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Assessment of cardiovascular risk in waiting‐listed renal transplant patients: a single center experience in 558 cases
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Citations
17
References
2009
Year
Renal TransplantationCoronary Artery DiseasePublic HealthCardiologyRadiologyCardiovascular ImagingTransplantation SurgeryTransplantationCardiovascular EpidemiologyKidney TransplantHealth PolicyCardiac ScreeningCardiovascular DiseaseKidney TransplantationSingle Center ExperienceCardiovascular RiskRenal Transplant CandidatesTransplant SurgeryMedicineNephrologyEmergency Medicine
Cardiac screening is recommended to prevent cardiovascular death after renal transplantation. This retrospective observational study illustrates the results of application of a cardiac assessment algorithm in a series of 558 renal transplant candidates at a single center in Turin, Italy. A dipyridamole-stress sestamibi myocardial scintiscan (DMS) performed in 302/558 (54.1%) cases was positive in 52 (17.2%), negative in 200 (66.2%), borderline in 16 (5.3%), and with signs of previous necrosis in 34 (11.4%). Coronary lesions detected by angiography in 48.1% of the 52 positives were treated medically (13.5%) or by percutaneous/surgical procedure (34.6%). Coronary lesions were detected in 14.1% of asymptomatic population subgroup. The minor and major cardiovascular event rates and the cardiovascular death rate were 1.9%, 0%, and 0%, respectively, in positive DMS group (high-cardiological risk) vs. 10%, 4.5%, and 3.5% in the negatives (p > 0.5; n.s.). It is suggested that not increased cardiovascular event or deaths rates in the high-risk group reflect early coronary lesion detection and correction. Since 55.9% of cardiovascular events or deaths occurred in the negative group more than 24 months after the DMS, its mandatory repetition every two yr after a negative finding is recommended.
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