Amr Sarhan
Boston Children's Hospital
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Featured researches published by Amr Sarhan.
Pediatric Nephrology | 2007
Ashraf Bakr; Mostafa Amr; Amr Sarhan; Ayman Hammad; Mohamed Ragab; Ahmed El-Refaey; Atef El-Mougy
Psychiatric assessment was done according to the DSM-IV TR criteria in 19 children with predialysis chronic renal failure (CRF) and 19 children with end-stage renal disease on regular hemodialysis. The prevalence rate of psychiatric disorders in all the studied patients was 52.6%. Adjustment disorders were the most common disorders (18.4%), followed by depression (10.3%) and neurocognitive disorders (7.7%). Anxiety and elimination disorders were reported in 5.1 and 2.6%, respectively. The disorders were more prevalent (P=0.05) in dialysis (68.4%) than in predialysis patients (36.8%). The presence of psychiatric disorders was not significantly correlated with sex, severity of anemia, duration of CRF or the efficiency or the duration of hemodialysis. In conclusion, psychiatric disorders were prevalent in our patients, especially in those on hemodialysis. Both adjustments with depression and depressive disorders were the most common psychiatric disorders. This array of disorders was more likely explained by the difficulties encountered in living with CRF rather than by demographic or physical factors.
Saudi Journal of Kidney Diseases and Transplantation | 2014
Ashraf Bakr; Riham Eid; Amr Sarhan; Ayman Hammad; Ahmed El-Refaey; Atef El-Mougy; Mohammed Magdy Zedan; Fatma ElHusseini; Ashraf Abd Elrahman
This study retrospectively investigates the indications and results of renal biopsy in children to determine the patterns of childhood kidney disease in a single tertiary childrens hospital in Egypt. We included all the patients who underwent ultrasound-guided renal biopsy from 1998 to 2012. All the kidney biopsies were studied under light microscopy, while immunofluorescence and electron microscopy were performed when indicated. A total of 1246 renal biopsies were performed over 15 years, on 1096 patients. The mean age of the patients at the time of biopsy was 9.2±3.7 years. The main indication for a biopsy was the steroid-resistant nephrotic syndrome (n=354, 28.4%), followed by the atypical nephrotic syndrome (n=250, 20.1%), and renal abnormalities in the systemic diseases (n=228, 18.3 %). In the 1226 pathologically diagnosed specimens, primary glomerulonephritis was the most common finding (n=826, 67.4%), followed by secondary glomerulonephritis (n=238, 19.4%). The most common causes of primary glomerulonephritis were Minimal Change Disease (MCD) (n=267, 21.8%), diffuse proliferative glomerulonephritis (n=188, 15. 3%), and focal proliferative glomerulonephritis (n=164, 13.3%). Lupus nephritis (n=209, 17%) was the most common cause of secondary glomerulonephritis. We conclude that the steroid-resistant nephrotic syndrome was the most frequent indication for biopsy and minimal change disease was the most common histopathological finding in our population.
Saudi Journal of Kidney Diseases and Transplantation | 2013
Ahmed El-Refaey; Riad M ElSayed; Amr Sarhan; Ashraf Bakr; Ayman Hammad; Atef El-Mougy; Ahmed Y Aboelyazeed
Studies examining sleep patterns in children on hemodialysis (HD) are lacking. This cross-sectional, control-matched group study was performed to assess the sleep quality in children on HD. The assessment was made using a subjective sleep assessment and sleep questionnaire and objective analysis was made using full night polysomnography. A total of 25 children with end-stage renal disease (ESRD) on HD were compared with 15 age- and sex-matched controls. The average age of the cases was 14 ± 4 years, 52% were males and the mean body mass index was 20 ± 3.8 kg/m². The average duration on dialysis was 2.6 ± 2 years. Analysis of subjective data revealed markedly affected sleep quality in HD patients, as evidenced by excessive day time sleepiness (P <0.005), night awakening (P <0.005), difficult morning arousal (P <0.005) and limb pains (P <0.005). Objective analysis showed differences in sleep architecture, less slow wave sleep in HD children, similar rapid eye movement and non-rapid eye movement, more sleep disordered breathing (P <0.0001) and more periodic limb movement disorders (P <0.0001). Our study suggests that children on regular HD have markedly affected objective as well as subjective quality of sleep.
