Clinical aspects of polycystic disease of the kidneys.
- 7 May 1977
- Vol. 1 (6070) , 1196-1199
- https://doi.org/10.1136/bmj.1.6070.1196
Abstract
Seventy-eight patients were treated for polycystic disease of the kidneys. An analysis of the interval between the onset of symptoms and end-stage renal failure made it possible to give and accurate prognosis in individual cases. Pregnancy and urinary infection did not appear to accelerate deterioration of renal function, but Rovsing' operation precipitated renal failure in some cases. Forty-two patients needed replacement treatment for end-stage renal failure, and 24 patients received 29 renal allografts. Transplant function at all times was better than a matched group of 70 patients indications for removal of polycystic kidneys in graft recipients were persistnet or recurrent infection, erythraemia that failed to respond to conservative treatment, and to make room for the transplant.Keywords
This publication has 9 references indexed in Scilit:
- Renal transplantationUrology, 1975
- Congenital cystic disease of kidneyUrology, 1974
- Reduced Calcium Absorption after Nephrectomy in Uremic PatientsNew England Journal of Medicine, 1974
- Polycystic renal disease treated by renal transplantation.1973
- Adult Polycystic Disease of the Kidneys (Potter Type 3)JAMA, 1972
- Hemodialysis and Transplantation in Adults With Polycystic Renal DiseaseJAMA, 1971
- The Nephrogram in Polycystic Disease: An Important Radiographic SignJournal of Urology, 1970
- CONGENITAL RENAL POLYCYSTIC DISEASEJAMA, 1955
- BILATERAL POLYCYSTIC KIDNEY DISEASEA.M.A. Archives of Surgery, 1952