| Literature DB >> 786191 |
Abstract
In this study, the incidence of clinical and autopsy arteriosclerosis (AS) was studied in over 300 renal transplant patients (RTP) followed in our clinic up to 13 years post-transplant. Of 45 RTP followed a mean of 10.45 years, the incidence of clinical AS was 6% or 0.58% per year at risk. The incidence of death from AS was 2.2% over 10 years or 0.22% per year at risk. There was no apparent tendency for increase of the risk incidence with increasing time post-transplantation up to 13 years. This incidence of clinical and death-related AS in long term RTP contrasts sharply with a quite high incidence of both clinical and death-related AS in long-term dialysis patients as reported by Scribner's group and both the European and U.S. Dialysis Registry. Of our RTP surviving a decade or more, 77% have normal serum triglycerides and 92% are normotensive, again contrasting sharply with a 70-80% incidence of hyperlipidemia and a 60-80% incidence of hypertension in long-term dialysis patients. These studies suggest that the high rate of accelerated AS in dialysis patients is largely reversed by successful renal transplantation, probably due to a lowering of both blood pressure and hyperlipidemia in the long-term RT patients. Practically, these results suggest that the superior survival of transplant patients over dialysis patients already evident at 10 year mark will widen further during the second post-transplantation decade.Entities:
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Year: 1976 PMID: 786191 PMCID: PMC1344395 DOI: 10.1097/00000658-197609000-00012
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Ann Surg ISSN: 0003-4932 Impact factor: 12.969