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Stories from the dialysis comunity across the globe.



Exploring metabolic dysfunction in chronic kidney disease - 7thSpace Interactive (press release) PDF Print

Exploring metabolic dysfunction in chronic kidney disease
7thSpace Interactive (press release)
Impaired kidney function and chronic kidney disease (CKD) leading to kidney failure andend-stage renal disease (ESRD) is a serious medical condition associated with increasedmorbidity, mortality, and in particular cardiovascular disease (CVD) risk.

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Surprising results for use of dialysis for kidney failure in developing world - EurekAlert (press release) PDF Print

Surprising results for use of dialysis for kidney failure in developing world
EurekAlert (press release)
LONDON, ON –Researchers at Lawson Health Research Institute have discovered that developing countries have faster growing rates of use of home-based dialysis (called peritoneal dialysis) for kidney failure than the developed world.
Intensive dialysis at home could increase survival chances for patients with ESRD News-Medical.net

all 5 news articles »

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Nurses' union says closing rural dialysis units bad for nurses, patients - The Guardian Charlottetown PDF Print

The P.E.I. Nurses' Union plans to meet with the province to discuss how closing two dialysis units will negatively impact nurses and patients.

Health Minister Doug Currie and Health P.E.I. CEO Keith Dewar announced Wednesday that the province is changing the locations of hemodialysis clinics by taking them out of Alberton and Souris and increasing service in Summerside and Charlottetown.

The PEINU says the closures will have an immediate and direct impact on registered nurses who work in the Souris and Alberton dialysis units.

As well, dialysis patients who currently receive treatment at Souris Hospital and Western Hospital will soon have to travel to the new dialysis centre at the Prince County Hospital in Summerside or to Charlottetown where a new provincial renal clinic and new hemodialysis centre are expected to open this summer at the Queen Elizabeth Hospital.

“The loss of these rural treatment facilities that so many people depend upon is really unfortunate for both the patients and the nursing staff,” said nurses' union president Mona O’Shea. “The union will support the nursing staff who are negatively impacted by the changes and will ensure the employer complies with contract provisions protecting members from lengthy travel that is not of their choosing.

"No doubt their dialysis clients will feel similarly about the extra travel, and rightly so.”

The union will be meeting with the province in the near future regarding the affected employees and the closure of the two units, O'Shea said.

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2012 MMAC team profile: Saipan Health/St. Jude Renal Care, Team Bodig - Marianas Variety PDF Print

SAIPAN Health/St. Jude Renal Care has been involved with the cancer march for the past three years, and this year, its team captains are Selma Salas and Samantha Nepaial.

Team Saipan Health/St. Jude Renal Care The team says the word “cancer” is not easy to say, and certainly not easy to hear.

“Who knew that one word could change your whole world? All the uncertainties, all the unknown and all the fear is now a reality. Your body becomes numb and your heart drops. Cancer is life-changing, and individuals who are fighting the battle need plenty of support,” the team said.

The cancer march provides funding for the Commonwealth Cancer Association, which supports individuals fighting cancer.

Saipan Health/St. Jude Renal Care said cancer has impacted their team on a personal level.

“We have survivors on our team and have lost some to cancer. Why not support a cause that supports our community?”

The team’s favorite part of the event is the survivor walk around the track, which team members describe as “very emotional and powerful.”

“The funds raised go to a great cause and stay on-island. You are helping individuals who are fighting cancer in the CNMI!” the team said.

Team Bodig Team Bodig

Team Bodig will be participating in the Marianas March Against Cancer tonight under team captains Jocelyn Deleon Guerrero and Bridgette M. Camacho.

Team Bodig has been an active participant of the march since 2003, but the team was born in 1999 under the banner of the American Cancer Society’s Relay-For-Life.

The team captains said their mother was struck with cancer in 1994.

“A very strong woman in every sense of the word, she endured the pain of seeing one of her children battle cancer two years later. She knew the importance that family played in a cancer patient’s life. When the opportunity presented itself, there was no question that we would join the march,” the team captains said.

They said that overwhelming support from families and friends such as phone calls, looking after the little ones, and having a shoulder to cry on — gave them the motivation, the courage and the strength to join the fight against this deadly disease.

“Our mother lost her battle to cancer in 2004; our sister is a survivor. We have many family members who lost their battles and more who are survivors, and still a few more who are battling this dreadful disease,” they added.

Team Bodig was formed through the persistence and determination of Gramma Bodig, as she was fondly called.

“Family kept us strong. The path to form a team is no easy task, it takes commitment, dedication, support and most of all, cooperation and understanding. Just by reaching out, our team has grown and keeps on growing,” the team captains said.

Tonight during the march, Team Bodig will sell food and drinks, but most of all, team members will be there “in full support of this worthy cause — whatever it takes!”

The march will be held from 6 p.m. tonight to 6 a.m. tomorrow at the Hopwood Junior High School softball field in Chalan Piao.

