SESARAM - Nef - Nefrologia
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- Fungal peritonitis in peritoneal dialysis patients: is previous antibiotic therapy an essential condition?Publication . Guimarães Rosa, Nuno; Silva, Sónia; Lopes, José António; Branco, Patrícia; de Almeida, Edgar; Ribeiro, Carlos; Abreu, Fernando; Barbas, José; Martins Prata, M.The aim of this study was to analyse the clinical and microbiological features of fungal peritonitis, in chronic peritoneal dialysis patients, focusing on non-traditional risk factors for this feared complication. From 2001 to 2004, five episodes of fungal peritonitis were diagnosed in five different patients, accounting for 4.5% of all peritonitis cases seen during this period. Candida spp. were the most frequent isolates. In all cases, peritoneal dialysis catheter removal and switching to haemodialysis were necessary. In these five cases of fungal peritonitis only one was preceded by antibiotic use, within the previous 3 months, the classical risk factor for fungal peritonitis. Identifying predisposing factors usually not taken into account, may lead to an early diagnosis and to a better understanding of fungal peritonitis pathogenesis.
- Main Determinants of PON1 Activity in Hemodialysis PatientsPublication . Ribeiro, Sandra; do Sameiro Faria, Maria; Mascarenhas-Melo, Filipa; Freitas, Isabel; Mendonca, Maria Isabel; Nascimento, Henrique; Rocha-Pereira, Petronila; Miranda, Vasco; Mendonça, Denisa; Quintanilha, Alexandre; Belo, Luís; Costa, Elísio; Reis, Flávio; Santos-Silva, AliceCardiovascular diseases are the major cause of morbidity and mortality in hemodialysis (HD) patients. These patients present reduced paraoxonase 1 (PON1) activity that depends on genetic and non-genetic factors; however, how these factors influence PON1 activity in HD patients is poorly clarified. Our aim was to evaluate the influence of two polymorphisms and non-genetic factors on PON1 activity in HD patients.
- Obesity, acute kidney injury and mortality in patients with sepsis: a cohort analysisPublication . Gameiro, Joana; Gonçalves, Miguel; Pereira, Marta; Rodrigues, Natacha; Godinho, Iolanda; Neves, Marta; Gouveia, João; Silva, Zélia Costa e; Jorge, Sofia; Lopes, José AntónioAlthough the prognostic effect of obesity has been studied in critically ill patients its impact on outcomes of septic patients and its role as a risk factor for acute kidney injury (AKI) is not consensual. We aimed to analyze the impact of obesity on the occurrence of AKI and on in-hospital mortality in a cohort of critically ill septic patients. This study is retrospective including 456 adult patients with sepsis admitted to the Division of Intensive Medicine of the Centro Hospitalar Lisboa Norte (Lisbon, Portugal) between January 2008 and December 2014. Obesity was defined as a body mass index of 30 kg/m2 or higher. The Kidney Disease Improving Global Outcomes classification was used to diagnose and classify patients developing AKI. AKI occurred in 87.5% of patients (19.5% with stage 1, 22.6% with stage 2 and 45.4% with stage 3). Obese patients developed AKI more frequently than non-obese patients (92.8% versus 85.5%, p = .035; unadjusted OR 2.2 (95% CI: 1.04-4.6), p = .039; adjusted OR 2.31 (95% CI: 1.07-5.02), p = .034). The percentage of obese patients, however, did not differ between AKI stages (stage 1, 25.1%; stage 2, 28.6%; stage 3, 15.4%; p = .145). There was no association between obesity and mortality (p = .739). Of note, when comparing AKI patients with or without obesity in terms of in-hospital mortality there were also no significant differences between those groups (38.4% versus 38.4%, p = .998). Obesity was associated with the occurrence of AKI in critically ill patients with sepsis; however, it was not associated with in-hospital mortality.