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  • Title: [Maintenance hemodialysis and renal transplantation in diabetic patients (author's transl)].
    Author: Jacobs C, Rottembourg J, Legrain M.
    Journal: Diabete Metab; 1977 Mar; 3(1):59-67. PubMed ID: 323088.
    Abstract:
    Maintenance hemodialysis and renal transplantation are increasingly used for treating diabetic patients with terminal uremia. Nowadays dialysis techniques may be considered for most of these patients, except those presenting with multiple severe disabling complications. Difficulties in control of glycaemia or of the uremic state or in the management of immunosuppressive drugs in transplanted patients do not, in themselves, constitute special problems in dialysis or transplantation. The high rate of complications and the excess mortality recorded in diabetics, compared with non-diabetic dialyzed or transplanted patients are closely related to the cardiovascular, neurological and microvascular disease that is present to various degress in all diabetic patients. Cardiac and cerebrovascular complications account for most of the deaths. Ocular and neurological status often worsen during dialysis but their stabilization usually occurs after successful transplantation. The choice between therapeutic methods in end-stage uremia must be an individual one for each patient" depending on age, medical and psychological factors and technical feasibility. Renal transplantation gives best results in patients aged less than 50 years and should be carried out early (creatinine clearance 15 - 10 ml/min.) before occurrence of the most disabling complications. If transplantation is not indicated or available, dialysis should be initiated when creatinine clearance is about 10 ml/min. Early multidisciplinary care of uremic diabetics will improve the results of maintenance hemodialysis, the problems and failures of which occur most frequently when treatment is commenced too late in patients with irreversible clinical and/or metabolic conditions.
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