For more information, call 285-1828, email This e-mail address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it or visit www.ccamarianas.org.

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Add kidneys to list of things that can be recycled - Zee News PDF Print
Add kidneys to list of things that can be recycled Chicago: It turns out you can recycle just about anything these days — even kidneys and other organs donated for transplants.

Recently in Chicago, in what is believed to be the first documented case of its kind in the US, a transplanted kidney that was failing was removed from a patient while he was still alive and given to somebody else.

There have been other cases since the 1980s of transplant organs being used more than once, but they were rare and involved instances in which the first recipient died.

Typically when transplanted organs fail in living patients, doctors throw them away. But with more than 73,000 people awaiting transplants nationwide, some specialists say doctors should consider trying to reuse more organs to ease the severe shortage.

"The need for kidney transplantation doesn`t match our capacity," said Dr. Lorenzo Gallon, a Northwestern University transplant specialist who oversaw the kidney recycling operation in Chicago. "People die on dialysis" while awaiting kidneys.

That was the possible fate awaiting two strangers. A research letter describing the unusual case was published in Thursday`s New England Journal of Medicine.

The donated kidney lasted just two weeks in the first patient, a 27-year-old Illinois man. The same disease that ruined his kidneys started to damage the new kidney, given to him by his sister. He was getting sicker, and doctors needed to act fast if they were going to save the organ. With permission from the man and his sister, they removed it last July and retransplanted it into a 67-year-old Indiana man.

The Illinois man is back on dialysis and will probably get another transplant eventually.

Still, reusing a transplanted organ can be tricky — and riskier — because surgeons have to deal with scar tissue that typically forms around an organ as the body heals from the operation.

Also, Wayne Shelton, a bioethicist at Albany Medical College in New York, said the practice may raise ethical questions. He said doctors need to make sure patients who are offered reused parts understand all the risks and are not made to feel coerced into accepting such organs. And because these cases are so rare, there is little data on how patients with recycled parts fare, Shelton noted.

Dr. Jonathan Bromberg, director of transplantation at the University of Maryland Medical Center, praised the Northwestern doctors but said organ recycling is unlikely to become commonplace because it would be rare for an already transplanted organ to be healthy enough to be reused.

In Boston in 2009, a man died shortly after a getting a new heart, and the organ was in good enough shape to be transplanted into someone else. A 2005 medical journal report detailed three US cases involving donor livers reused after the initial recipients died, and said they were among 11 similar cases between 1987 and 2005. Medical literature also includes reports from the 1990s about a kidney retransplant in Spain and a heart retransplant in Switzerland.

In the Chicago case, Ray Fearing of Arlington Heights, Ill., received a new kidney that was later reused by Erwin Gomez of Valparaiso, Ind., a surgeon familiar with the medical complexities involved.

Joel Newman, a spokesman for the United Network for Organ Sharing, said previous retransplants in the US "have occurred when the original recipient has died soon after a transplant but the organ is still able to function. To our knowledge, this is the first publicly reported instance where a kidney has been removed from a living person due to the risk of organ failure and retransplanted."

Fearing had a disease that caused scarring that prevented the kidneys from filtering waste from blood. He had to quit his industrial machinery job and went on dialysis a year ago. His sister donated a kidney last June in what was "probably the happiest moment of my life," Fearing said. The worst, he said, was a few days later, when doctors told him the kidney was damaged and had to be removed.

Gallon, medical director of Northwestern`s kidney transplant program, thought the kidney could be reused in somebody else if it was removed quickly, before it became irreversibly damaged.

Gallon needed Fearing`s permission, and also asked the young man`s sister, Cera Fearing.

Fearing said he was heartbroken and reluctant to abandon an organ that had been his only hope for a normal life. But he decided it was the only option that made sense. His sister, too, was crushed but said she didn`t hesitate when told her kidney might help someone else.

"I just assumed it`s damaged, it`s garbage," she said. "The fact that they were able to give it to someone that somehow was able to benefit from it was great."

Gomez was selected because he was a good match. But Gallon said doctors also thought Gomez`s medical background would help him understand the complexities. Gomez said he had never heard of reusing transplant organs, and he worried about taking what seemed like damaged goods. But he agreed after the Northwestern team explained the risks and possible benefits.

The removal and retransplant operations took place July 1. Within two days, the transplanted kidney had regained function. Gallon said he is convinced the damage is reversed.

Gomez is taking anti-rejection drugs and is off dialysis. "I finally feel normal," he said. Fearing is back on dialysis and said he is doing OK.

Gallon said it is not uncommon for patients with Fearing`s disease to go through more than one transplanted kidney, and he expects Fearing will eventually get another one.

Despite his own misfortune, Fearing said he is "extremely happy about being a part of this medical breakthrough" that might end up helping others.

Bureau Report

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