Transplantation proceedings
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Although the risk of kidney donation has been determined in many studies to be low with respect to morbidity and mortality, it is important to keep in mind that patients are put at some risk when they donate an organ for transplantation. The reported incidence of end-stage renal disease (ESRD) among kidney donors ranges from 0.2% to 0.5% with varying follow-up times. Herein, we have reported four living kidney donors at our institution who progressed to ESRD. ⋯ Progression to ESRD is rare among living renal donors. Kidney donation is safe when strict eligibility criteria are met. There may be an increased risk for progression to ESRD among donors with a family history of renal disease.
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We sought to determine the utility of the bispectral index (BIS) as a tool for clinical evaluation of the moment of brain death (BD). ⋯ BIS monitoring is a continuous, simple method that is easy to interpret. It can help in clinical evolution and the decision of the BD moment. In our series, cerebral circulatory cessation (TCD) preceded BIS 0 and SR 100 values. The BIS prematurely detected the start of cerebral circulatory cessation, alerting us of BD.
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In 2005, 3974 Canadians were on waiting lists for organ transplants and 275 patients died while waiting. Canada's organ shortage has led to calls for changes to Canada's organ donation system and its legal framework. Herein we examine an issue in which law reform could both increase the number of available organs and better align practice with respect for autonomy, a core value underpinning the Canadian legal system: the issue of family overrides of a valid donor consent to postmortem donation. ⋯ Second, we consider the legal status of family overrides of valid donor consent in relation to postmortem donation. Third, we describe the available data with regard to the practice of permitting families to override valid donor consent and discuss the possible reasons for this practice. Finally, we describe and defend the desired results with respect to law reform and describe the actions needed to realize these results.
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Randomized Controlled Trial
Perioperative management in patients undergoing pancreatic surgery: the anesthesiologist's point of view.
A high rate of mortality and morbidity has been associated with pancreaticoduodenectomy; the 5-year survival rate is 15% to 25% compared with 1% to 5% among those who did not have any cancer-directed treatment. Systemic rather than surgical complications cause the majority of perioperative deaths, so the anesthesiologist has a crucial role in the management of these patients. This work sought to evaluate an improved approach to perioperative pain management, postsurgical complications as well as outcomes. ⋯ Adequate perioperative treatment included suitable nutritional support and pain management using loco-regional techniques, which seem to improve the surgical outcomes among pancreatic cancer patients.
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A patient undergoing renal transplantation presents unique problems to the anesthetist, as almost every body system is affected. The combined spinal-epidural technique has become popular in lower abdominal surgeries because it offers the advantages of both spinal and epidural techniques. We review our experience of combined spinal-epidural technique in patients undergoing renal transplantation with respect to demographics, intraoperative anesthesia, hemodynamics, postoperative analgesia, and untoward adverse events. ⋯ Combined spinal-epidural anesthesia proved to be a useful regional anesthetic technique, combining the reliability of spinal block and versatility of epidural block for renal transplantation.