Search results for "Dialysis"

showing 10 items of 528 documents

Evaluating hazardous waste generation in for-profit outpatient haemodialysis centres

2015

SUMMARYBackground “Green” haemodialysis management to reduce the environmental impact of haemodialysis is growing. Objectives Dealing with hazardous waste production could heighten healthcare professionals’ awareness of this problem, and improve their healthcare involvement in environmental sustainability and environmental-friendliness. Design and Measurements A list of for-profit outpatient haemodialysis centres in the Valencian Community (E Spain) was compiled. Data on their hazardous waste production from 2008 to 2012 through the annual waste reports issued by official organisations competent in environmental issues were collected. Results There are 22 for-profit dialysis centres, that m…

Advanced and Specialized Nursingbusiness.industrymedicine.medical_treatment030232 urology & nephrology030204 cardiovascular system & hematologyNatural resource03 medical and health sciences0302 clinical medicineNursingNephrologyHazardous wasteHealth careSustainabilityFor profitmedicineProduction (economics)Operations managementEnvironmental impact assessmentbusinessDialysisJournal of Renal Care
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Ambulatory blood pressure during diseases of the kidney

1999

During the last few years there has been a renewal of interest in blood-pressure-induced kidney damage due to a progressive increase in the incidence and prevalence of hypertension and vascular diseases as a cause of end-stage renal disease (ESRD). The need to prevent ESRD demands a continuation of effort to make the early identification of hypertensives who are at risk possible and to provide them with effective antihypertensive therapy. Since ambulatory blood pressure monitoring has been used successfully to assess blood pressure and identify risk markers for cardiovascular diseases, a logical approach would be to use it also to identify the risk markers for ESRD. Higher than normal perce…

Advanced and Specialized Nursingmedicine.medical_specialtyKidneyAmbulatory blood pressurebusiness.industrymedicine.medical_treatmentContinuous ambulatory peritoneal dialysisRenal functionGeneral MedicineAssessment and Diagnosisurologic and male genital diseasesmedicine.diseasePeritoneal dialysisRenovascular hypertensionmedicine.anatomical_structureBlood pressureInternal medicinemedicineCardiologyInternal MedicinebusinessCardiology and Cardiovascular MedicineDialysisBlood Pressure Monitoring
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Loup-assisted technique to create arterio-venous fistulas in elderly. A single centre experience

2019

AIMS: The radio-cephalic arteriovenous fistula (RCAVF) is the first choice treatment in end-stage renal disease patients. In the last few years, the hemodialysis population has shown a high percentage of elderly patients (> 65 year old) with comorbidities, mainly vascular diseases, which may adversely affect their vascular access success. The aim of this study was to evaluate the effectiveness of a loup-assisted technique to create RCAVFs in over 65 patients. PATIENTS AND METHODS: 98 consecutive patients with renal failure were prospectively observed. The patient were divided in relation to their age (> 65 year old; < 65 year old). In both groups, a microsurgical distal RCAVF was c…

Aged 80 and overMalePatient SelectionMiddle AgedArteriovenous Shunt SurgicalTreatment OutcomeRenal DialysisRenal DialysiHumansKidney Failure ChronicFemaleHemodialysiElderly patientAgedRadio-cephalic arteriovenouHuman
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Biochemical evidence that the atypical antipsychotic drugs clozapine and risperidone block 5-HT(2C) receptors in vivo.

2002

Clozapine and risperidone are two atypical antipsychotic drugs which bind, among other receptors, to 5-HT(2C) receptor subtypes. They inhibit the basal inositol phosphate production in mammalian cells expressing rat or human 5-HT(2C) receptors. This biochemical effect is indicative of inverse agonist activity at these receptors. There is evidence that 5-HT(2C) receptors are involved in the control of the activity of central dopaminergic system. Therefore, the effects of clozapine (5 mg/kg ip), risperidone (0.08 mg/kg ip) and of the typical antipsychotic haloperidol (0.1 mg/kg ip) were studied on the extracellular concentration of dopamine (DA) in the nucleus accumbens of chloral hydrate-ane…

AgonistMalemedicine.medical_specialtymedicine.drug_classDopamineMicrodialysisClinical BiochemistryAtypical antipsychoticPharmacologyToxicologyBiochemistryNucleus AccumbensRats Sprague-DawleyBehavioral NeuroscienceInternal medicinemedicineHaloperidolElectrochemistryReceptor Serotonin 5-HT2CAnimalsReceptorClozapineBiological Psychiatry5-HT receptorClozapineChromatography High Pressure LiquidPharmacologyRisperidoneChemistryRisperidoneTypical antipsychoticRatsEndocrinologyReceptors SerotoninHaloperidolSerotonin AntagonistsExtracellular Spacemedicine.drugAntipsychotic AgentsPharmacology, biochemistry, and behavior
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Disinfectants in Dialysis: Dangers, Drawbacks and Disinformation

1988

Aldehydesmedicine.medical_specialtybusiness.industrySurgeryDisinfectionIodophorsRenal DialysisAlcoholsDisinformationmedicineHumansPeracetic AcidChlorineDialysis (biochemistry)Intensive care medicinebusinessPeritoneal DialysisDisinfectantsNephron
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Comparison of Three Techniques for Lipid Removal from Seal Blubber: Gel Permeation, Acid Treatment, and Dialysis with Semipermeable Membrane

