In a previous report, we showed that nutritional status and especially serum albumin had great predictive value for death in chronic hemodialysis patients, whereas blood pressure did not. In the present study, we analyzed the causes of death in consideration of the relationship between serum albumin and blood pressure. A total of 1,243 Okinawan patients (719 males, 524 females) undergoing hemodialysis in January 1991 were followed up through the end of 1995. Three hundred forty-two of the patients died, 45 received transplants, and 12 were transferred by the end of the follow-up period. The total duration of observation was 5,110.3 patient-years. Blood pressure as well as clinical and laboratory variables were determined immediately prior to the first dialysis session in January 1991. The crude death rate was 40.0% when the diastolic blood pressure (DBP) <70 mm Hg, 35.0% at 70 to 79 mm Hg, 25.0% at 80 to 89 mm Hg, 25.0% at 90 to 99 mm Hg, and 13.0% at >100 mm Hg. The death rate showed an inverse correlation with DBP. DBP showed a significant positive correlation with serum albumin (r = 0.137, P < 0.001) and age (r = -0.325, P < 0.0001). The adjusted odds ratio (95% confidence interval) of death was 0.84 (0.71 to 0.99) with 10 mm Hg increments in DBP when the reference DBP was less than 69 mm Hg. Low DBP may be a manifestation of malnutrition and/or cardiovascular disease in chronic hemodialysis patients. Target DBP levels may be higher levels in chronic hemodialysis patients than the general population.
Here we report a community-based epidemiologic study of patients who received renal biopsy in Okinawa, Japan between 1967 and 1994. The total number of cases was 2832 (1395 men and 1437 women), and the mean (SD) age at biopsy was 30.0 (10.0) years (range 1.0 to 88.0 years). The most common clinical indications for renal biopsy were proteinuria/hematuria (46.7%), nephrotic syndrome (21.2%), acute glomerulonephritis (10.1%), and systemic lupus erythematosus (7.5%). Patients who received renal biopsy between 1985 and 1994 (N= 1480) were much less likely to have acute glomerulonephritis than patients treated between 1967 and 1984 (N= 1352); the rates of proteinuria/hematuria, renal failure, and diabetes mellitus were slightly higher in the later period. Okinawa patients who began dialysis between 1971 and 2000 (N= 5246) were also studied. Among them, a total of 468 patients (260 men and 208 women) began dialysis after renal biopsy. The cumulative incidence of end-stage renal disease (ESRD) among these patients was 17% in 17 years. Half of these patients developed ESRD in the 5.8 years after renal biopsy. Among the dialysis patients, the biopsy rate was 12.6% in chronic glomerulonephritis, 1.7% in diabetes mellitus, 2.6% in nephrosclerosis, and 52.1% in systemic lupus erythematosus. The diagnoses of primary renal diseases were primarily made clinically. The survival rate after starting dialysis therapy was slightly better in those with than in those without renal biopsy but this finding was not statistically significant (adjusted hazards ratio 0.855, 95% CI 0.711-1.028, P= 0.095). The clinical significance of renal biopsy, other than its provision of histologic evidence, remains to be shown.
A case of new dysautonomia-like disorder in a Japanese infant is reported. The patient showed almost all of the essential criteria for the diagnosis of familial dysautonomia. Results of pharmacologic tests and urinary excretion patterns of catecholamines and their metabolites were also compatible with the disorder. But he lacked some important clinical findings, such as lifelong hypolacrimia, skin blotching, excessive sweating and labile blood pressure. Precise observations of clinical features and literatures on non-Jewish cases of familial dysautonomia lent evidence that this case suffered from a new dysautonomia-like disorder.
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