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  • Title: Nephrology: main advances in the last 40 years.
    Author: Locatelli F, Del Vecchio L, Pozzoni P, Manzoni C.
    Journal: J Nephrol; 2006; 19(1):6-11. PubMed ID: 16523419.
    Abstract:
    Modern nephrology has become one of the liveliest and most productive branches of medicine. Once seen as a temporary means of rescue from uremic coma, hemodialysis (HD) has allowed thousands of people with irreversible uremia to survive for many years, and evolving treatment modalities have led to a significant increase in efficacy and tolerability. At the same time, two other forms of renal replacement therapy (RRT) have been developed: peritoneal dialysis (PD) and renal transplantation. The number of end-stage renal disease (ESRD) patients requiring RRT has increased dramatically throughout the world for a number of reasons: the improved survival of patients affected by other diseases, a real increase in the incidence of chronic kidney disease (CKD) mainly due to the burden of 'metabolic syndrome', and the significant broadening of RRT acceptance criteria. This last factor means that RRT has become available to increasing numbers of elderly patients, diabetics and patients with other severe comorbidities, among whom the leading cause of death is cardiovascular disease (CVD). However, nephrology is not just a case of substituting the function of failing kidneys; it also covers the treatment of glomerular diseases, slowing down CKD progression and managing the related comorbidities, all of which have substantially improved over the last 40 yrs.
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