[Abstract] [Full Text PDF] (in Japanese / 1501KB) [Members Only And Two Factor Auth.]

J.Jpn. Surg. Soc.. 92(9): 1246-1248, 1991


Report on the annual meeting

MUTUAL SUPPLEMENTATION IN TREATMENT OF RENAL FAILURE BY BLOOD PURIFICATION AND KIDNEY TRANSPLANTATION

Department of Surgery, Kidney Center, Tokyo Women's Medical College, Tokyo, Japan

Tetsuzo Agishi, Kota Takahashi, Takashi Yagisawa, Shinobu Oba, Satoshi Teraoka, Kazuo Ota

More than 100,000 uremic patients have been maintained by various blood purification modalities in Japan. However, their quality of life is far from satisfaction not only in terms of physical problems related to the complications specific to long-term dialysis treatment, but also the restriction in social activities by spending much time for hospital dailysis.
A graft functioning rate in kidney transplantation has been remarkably improving after introduction of Ciclosporine A as an immunosuppressant and is presently approximately 90% one year after transplantation. As long as the transplanted kidneys function, further extensive social activities and highly-graded quality of life is warranted compared to artificial kidney treatment.
On the other hand, patients in end-stage renal diseases and with rejected transplants are expected to undergo safe kidney transplantations as being maintained by dialysis therapy. Furthermore, recent development in blood purification technology has made the specific kidney tranplantations successful in recipients with the preformed antibody (-ies) and the incompatible ABO blood type antibody (-ies).
Nowadays, relation between blood purification and kidney transplantation is not competitive, but mutually supplementary as a matter of realism.


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