Infectious complications in 135 Turkish renal transplant patients
Jazyk angličtina Země Česko Médium print
Typ dokumentu časopisecké články
PubMed
12528389
Knihovny.cz E-zdroje
- MeSH
- antibiotická profylaxe MeSH
- bakteriální infekce mikrobiologie prevence a kontrola MeSH
- imunosupresivní léčba MeSH
- infekce epidemiologie etiologie MeSH
- lidé MeSH
- mykózy mikrobiologie prevence a kontrola MeSH
- následné studie MeSH
- parazitární nemoci parazitologie prevence a kontrola MeSH
- retrospektivní studie MeSH
- transplantace ledvin škodlivé účinky MeSH
- virové nemoci prevence a kontrola virologie MeSH
- Check Tag
- lidé MeSH
- Publikační typ
- časopisecké články MeSH
- Geografické názvy
- Turecko epidemiologie MeSH
Infections are the emerging causes of mortality and morbidity due to lifelong immunosuppressive therapy in renal transplant patients (1, 4). Here, we report infectious complications of 135 renal allograft recipients who were followed up in the last 20 years in Gülhane Military Medical Academy, Ankara, Turkey. Of them, 83 (61.4%) had a transplant from living related donors, 18 (13.3%) from living non-related HLA matched donors and 34 (25.1%) from cadaveric matched donors. Immunosuppression was achieved in 42 (31.1%) recipients by azathioprine plus corticosteroid (AZA + CS) and in 93 (68.8%) by AZA + CS + cyclosporin A (CsA). Encountered infections were classified according to three different periods of the transplantation procedure [early (first month), intermediate (2-6th months) and late (after the 6th month)]. Bacterial infections were the leading infections in all three periods and the most affected system was the urinary tract. Each recipient had at least one episode of urinary tract infection (UTI) and E. coli was the most common urinary pathogen. On the other hand, HCV was the leading viral pathogen (14.3%). The total mortality rate was 7.4%, and septic shock was the most common cause of death (80%).