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1.
J Pediatr Urol ; 14(4): 332.e1-332.e6, 2018 08.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30228092

ABSTRACT

INTRODUCTION: Management of severe antenatally detected oligohydramnios with and without obstruction is improving with the result that more fetuses are surviving with early renal failure. Significant advances have occurred in all specialties involved in the management of these patients. All these specialties working together have resulted in the survival of more patients born with renal failure. OBJECTIVE: The aim of this study is to highlight the medical advances in antenatal management of fetal oligohydramnios and pulmonary hypoplasia and to demonstrate that transplantation into a diverted urinary system is safe and leads to good outcomes. STUDY DESIGN: A case series of five patients were presented who, at the study center's respective facilities, recently underwent renal transplantation into bladders drained by cutaneous vesicostomy after extensive bladder evaluation and whose clinical cases highlight the aim of this study. RESULTS: A total of 5 patients were reviewed. Renal failure was caused by posterior urethral valves in four patients, and in one patient Eagle-Barrett syndrome. One patient received an amnio-infusion and attempted antenatal bladder shunt. One patient was ventilator dependent until 24 months, and required a tracheostomy, while two patients were ventilator dependent for the first few months of life. Three of five patients were dialysis dependent. Patient age at transplantation ranged from 20 to 61 months. All patients were poorly compliant pre-transplant and had bladder capacities ranging from 10 mL to 72 mL. Months since follow-up ranged from 3 to 64 months. Creatinine levels prior to transplant ranged from 1.9 to 5.6. During the follow up period, this range decreased to 0.13 to 0.53. Two of five patients had UTI episodes since transplantation. Patient A showed Banff Type 1A acute T-cell mediated rejected approximately two months after transplant, but subsequent biopsies have been negative for rejection. Patient A also required a vesicostomy revision approximately two months after transplant and balloon dilation of UVJ anastomosis three months after transplant. DISCUSSION: Vesicostomy is an especially attractive option to manage children with small bladders to accommodate the high urinary output that occurs after transplantation in infants who require an adult kidney. Recent advances in antenatal management such as amnioinfusion for oligohydramnios have made significant impacts in pulmonary and renal management of this patient population over recent years. CONCLUSION: This report provides further support for the use of vesicostomy as an option for surgical management of patients with renal failure with oligohydramnios and severe obstructive lesions identified antenatally. It also indicates the need to update the criteria for antenatal management of oligohydramnios in obstructive and anephric patients.


Subject(s)
Cystostomy , Kidney Transplantation , Urethral Obstruction/surgery , Urinary Bladder/surgery , Child , Child, Preschool , Humans , Kidney Transplantation/methods , Male , Severity of Illness Index , Time Factors
2.
Rev Sci Instrum ; 88(2): 023112, 2017 Feb.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28249467

ABSTRACT

A novel design of alkali chloride vapour-generating cell has been developed, which can serve as a calibration cell for quantitative ultraviolet absorption concentration measurements and meticulous spectral investigations of alkali compounds. The calibration cell was designed to provide alkali vapour of well-controlled concentrations and temperatures, and consisted of a sealed quartz cell measuring 0.4 m in length with a temperature-controlled reservoir containing solid alkali salt. The cell was placed in a furnace and the alkali vapours generated from the reservoir have direct access to the measuring chamber. Investigations of potassium chloride (KCl) were made on sublimated vapour at temperatures 650, 700, 750, 780, and 800 °C while the reservoir temperature was kept 50 °C lower to avoid condensation. The cell provides stable KCl vapour pressures, and the furnace provides a homogenous temperature profile along the cell. KCl vapour pressures are well characterised and conform the base for determination of the KCl concentration in the cell. The alkali chloride levels matched the concentration range of the absorption setup and indicated a previously employed calibration method to overestimate KCl concentrations. The KCl absorption cross sections for wavelengths λ=197.6 nm and λ=246.2 nm were calculated to be 3.4 × 10-17 and 2.9 × 10-17 cm2/molecule, respectively. The absorption cross section spectra did not show any structural differences with increasing temperature, which could indicate influence of dimers or significant changes of the population in the KCl vibrational states. The KCl absorption cross sections thus did not show any temperature dependence in the temperature region of 700-800 °C. Moreover, the applicability of the calibration cell for measurement of other alkali chlorides and hydroxides is discussed.

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