Twenty-five patients with transplant artery stenosis were identified among 1141 renal graft recipients. Impaired graft function (9 patients), hypertension (4 patients) or both (12 patients) were the indications for arteriography. All were treated by percutaneous angioplasty (PTA). The immediate technical success rate was 88% and actuarial graft survival was 88% and 80% at 2 and 5 years respectively. The long-term success rate on graft function was 67% (median observation time 24 months) and on hypertension 63% (median observation time 23 months). Six patients needed rePTA (8 procedures) and in only one patient was surgical repair performed. No case of graft loss due to PTA was recorded and in only one case did occlusion of a segmental artery lead to impairment of graft function. Minor complications were recorded in four other cases and in no case was surgical intervention necessary. Based on these results we favour PTA as a first-line interventional procedure in transplant renal artery stenosis, and the need for surgical repair has been low.
The low osmolar nonionic contrast medium Omnipaque was used in 5,339 consecutive coronary angiographies and serious complications were registered. Myocardial infarction occurred in 4 patients, of whom 2 died, and ventricular fibrillation in 1. Cerebral embolism occurred in 11 patients, all of whom survived. The results are compared with those of previous series of coronary angiography with high osmolar ionic media. It is concluded that use of the nonionic medium Omnipaque resulted in a significant reduction of the frequency of serious complications.
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