2000

Abstract Harbor seal blubber samples were analyzed for PCDD/Fs and PCBs by splitting the initial extract into three aliquots and applying three different techniques for lipid removal (the first step of sample cleanup methodology for GC-HRMS analysis): gel permeation chromatography (GPC), sulfuric acid treatment, and dialysis through semipermeable membrane. Correlation coefficients of analyte concentrations obtained from three sets of replicate samples ranged from 0.965 to 0.994. In addition, a number of seal blubber samples were processed without pre-extraction using only the dialysis technique. The analyte concentrations in these samples correlated well with the analyte concentrations obta…

AnalyteChromatographyChemistryHealth Toxicology and MutagenesisPublic Health Environmental and Occupational HealthSoil ScienceSulfuric acidPermeationPollutionSeal (mechanical)Analytical ChemistryGel permeation chromatographychemistry.chemical_compoundBlubberEnvironmental ChemistrySemipermeable membraneDialysis (biochemistry)Waste Management and DisposalWater Science and TechnologyInternational Journal of Environmental Analytical Chemistry
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Lipid-Filled semipermeable membrane devices and mussels as samplers of organochlorine compounds in lake water.

1995

Semipermeable membrane sampling devices (SPMDs) and caged lake mussels (Anodonta piscinalis) were simultaneously deployed at four lake watercourse sites in Central Finland four weeks in August 1992. This study was part of the regular annual monitoring of the organochlorine compounds (OCC) in pulp-mill recipient watercourses of Finland with bivalves. Chlorohydrocarbons (CHCs), chlorophenol compounds (PCPs), chloroanisoles (PCAs) and chloroveratroles (PCVs) were analyzed from lipid extract of mussels and from the synthetic triolein lipid of the SPMDs. Hexane-diethyl ether (9:1, v/v) dialysis using polyethylene membrane was applied in dean up of the SPMD lipids and, for comparison, to six sets…

AnodontaChromatographybiologyChemistryHealth Toxicology and MutagenesisGeneral MedicineMusselbiology.organism_classificationPollutionLake waterSemipermeable membrane devicesEnvironmental chemistryBiomonitoringEnvironmental ChemistryEcotoxicologySemipermeable membraneDialysis (biochemistry)Environmental science and pollution research international
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Candida biofilms on implanted biomaterials: a clinically significant problem.

2006

In recent years there has been an increasing appreciation that microbial biofilms are ubiquitous, which has resulted in a number of studies on infectious diseases from a biofilm perspective. Biofilms are defined as structured microbial communities that are attached to a surface and encased in a matrix of exopolymeric material. A wide range of biomaterials used in clinical practice have been shown to support colonization and biofilm formation by Candida spp., and the increase in Candida infections in the last decades has almost paralleled the increase and widespread use of a broad range of medical implant devices, mainly in populations with impaired host defenses. Formation of Candida biofil…

AntifungalCatheterization Central Venousmedicine.drug_classBiofilmGeneral MedicineProstheses and Implantsbiochemical phenomena metabolism and nutritionBiologyApplied Microbiology and BiotechnologyMicrobiologyCandida infectionsMicrobiologyClinical PracticeImmune systemCatheters IndwellingEquipment and SuppliesRenal DialysisBiofilmsmedicineHumansDenturesMicrobial BiofilmsCandidaFEMS yeast research
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T cell activation defect in hemodialysis patients: Evidence for a role of the B7/CD28 pathway

1993

T cell activation defect in hemodialysis patients: Evidence for a role of the B7/CD28 pathway. The immunosuppressive effect of chronic renal failure is correlated with an impaired proliferation of peripheral blood leukocytes in vitro . This is mainly due to an impaired function of the accessory cells rather than the T cells. Here we tried to define a missing accessory signal for T cell activation in hemodialysis patients. We substituted cell surface bound molecules by adding tumor cell lines to the in vitro assays that express different patterns of accessory molecules. Cell lines that express the costimulatory B7 molecule reconstituted the activation of patients' cells whereas B7 negative c…

Antigens Differentiation T-LymphocyteT-LymphocytesT cellCellLymphocyte ActivationTransfectionMonocytesMiceImmune systemCD28 AntigensAntigens CDRenal DialysisTumor Cells CulturedmedicineAnimalsHumansPhytohemagglutininsAntigen-presenting cellAgedUremiabusiness.industryCD283T3 CellsT lymphocyteTransfectionMiddle AgedBurkitt LymphomaPhenotypemedicine.anatomical_structureNephrologyCell cultureAntigens SurfaceImmunologyB7-1 AntigenCancer researchInterleukin-2businessKidney International
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Azapropazone binding to human serum albumin

1980

Azapropazone, a new non-steroidal antiinflammatory drug, is strongly bound to human serum albumin. As revealed by Scatchard analysis, one high-affinity binding site with an association constant of about 1.2 x 10(6)M-1 and two low-affinity binding sites with association constants of about 0.05 x 10(6)M-1 were found. While the high-affinity binding site of azapropazone is clearly not identical with the diazepam or digitoxin binding sites of human serum albumin, contradictory evidence was found by optical measurements and displacement studies for the similarity of the azapropazone and the warfarin binding site of human serum albumin. At present, it is suggested that both drugs bind to differen…

ApazoneDigitoxinOptical measurementsEndogenyPlasma protein bindingIn Vitro TechniquesPharmacologyBinding CompetitivemedicineHumansBinding siteSerum AlbuminAzapropazonePharmacologyBinding SitesAntiinflammatory drugTriazinesChemistryCircular DichroismGeneral MedicineHuman serum albuminPhenylbutazoneBiochemistryDialysisProtein Bindingmedicine.drugNaunyn-Schmiedeberg's Archives of Pharmacology
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