Gabriella Guzzo
University of Turin
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American Journal of Kidney Diseases | 2014
Giorgina Barbara Piccoli; Adriano Massimiliano Priola; Federica Neve Vigotti; Gabriella Guzzo; Andrea Veltri
Patients with fever, flank pain, and dysuria frequently are encountered in the emergency department. Acute pyelonephritis is the most likely diagnosis; however, its clinical and radiologic presentation consistently overlap with that of acute renal infarction. Ultrasound is unable to distinguish early infarction from nonabscessed acute pyelonephritis. Hence, computed tomography or magnetic resonance imaging are needed. We report the case of a 68-year-old woman who presented with fever, flank pain, and dysuria, along with respiratory distress and tachycardia. Elevated values for inflammatory indexes suggested a diagnosis of acute pyelonephritis, and subsequent contrast-enhanced computed tomography showed hypodense wedge-shaped areas in both kidneys. However, the presence of a thin rim of capsular enhancement (cortical rim sign), the absence of perirenal inflammatory changes, and the location of the lesions apart from defined calyces suggested the alternative diagnosis of renal infarction. The underlying cause was not identified until an episode of acute dyspnea revealed paroxysmal arrhythmia. Our case demonstrates that a thorough knowledge of the imaging findings of renal infarction and acute pyelonephritis is essential to correctly making the diagnosis.
Clinical Journal of The American Society of Nephrology | 2017
Maria Messina; Davide Diena; Sergio Dellepiane; Gabriella Guzzo; Luca Lo Sardo; Fabrizio Fop; Giuseppe Paolo Segoloni; A. Amoroso; Paola Magistroni; Luigi Biancone
BACKGROUND AND OBJECTIVES Extended criteria donors represent nowadays a main resource for kidney transplantation, and recovery criteria are becoming increasingly inclusive. However, the limits of this approach are not clear as well as the effects of extreme donor ages on long-term kidney transplantation outcomes. To address these issues, we performed a retrospective study on extended criteria donor kidney transplantation. DESIGN, SETTING, PARTICIPANTS, & MEASUREMENTS In total, 647 consecutive extended criteria donor kidney transplantations performed over 11 years (2003-2013) were included. Donor, recipient, and procedural variables were classified according to donor age decades (group A, 50-59 years old [n=91]; group B, 60-69 years old [n=264]; group C, 70-79 years old [n=265]; and group D, ≥80 years old [n=27]). Organs were allocated in single- or dual-kidney transplantation after a multistep evaluation including clinical and histologic criteria. Long-term outcomes and main adverse events were analyzed among age groups and in either single- or dual-kidney transplantation. Kidney discard rate incidence and causes were evaluated. RESULTS Median follow-up was 4.9 years (25th; 75th percentiles: 2.7; 7.6 years); patient and graft survival were comparable among age groups (5-year patient survival: group A, 87.8%; group B, 88.1%; group C, 88.0%; and group D, 90.1%; P=0.77; graft survival: group A, 74.0%; group B, 74.2%; group C, 75.2%; and group D, 65.9%; P=0.62) and between dual-kidney transplantation and single-kidney transplantation except for group D, with a better survival for dual-kidney transplantation (P=0.04). No difference was found analyzing complications incidence or graft function over time. Kidney discard rate was similar in groups A, B, and C (15.4%, 17.7%, and 20.1%, respectively) and increased in group D (48.2%; odds ratio, 5.1 with A as the reference group; 95% confidence interval, 2.96 to 8.79). CONCLUSIONS Discard rate and long-term outcomes are similar among extended criteria donor kidney transplantation from donors ages 50-79 years old. Conversely, discard rate was strikingly higher among kidneys from octogenarian donors, but appropriate selection provides comparable long-term outcomes, with better graft survival for dual-kidney transplantation.
Hemodialysis International | 2014
Giorgina Barbara Piccoli; Gabriella Guzzo; Federica Neve Vigotti; Irene Capizzi; Roberta Clari; Stefania Scognamiglio; Valentina Consiglio; Emiliano Aroasio; Silvana Gonella; Andrea Veltri; Paolo Avagnina
Renal function recovery (RFR), defined as the discontinuation of dialysis after 3 months of replacement therapy, is reported in about 1% of chronic dialysis patients. The role of personalized, intensive dialysis schedules and of resuming low‐protein diets has not been studied to date. This report describes three patients with RFR who were recently treated at a new dialysis unit set up to offer intensive hemodialysis. All three patients were females, aged 73, 75, and 78 years. Kidney disease included vascular‐cholesterol emboli, diabetic nephropathy and vascular and dysmetabolic disease. At time of RFR, the patients had been dialysis‐dependent from 3 months to 1 year. Dialysis was started with different schedules and was progressively discontinued with a “decremental” policy, progressively decreasing number and duration of the sessions. A moderately restricted low‐protein diet (proteins 0.6 g/kg/day) was started immediately after dialysis discontinuation. The most recent update showed that two patients are well off dialysis for 5 and 6 months; the diabetic patient died (sudden death) 3 months after dialysis discontinuation. Within the limits of small numbers, our case series may suggest a role for personalized dialysis treatments and for including low‐protein diets in the therapy, in enhancing long‐term RFR in elderly dialysis patients.
