Mechanical thrombectomy with the ATD in acutely thrombosed TIPS is technically feasible. Mechanical thrombectomy is a potential alternative to thrombolysis.
The article deals with a number of thyroid abnormalities which produce similar sonographic patterns, characterised by a paucity of echos of low amplitude. It concerns three more or less circumscribed changes (differentiated carcinoma of the thyroid, autonomous adenoma and focal thyroiditis) and two diffuse thyroid conditions (sub-acute and lymphocytic diffuse thyroiditis, hyperthyroidism). Carcinoma of the thyroid is of particular interest. The distinguishing features and differential diagnosis are discussed.
Our treatment of acute renal cellular rejection in patients on ciclosporin (cyclosporin A) involves the almost complete elimination of T cells (according to individual T cell monitoring in peripheral blood) through antithymocyte globulin (ATG) therapy. We present here the results of treatment of 44 histologically or cytologically proven acute rejection episodes in 33 of 62 consecutive renal transplantation patients. ATG therapy resulted in a 95.5% success rate when duration and dosage were individually adjusted according to T cell elimination in peripheral blood. Only two grafts were lost, both because of vascular occlusions. In neither case could it be clarified whether the loss was due to primary vascular lesions or the result of severe rejection or side effects of ATG. Our data show that the elimination of primed T cells with ATG permits the use of ciclosporin even in the presence of an established immune response.
A randomized prospective unicenter study produced no significant difference in 2-year outcome between the use of well matched cadaver renal allografts shared among transplantation centers, and the use of organs of local origin matched only for blood group. Graft and patient survival rates, transplant function and incidence of rejection were compared. On the basis of 1 and 2-year outcome with well matched and shared allografts we conclude that cyclosporine therapy makes HLA matching unnecessary.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.