 1522-1526
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| IMEMR
| ID: emr-206502
Biblioteca responsable:
EMRO
Objective: To evaluate the surgical complications of renal transplantation in adult end stage renal disease patients
Study Design: Retrospective observational study
Place and Duration of Study: Armed Forces Institute of Urology [AFIU] Rawalpindi, from Apr 2009 to Apr 2014
Material and Methods: Frequency of the surgical complications of renal transplant was assessed in 105 adults with end stage renal disease subjected to renal transplantation at Armed Forces institute of Urology Rawalpindi, from Apr 2009 to Apr 2014
Results: Total 105 adults were included in the study with the median age of 38 years; [ranging from 18 to 61 years]. There were 88 [83.8 percent] male and 17 [16.2 percent] female patients. All were live related transplants. Vascular complications were the most common [6.66 percent] followed by urological complications [2.85 percent]. Graft loss occurred in 3.8 percent and surgical mortality was 0.95 percent
Conclusion: Vascular complications after renal transplantation need prompt detection and remedial steps to avoid graft loss. Urological complications, on the other hand, increases morbidity, often needs corrective radiological or surgical intervention, but rarely leads to graft loss
Study Design: Retrospective observational study
Place and Duration of Study: Armed Forces Institute of Urology [AFIU] Rawalpindi, from Apr 2009 to Apr 2014
Material and Methods: Frequency of the surgical complications of renal transplant was assessed in 105 adults with end stage renal disease subjected to renal transplantation at Armed Forces institute of Urology Rawalpindi, from Apr 2009 to Apr 2014
Results: Total 105 adults were included in the study with the median age of 38 years; [ranging from 18 to 61 years]. There were 88 [83.8 percent] male and 17 [16.2 percent] female patients. All were live related transplants. Vascular complications were the most common [6.66 percent] followed by urological complications [2.85 percent]. Graft loss occurred in 3.8 percent and surgical mortality was 0.95 percent
Conclusion: Vascular complications after renal transplantation need prompt detection and remedial steps to avoid graft loss. Urological complications, on the other hand, increases morbidity, often needs corrective radiological or surgical intervention, but rarely leads to graft loss
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Índice:
IMEMR
Tipo de estudio:
Observational_studies
Idioma:
En
Revista:
Pak. Armed Forces Med. J.
Año:
2018