Dialysis industry news

Stories from the dialysis comunity across the globe.



Docs insert needle through thigh to treat blockage in dialysis - Business Standard PDF Print

In a breakthrough in dialysis technique, a team of doctors at a city hospital inserted a special needle through a patient's right thigh to reach her heart and from there created a channel in veins of right arm to ensure passage of blood.

Rama Devi's case, which has recently been acknowledged by a reputed international medical journal, brings a ray of hope for many dialysis patients with blockage of dialysis fistula.

Fistulas are created surgically for dialysis in people with severe kidney disease.

"Rama Devi's left arm fistula was already blocked, while the right arm one was badly swollen and had 100 per cent blockage in right upper body main vein which made her dialysis difficult day by day.

"It was great challenge to create a channel between blocked vein in the right arm and heart to save the patient's arm and to protect the only working dialysis fistula. She was high risk for any surgical procedure," said Dr Amit Malik, Senior Cardiologist at BLK Super Speciality Hospital.

"We planned to do angioplasty of the blocked vein, but the site of blockage was very near to heart and right lung and there was very high risk of injury to these vital organs.

"A specially designed long needle (Trans Septal Needle) was inserted to form a vein in right thigh which reaches up to heart and a channel was created between heart and blocked right arm vein. This channel was dilated with special balloons and special stent was placed in new channel to keep it open," said Dr Malik.

The team has been monitoring 52-year-old Rama Devi, who is doing well now. The surgery which took place on October 10 last year was acknowledged and published at the prestigious international journal 'Cardiovascular Intervention and Therapeutics' recently.

It was 150-minute surgery done under local anaesthesia and patient was awake during the entire procedure.

"Within 24 hours after the procedure, her arm's swelling subsided and she underwent dialysis without any difficulty. Patient was discharged 48 hours after the procedure. Many dialysis patients with blockages in fistula arm will get benefit with this technique," said Dr Sunil Prakash, Head of Department of Nephrology at the hospital.

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Nightingales Home Health to offer at-home dialysis to Indian patients - Livemint PDF Print
Livemint
Bengaluru: Nightingales Home Health Services, part of Medwell Ventures Pvt. Ltd, has tied up with global kidney-care specialist DaVita Healthcare Partners Inc. to provide dialysis for patients in the comfort of their homes. Dialysis is a cumbersome

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Fate of dialysis unit in Odisha's Capital Hospital uncertain - Odisha Sun Times PDF Print

Odisha Sun Times Bureau
Bhubaneswar, Jun 26:

The last-ditch attempt by Odisha’s Capital Hospital authorities to retain the stand-in doctor who managed the dialysis unit in the hospital have failed. In the absence of a permanent nephrologist, the fate of the unit at the hospital becomes is now uncertain.

dialysis machine

“Dr Ashok Panda, who ran the unit, has applied for voluntary retirement from his job as he was peeved with the government for not recognising him as a nephrologist even though he had completed the course. We attempted to persuade him to continue, but it failed,” said Director of the hospital Biswa Bhusan Patnaik.

Dr Panda, however, cited personal reasons for his decision to quit and refuted charges that he was reluctant to run the dialysis unit.

“I applied for voluntary retirement long back and only reminded the hospital authorities about it on June 23. The reason for my resignation is purely personal. Since I had applied earlier; the formalities of the voluntary retirement procedure are already on. The final call on my retirement will be taken based on existing government rules. It is not correct to say that I was not operating the dialysis unit because the government did not declare me a nephrologist,” said Dr Panda.

As per information provided by Director Patnaik, the hospital never had a dedicated nephrologist. After Dr Panda is relieved, the unit will be locked down and opened only after a new nephrologist is appointed.

It may be noted that the dialysis unit in the hospital was repaired after repeated reports in the media after lying closed for long. Hundreds of patients are diverted to a specific private hospital due to the lack of a functional dialysis unit here, but the Health Department could not care less.

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Routine Noninvasive Testing for CAD Minimally Beneficial - Renal and Urology News PDF Print
June 26, 2015 Routine Noninvasive Testing for CAD Minimally Beneficial - Renal and Urology News
Researchers found only a low yield among patients presenting with acute chest pain and low clinical risk.

(HealthDay News) -- For patients presenting with acute chest pain and low clinical risk evaluated in a chest pain evaluation center (CPEC), the yield of routine noninvasive testing is low for coronary artery disease (CAD), according to a study published in The American Journal of Cardiology.

David E. Winchester, M.D., from the University of Florida in Gainesville, and colleagues analyzed data from a prospective cohort of patients who underwent evaluation at a CPEC. 213 patients who presented with normal initial electrocardiogram and cardiac injury markers underwent observation and noninvasive CAD testing at a CPEC.

The patients were young (mean age, 43.8 years), obese (mean body mass index, 30.8 kg/m²), and mainly women (64.8%). The researchers found that 11 of the 203 patients who underwent testing had abnormal results, of whom 4 had obstructive CAD based on invasive coronary angiography. The positive predictive value for obstructive CAD was 45.5% after an abnormal test. The overall diagnostic yield for obstructive CAD was 2.5%.

"In conclusion, in patients with acute chest pain evaluated in a CPEC, the yield of routine use of noninvasive testing for CAD was minimal and the positive predictive value of an abnormal test was low," the authors write.

Source

  1. Winchester, DE, et al. The American Journal of Cardiology, July 15, 2015, volume 116, issue 2, pages 204–207; doi: 10.1016/j.amjcard.2015.03.058.

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Intratumoral morphologic and molecular heterogeneity of rhabdoid renal cell ... - Nature.com PDF Print
Nature.com
Rhabdoid histology in clear-cell renal cell carcinoma is associated with a poor prognosis. The prognosis of patients with clear-cell renal cell carcinoma may also be influenced by molecular alterations. The aim of this study was to evaluate the

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