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Stories from the dialysis comunity across the globe.



'Medical college to be built in Landhi' - The News International PDF Print
The News International
He made this announcement while inaugurating the newly installed dialysis machines at the Landhi Medical Complex. The four dialysis machines along with the related equipment had been installed at a cost of Rs15 million. The health minister said that

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Kidney, the amazing organ - The Hindu PDF Print

Kidney Day is observed all over the world on the second Thursday of March every year. Incidence of kidney failure cases is increasing day by day due to a steep increase in the number of diabetes and hypertensive patients in the recent past. Globally, nearly 50 million people suffer from renal failure but only 1 million among them undergo treatment. It has been estimated that 360 million people will die of renal failure in 2015.

Though there are no accurate statistics on the subject, the available data shows that 7.58 million people in India are suffering from kidney failure. Surveys conducted point out that less than 5%of the general public is aware of the location and functions of the kidney.

It was to create awareness among the people that Joel Kopple, the founder of International Federation of Kidney Foundations (IFKF), conceived the idea of World Kidney Day (WKD) in the year 2003. The day offers a crucial and visible opportunity to educate policymakers as well as the general public including all those who are at the risk of kidney disease/failure.

The kidney does a magnificent job in our urological system, thus becoming a unique organ in the body. Every day, it filters 200 litres of blood. It is an amazing organ not only excreting urine from the blood, but also maintaining the body electrolyte, maintaining blood pH, synthesises active form of vitD3. It produces Erythroprotien, which is essential for maturation of the red blood corpuscles and to maintain the blood pressure.

Then why does the kidney fail? It can fail due to uncontrolled hypertension, diabetes, failure to take proper treatment for the nephritic syndrome (excess protein in the urine), prolonged obstruction in the urinary tract, frequent use of analgesic (pain-killers) tablets, use of native medicine made of the metals, and a family history of renal disease. Some do suffer from kidney failure, without any specific or identifiable cause. Various reports from Sri Lankan studies reveal that environmental factors like the use of pesticides, use of medicines containing metals, hydrocarbon, etc., too can cause kidney failure.

Chronic kidney failure causes severe economic burden to the individual and his family, and to the nation as a whole on dialysis and renal transplantation. Such patients undergo a lot of stress and strain for want of a potential donor for transplant, most often resulting in depression. With frequent rackets and malpractices involving kidney donation which have become common, in spite of the strict enforcement of rules, the motivation of brain-death patients for organ donation is the only alternative for transplantation.

Prevention is always better than cure. In order to prevent kidney failures, it is essential that everyone knows about the kidney and its importance. There are eight golden rules which help to avoid kidney failures.

1. Keep fit and active. Maintain ideal body weight.

2. Keep regular control of blood sugar.

3. Monitor your blood pressure.

4. Eat healthy and keep your weight in check.

5. Maintain a healthy fluid intake.

6. Do not smoke.

7. Do not take over-the-counter pills regularly.

8. Check your kidneys function if you have any one or more of the high risk factors. The theme for the this year's World Kidney Day (March 8) was: “DONATE — RECEIVE — KIDNEYS FOR LIFE”

(The writer is retired Professor of Nephrology, Thanjavur Medical College, Thanjavur, Tamil Nadu. His email is This e-mail address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it )

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'Difficult' hypertension made easy! - Bangladesh News 24 hours PDF Print
Bangladesh News 24 hours
Dhaka, May 26 (bdnews24.com) – A new treatment has been introduced in Bangladesh to lower blood pressure using a technique called renal denervation to patients with 'difficult' hypertension. The National Heart Foundation Hospital and Research Institute

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'Difficult' hypertension made easy - Bangladesh News 24 hours PDF Print
Bangladesh News 24 hours
Dhaka, May 26 (bdnews24.com) – A new treatment has been introduced in Bangladesh to lower blood pressure using a technique called renal denervation to patients with 'difficult' hypertension. The National Heart Foundation Hospital and Research Institute

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Clinical Decision Tool Helps Cut RRT Referral Time - Renal and Urology News PDF Print

PARIS—Primary care physicians who use a clinical decision support system (CDSS) may be able to avoid late referrals for renal replacement therapy (RRT), researchers reported at the 49th Congress of the European Renal Association-European Dialysis and Transplant Association.

Christopher Farmer, MD, a renal consultant at East Kent University Hospitals NHS Foundation in Kent, UK, and colleagues tested the impact of a CDSS on the incidence of late referral to their renal service.

“Timely referral is requisite for ensuring favorable outcomes in patients reaching end-stage renal failure,” Dr. Farmer said. “We know that patients who are referred late are about twice as likely to die within 90 days of starting dialysis, they are more likely to be denied the possibility of choosing their treatment, and they are much less likely to start peritoneal dialysis, and so they tend to start on hemodialysis. And, finally, there is no possibility for preemptive transplantation, which is clearly the best treatment for end-stage kidney disease. So, in short, you are limiting the patient's choice.”  

The investigators developed a CDSS that is an algorithm available as computer software that screens patients having serum creatinine estimates in primary care. Data are routinely extracted from primary care databases and patient-specific advice is given to primary care physicians about referrals, medical management of co-morbidities such as hypertension and diabetes, and additional investigations that might be needed to screen patients for anemia or disorders of calcium and phosphate. 

Over a recent four-year period, Dr. Farmer's team tested the tool in patients for whom estimated serum creatinine levels were available. “What we found was significantly fewer ‘crash landers' when physicians used the system,” Dr. Farmer said. “By ‘crash landing,' I am referring to patients who were referred less than 90 days before starting RRT.”

The “crash lander” rate in patients from primary care practices that did not use the CDDS was 25% versus 6% in patients from practices that had used the CDDS. “The difference between the two groups was huge and significant,” Dr. Farmer said.

He cautioned that the primary care practices included in the analysis were not randomly selected. “What this means is that there may be selection bias in that practices that are better may be more innovative and may be more likely to opt to participate in a managed care program that uses a CDSS system or the like,” he said.

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