Lupus | 2014
Ashraf Bakr; W Laimon; Ma El-Ziny; Ayman Hammad; Ak El-Hawary; Aa Elsharkawy; Ahmed El-Refaey; Na Salem; Atef El-Mougy; Mohamed Zedan; Hm Aboelenin; R Eid; Amr Sarhan
Systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE) is a multi-systemic autoimmune disease that involves almost all the organs in the human body and is characterized by auto antibodies formation. Autoimmune thyroid diseases (AITD) are organ-specific diseases that are associated with a production of a variety of antibodies such as antinuclear antibodies, anti-double-stranded DNA, anti-Ro antibodies, anti-cardiolipin antibodies, and others. The diagnosis of AITD in patients with SLE is well known, but the reverse is rarely reported. We present two cases of adolescent girls in whom SLE evolved one year after being diagnosed with hypothyroidism.
Saudi Journal of Kidney Diseases and Transplantation | 2017
Mohammad Al-Haggar; Ashraf Bakr; Yahya Wahba; Paul Coucke; Fatma El-Hussini; Mona M. Hafez; Riham Eid; Abdel-Rahman Eid; Amr Sarhan; Ali Shaltout; Ayman Hammad; Sohier Yahia; Ahmad El-Rifaie; Dina Abdel-Hadi
Marfan syndrome (MFS), the founding member of connective tissue disorder, is an autosomal dominant disease; it is caused by a deficiency of the microfibrillar protein fibrillin-1 (FBN1) and characterized by involvement of three main systems; skeletal, ocular, and cardiovascular. More than one thousand mutations in FBN1 gene on chromosome 15 were found to cause MFS. Nephrotic syndrome (NS) had been described in very few patients with MFS being attributed to membranoproliferative glomerulonephritis secondary to infective endocarditis. Focal segmental glomerulosclerosis (FSGS) had been reported in NS in conjunction with MFS without confirming the diagnosis by mutational analysis of FBN1. We hereby present an Egyptian family with MFS documented at the molecular level; it showed a male proband with NS secondary to FSGS, unfortunately, we failed to make any causal link between FBN dysfunction and FSGS. In this context, we review the spectrum of renal involvements occurring in MFS patients.
Saudi Journal of Kidney Diseases and Transplantation | 2015
Ashraf Bakr; Riham Eid; Amr Sarhan; Ayman Hammad; Ahmed El-Refaey; Atef El-Mougy; Mohammed Magdy Zedan; Fatma ElHusseini
Schimke immune-osseous dysplasia (SIOD) is a rare autosomal recessive disorder characterized by spondylo-epiphyseal dysplasia (SED), progressive renal insufficiency beginning as steroid-resistant nephrotic syndrome (SRNS) and defective cellular immunity. This article reports a case from Egypt with a mild form of SIOD. A 14.5-year-old male patient presented with disproportionate short stature, SRNS (focal and segmental glomerulosclerosis), laboratory evidence of cellular immune deficiency and radiologic characteristics of SED. He died at the age of 16.5 years with bone marrow failure and severe pneumonia. To the best of our knowledge, this is the first case of SIOD to be reported from Egypt.
Pediatric Nephrology | 2010
Ahmed El-Refaey; Ashraf Bakr; Ayman Hammad; Atef El-Mougy; Fatma El-Houseeny; Ashraf Abdelrahman; Amr Sarhan
Archive | 2007
Ashraf Bakr; Amr Sarhan; Ayman Hammad; Mohamed Ragab; Osama S. Salama; Fatma Al-Husseni; Mohamed Azmy
Journal of Nephrology | 2015
Atef El-Mougy; Amr Sarhan; Ayman Hammad; Ahmed El-Refaey; Mohammed Magdy Zedan; Riham Eid; Wafaa Limon; Ashraf Abd Elrahman; Fatma Elhussieni; Enas El-Sherbeny; Ashraf Bakr
Journal of Nephrology | 2015
Atef El-Mougy; Amr Sarhan; Ayman Hammad; Ahmed El-Refaey; Mohammed Magdy Zedan; Riham Eid; Wafaa Laimon; Ashraf Abd Elrahman; Fatma Elhussieni; Enas El-Sherbeny; Ashraf Bakr