American journal of kidney diseases : the official journal of the National Kidney Foundation
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Leptospirosis, caused by a spirochete, is the most common zoonosis in domestic or wild animals. Animals excrete infected urine in soil or water and may cause human infections through abrased wound, mucosa, conjunctiva, or by swallowing contaminated water. Clinical presentations of leptospirosis are mostly subclinical. ⋯ Because active surveillance has resulted in 13 cases diagnosed as leptospirosis islandwide thereafter, underestimation and ignorance of leptospirosis as a cause of acute renal failure may occur in Taiwan. Therefore, an area with a low leptospirosis incidence may actually have a very high incidence. Leptospirosis should be suspected in febrile patients with jaundice and renal failure when pathogens cannot be identified by traditional culture for microorganisms.
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Quality assessment efforts to enhance public accountability in dialysis care and to support provider efforts to improve care have lacked patient input. To develop brief patient evaluation or satisfaction surveys suitable for busy clinical settings, knowing patients' priorities can be helpful in deciding which aspects of care should be tracked. We conducted a study to identify salient attributes of dialysis care and to rank the importance of these attributes from the perspective of dialysis patients. ⋯ Patients value certain aspects of dialysis care highly, and these aspects differed in some respects for the relatively small number of hemodialysis and peritoneal dialysis patients studied. Construction of brief questionnaires for quality assessment and assurance requires thoughtful consideration of what questions to include. Knowing patients' priorities regarding the most important aspects of care that have high potential for dissatisfaction may be helpful to continuous quality improvement of end-stage renal disease care.
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Review Comparative Study
CRRT in the area of cost containment: is it justified?
Intensive care accounts for at least 25% of health care costs. One third of this goes to 10% of patients who, in general, have combined respiratory and renal failure. The cost of renal replacement therapy is, therefore, of major importance. ⋯ When comparing randomized patients in a recent prospective trial, aggregate costs for renal replacement therapy were comparable. The advantages of better nutrition, better fluid balance, easier management of hemodynamics, and more complete renal recovery, as suggested by this study, should continue to make it valuable. Physician acceptance of CRRT advantages has been established and suggests clinical benefit despite any potential increased cost.
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Sepsis can be considered a systemic inflammatory response syndrome (SIRS) caused by infection. When an excessive and/or persistent activation of humoral and cellular mechanisms of host defense is present, an exaggerated and generalized activation of inflammatory mechanisms can lead to a multiple organ dysfunction syndrome. Mediators thought to be involved in this syndrome include the major plasma cascade systems (complement, coagulation, and fibrinolytic systems) and soluble cell-derived mediators (cytokines, reactive oxygen species, platelet-activating factor (PAF), arachidonic acid metabolites, and nitric oxide and related compounds). ⋯ Although the removal of cytokines, such as tumor necrosis factor-alpha (TNF-alpha), remains controversial, mainly because of differences in membrane used, operational conditions, and inter- and intra-assay variability, the crucial point is that no evidence has yet been given to show real benefit from CRRT in significantly reducing the plasma concentration of cytokines. The net advantage of CRRT, however, may not only be the removal of cytokines per se, but also the simultaneous elimination of cytokine-inducing substances. Experimental and human studies will be discussed as to whether extracorporeal treatments may remove an excess of circulating cytokines, either by increasing the turnover rate (the so-called high-volume hemofiltration), or by using sorbent systems to regenerate plasma filtrate.
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It is routine in hemodialysis units to require a chest radiograph after the insertion of an internal jugular line for venous access before dialysis is commenced. There are two principal reasons for this: (1) to ensure that no procedural complications have occurred and (2) to verify correct catheter placement. Knowledge of the time delay involved may prompt nephrologists to opt for femoral access (with increased hemodialysis recirculation and need for repeated line placement). ⋯ There was no case of associated pneumothorax. Of the 370 line insertions in 250 patients in whom it was believed clinically that no complication had occurred, the chest radiograph only showed unsuspected line malposition in four cases (1.08%). Routine chest radiographs rarely contribute to the diagnosis of any procedural complications and are of little value after internal jugular access placement, especially if it is believed clinically that no complication occurred.