International Journal of Artificial Organs | 2014
Giorgina Barbara Piccoli; Gabriella Guzzo; Federica Neve Vigotti; Stefania Scognamiglio; Valentina Consiglio; Emiliano Aroasio; Silvana Gonella; Natascia Castelluccia; Giuseppe Mauro; Nicoletta Colombi
Introduction and aims Renal function recovery (RFR), defined as the discontinuation of dialysis after 3 months of replacement therapy, is an uncommon occurrence. At a time when the “too early” start of dialysis is in discussion, a systematic review of the literature for cases in which patients recovered renal function after starting dialysis with chronic indications, including single cases and large series, may lead to attention being focused on this interesting issue. Methods The search strategy was built in Medline on Pubmed, in EMBASE and in the Cochrane Collaboration (August 2013) combining Mesh, Emtree and free terms: dialysis or hemodialysis, kidney function, renal function and recovery (publication date 2000-2013). The following tasks were performed in duplicate: titles and abstracts were manually screened, the data were extracted: title, author, objective, year, journal, period of study, multi-center, country, type of study. Results The systematic review retrieved 1 894 titles; 58 full papers were retrieved and the final selection included 24 papers: 11 case series or Registry data (4 from ANZdata) and 13 case reports. In spite of the high heterogeneity of the studies, overall they suggest that RFR occurs in about 1% of patients, without differences between PD and HD. RFR appears to be more frequent in elderly patients with renal vascular disease (up to 10% RFR in cholesterol emboli or scleroderma), but is reported in all types of primary and secondary kidney diseases. Conclusions RFR is a clinical event that should be looked for, particularly in elderly patients with vascular comorbidity.
Hemodialysis International | 2015
Martina Ferraresi; Anna Pia; Gabriella Guzzo; Federica Neve Vigotti; Elena Mongilardi; Marta Nazha; Emiliano Aroasio; Cinzia Gonella; Paolo Avagnina; Giorgina Barbara Piccoli
Severe hyperparathyroidism is a challenge on hemodialysis. The definition of dialysate calcium (Ca) is a pending issue with renewed importance in cases of individualized dialysis schedules and of portable home dialysis machines with low‐flow dialysate. Direct measurement of calcium mass transfer is complex and is imprecisely reflected by differences in start‐to‐end of dialysis Ca levels. The study was performed in a dialysis unit dedicated to home hemodialysis and to critical patients with wide use of daily and tailored schedules. The Ca‐phosphate (P)‐parathyroid hormone (PTH) profile includes creatinine, urea, total and ionized Ca, albumin, sodium, potassium, P, PTH levels at start, mid, and end of dialysis. “Severe” secondary hyperparathyroidism was defined as PTH > 300 pg/mL for ≥3 months. Four schedules were tested: conventional dialysis (polysulfone dialyzer 1.8–2.1 m2), with dialysate Ca 1.5 or 1.75 mmol/L, NxStage (Ca 1.5 mmol/L), and NxStage plus intradialytic Ca infusion. Dosages of vitamin D, calcium, phosphate binders, and Ca mimetic agents were adjusted monthly. Eighty Ca‐P‐PTH profiles were collected in 12 patients. Serum phosphate was efficiently reduced by all techniques. No differences in start‐to‐end PTH and Ca levels on dialysis were observed in patients with PTH levels < 300 pg/mL. Conversely, Ca levels in “severe” secondary hyperparathyroid patients significantly increased and PTH decreased during dialysis on all schedules except on Nxstage (P < 0.05). Our data support the need for tailored dialysate Ca content, even on “low‐flow” daily home dialysis, in “severe” secondary hyperparathyroid patients in order to increase the therapeutic potentials of the new dialysis techniques.
Nephrology Dialysis Transplantation | 2014
Giorgina Barbara Piccoli; Gianfranca Cabiddu; G Daidone; Gabriella Guzzo; Stefania Maxia; I Ciniglio; Postorino; Loi; Sara Ghiotto; Michele Nichelatti; Rossella Attini; Alessandra Coscia; Antonello Pani
Nephrology Dialysis Transplantation | 2015
Giorgina Barbara Piccoli; Valentina Postorino; Gianfranca Cabiddu; Sara Ghiotto; Gabriella Guzzo; Simona Roggero; Eleonora Manca; Rosalba Puddu; F. R. Meloni; Rossella Attini; Paolo Moi; Bruna Guida; Stefania Maxia; Antonio Piga; Luigi Mazzone; Antonello Pani; Santina Castellino; Giuseppe Gernone; Santo Calabria; Marco Galliani; Gianfranco Manisco; Massimo di Tullio; Luigi Vernaglione; Maria Grazia Chiappini; Emanuela Proietti; Stefano Saffiotti; Concetta Gangeni; Chiara Brunati; Alberto Montoli; Ciro Esposito
Hemodialysis International | 2015
Federica Neve Vigotti; Luigi Teta; Anna Pia; Sara Mirasole; Gabriella Guzzo; Domenica Giuffrida; Irene Capizzi; Paolo Avagnina; Davide Ippolito; Giorgina Barbara Piccoli
Nephrology Dialysis Transplantation | 2015
Gianfranca Cabiddu; Santina Castellino; Rossella Attini; Gabriella Guzzo; Marta Nazha; Michele Rossini; Paola Todeschi; Maria Scolari; Piero Stratta; Maria Luisa Perrino; Giuseppe Montagnino; Delia Davoli; Giorgina Barbara Piccoli
Nephrology Dialysis Transplantation | 2016
Davide Diena; Maria Messina; Gabriella Guzzo; Sergio Dellepiane; Gianna Mazzucco; Giuseppe Paolo Segoloni; Fabrizio Fop; Luigi Biancone