Literature DB >> 3154644

Drug management of the cardiac transplant patient.

S A Hunt1.   

Abstract

Drug or pharmacologic management of patients with cardiac allografts is an area of clinical cardiology that is quite different from most pharmacological management involved in caring for patients with cardiac disease. In transplant patients one is dealing with a heart that is not stunned, ischemic, infarcted, hypertrophied, dilated, or in any way weak or structurally abnormal. The patient has a perfectly healthy heart, usually chronologically younger than the patient, the only flaw of which is its antigenic dissimilarity from tissue of the patient. This dissimilarity, of course, leads to the need to suppress the normal immune response and make the patient at least relatively immunologically tolerant of his or her solid organ allograft. Problems inherent in the induction and maintenance of immune tolerance in cardiac allograft patients are no different than those encountered in the more widely practiced field of renal transplantation. The major obvious difference is that of the more disastrous consequence of graft "loss" in cardiac transplant recipients since no cardiac equivalent of chronic hemodialysis exists to be resorted to. Thus, immunosuppressive regimens used in cardiac transplant programs tend to err (if they err) on the side of heavier suppression and accept the consequences of this choice.

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Year:  1988        PMID: 3154644     DOI: 10.1007/bf00054210

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Cardiovasc Drugs Ther        ISSN: 0920-3206            Impact factor:   3.727


  10 in total

1.  Use of Orthoclone OKT3 monoclonal antibody in cardiac transplantation: early experience with rejection prophylaxis and treatment of refractory rejection.

Authors:  E M Gilbert; C C Eiswirth; D G Renlund; R L Menlove; C W DeWitt; L A Freedman; C M Herrick; W A Gay; M R Bristow
Journal:  Transplant Proc       Date:  1987-04       Impact factor: 1.066

2.  Immunologic monitoring during and after OKT3 therapy.

Authors:  C F Shield; D J Norman
Journal:  Am J Kidney Dis       Date:  1988-02       Impact factor: 8.860

Review 3.  Cyclosporine drug interactions: a review.

Authors:  N K Wadhwa; T J Schroeder; A J Pesce; S A Myre; C W Clardy; M R First
Journal:  Ther Drug Monit       Date:  1987-12       Impact factor: 3.681

4.  Cyclosporine-associated chronic nephropathy.

Authors:  B D Myers; J Ross; L Newton; J Luetscher; M Perlroth
Journal:  N Engl J Med       Date:  1984-09-13       Impact factor: 91.245

Review 5.  Cyclosporine: a new immunosuppressive agent for organ transplantation.

Authors:  D J Cohen; R Loertscher; M F Rubin; N L Tilney; C B Carpenter; T B Strom
Journal:  Ann Intern Med       Date:  1984-11       Impact factor: 25.391

6.  A randomized clinical trial of OKT3 monoclonal antibody for acute rejection of cadaveric renal transplants.

Authors: 
Journal:  N Engl J Med       Date:  1985-08-08       Impact factor: 91.245

7.  Treatment of refractory cardiac allograft rejection with OKT3 monoclonal antibody.

Authors:  E M Gilbert; C W Dewitt; C C Eiswirth; D G Renlund; R L Menlove; L A Freedman; C M Herrick; W A Gay; M R Bristow
Journal:  Am J Med       Date:  1987-02       Impact factor: 4.965

Review 8.  Monoclonal antibody treatment of human allograft recipients.

Authors:  F L Delmonico; A B Cosimi
Journal:  Surg Gynecol Obstet       Date:  1988-01

9.  Complications and monitoring of OKT3 therapy.

Authors:  J R Thistlethwaite; J K Stuart; J T Mayes; A O Gaber; S Woodle; M R Buckingham; F P Stuart
Journal:  Am J Kidney Dis       Date:  1988-02       Impact factor: 8.860

10.  Cyclosporin A in patients receiving renal allografts from cadaver donors.

Authors:  R Y Calne; D J White; S Thiru; D B Evans; P McMaster; D C Dunn; G N Craddock; B D Pentlow; K Rolles
Journal:  Lancet       Date:  1978 Dec 23-30       Impact factor: 79.321

  10 in total

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