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Pancreas and kidney transplantation

Current Diabetes Reports, 2002
Kidney transplantation is preferred over dialysis for management of end-stage renal disease complicating type I or type 2 diabetes, for those who are eligible. Simultaneous pancreas-kidney (SPK) or pancreas after kidney transplantation (PAK) is an important alternative to kidney transplantation alone for type I diabetes patients if the patient is able ...
Jennifer, Larsen   +2 more
openaire   +2 more sources

Pancreas and Islet Transplantation

2001
The aim of pancreas and islet transplantation is to establish the same status of glucose control that is provided by endogenous secretion of insulin from a healthy native pancreas in order to improve the quality of life and ameliorate secondary diabetic complications in patients with type I insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus (IDDM).
Nadey, Hakim, V, Papalois
openaire   +2 more sources

CT of Pancreas Transplantation

Investigative Radiology, 1985
Thirty-eight abdominal CT examinations obtained on 20 patients after pancreas transplantation were reviewed to determine the CT findings associated with pancreas transplantation and to assess the clinical utility of CT in this setting. Visualization of the transplanted pancreas was variable and was strongly influenced by adequacy of gastrointestinal ...
C W, Maile   +5 more
openaire   +2 more sources

Pancreas transplantation: a review

Transplantation Proceedings, 1998
Pancreas transplantation is now performed as a routine treatment for uremic diabetic recipients of kidney transplants either simultaneously with or after the kidney. Such patients are obligated to immunosuppression and with a successful pancreas transplant can achieve insulin independence as well as a dialysis-free state. Pancreas transplants alone are
D E, Sutherland   +2 more
openaire   +2 more sources

Cyclosporine and pancreas transplantation

World Journal of Surgery, 1984
AbstractA variety of experiments have thus far shown cyclosporine to be not nearly as successful in preventing rejection of pancreas allografts (islets, fetal, vascularized segmental) in experimental animals as it is with other tissues. Clinical experience has also been relatively disappointing, although surgeons at most centers have the impression ...
D W, Gray, P J, Morris
openaire   +2 more sources

[Pancreas transplantation. II].

Minerva medica, 1982
So far no really successful therapy has been found for diabetes mellitus, though it is a common disease and its complications, involving microangiopathy, are extremely serious. The serious limitation of all forms of insulin therapy (various types of insulin and insulin pump) is the impossibility of achieving a fast, successful response to either the ...
F. Marincola   +3 more
openaire   +4 more sources

A critique of pancreas transplantation

Clinical Transplantation, 1990
There are three possible indications for pancreas transplantation** 1. to correct the diabetic state; 2. to cure or ameliorate the complications of diabetes or to delay or diminish their deterioration; 3. to prevent the complications. The diabetes we are considering here is type 1 or insulin‐dependent diabetes, a disorder in which there is more or less
openaire   +2 more sources

Long-term outcome after pancreas transplantation: a registry analysis

Current Opinion in Organ Transplantation, 2016
A. Gruessner, R. Gruessner
semanticscholar   +1 more source

The Value of PDRI and P-PASS as Predictors of Outcome After Pancreas Transplantation in a Large European Pancreas Transplantation Center

Pancreas, 2016
J. Blok   +7 more
semanticscholar   +1 more source

Donors after circulatory death pancreas transplantation

Current Opinion in Organ Transplantation, 2017
S. Mittal, J. Gilbert, P. Friend
semanticscholar   +1 more source

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