Pediatric Renal Transplantation in Children with Weight 20kg or Less: A Single-Center Experience

Journal Title: International Journal of Anesthesiology & Research (IJAR) - Year 2019, Vol 7, Issue 1

Abstract

Background: Renal transplantation (RT) is the treatment of choice for children with Chronic Kidney Disease (CKD). This technique benefits survival and quality of life. Long-term outcomes in pediatric transplantation have significantly improved over the past 20 years; however, children less than 5 years of age weighing 20 kg or less still remain a considerable challenge, with higher mortality rate and graft loss. Methods: In this article, we present the pediatric RT experience at Hospital Universitario de Cruces, the main center for transplants in Spain. Children who underwent RT within the period of January 2012 - January 2017 were retrospectively reviewed to identify those with weight less than 20 Kg. The following parameters were collected: pre-transplant characteristics, surgical technique, anesthesia characteristics, intra-operative and post-operative surgical or medical complications, pre and post-transplant creatinine levels, renal graft survival, and late post-operative complications. Results: Within a period of 5 years, a total of 13 pediatric patients (weight ≤ 20kg) underwent RT at Hospital Universitario de Cruces. The patient sample represented 37.14 % of the 35 renal transplants performed on pediatric patients at this institution. All 13 patients received a standard surgical and anesthetic perioperative management. Post-transplant creatinine levels significantly decrease after surgery during the early postoperative period from 6.45 mg/dl preoperatively (range, 1.90 - 12.26) to 0.59 mg/dl postoperatively (range, 0.27 - 1.27). The mean follow-up period was 1.5 year (range, 1 - 3) with 12 patients out of 13 (92.31%) presenting with 1-year graft survival. Conclusions: A multidisciplinary collaboration, including surgeons, nephrologists, and anesthesiologists specialized in handling transplants for underweight children should be a priority. Close intraoperative monitoring of vital signs and optimal fluid therapy is essential for anesthetic management due to the possible perioperative hemodynamic changes.

Authors and Affiliations

Ana Mavarez- Martinez

Keywords

Related Articles

Effects of General Anesthesia vs Regional Anesthesia on Neonatal Outcomes: A Systemic Review and Mata Analysis

Backgrounds: Types of anesthesia provision and perioperative patient cares are the main determinants of neonatal outcome in mothers undergo caesarean section. Body of evidence didn’t clearly reveal which types of Anesthe...

NASA Task Load Index Scale to Evaluate the Cognitive Workload during Cardiac Anesthesia Based Simulation Scenarios

Simulation-based education is an important tool for anesthesiology educators given the work hour restrictions and limited exposure of anesthesiology residents to high acuity cardiac cases. Cognitive load is key to learni...

Anesthetic Management in a Patient with Congenital Insensitivity to Pain Syndrome for Lower Extremity Surgery

Congenital insensitivity to pain (CIP) is a rarely syndrome and is characterized by unresponsiveness to painful stimulants, anhydrous, mental retardation, and recurring feverish episodes. In this case report we presented...

Laparoscopic Surgeries during Pregnancy - Related Anaesthetic Concerns

Pregnancy is no longer considered a contraindication to laparoscopic surgery. The advantages include less exposure of the fetus to possibly toxic agents, smaller incisions, decreased pain, less need for analgesics, more...

Acute Respiratory Distress Syndrome, Short Review

Acute respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS) is a common syndrome in intensive care units, proper diagnosis and understanding of pathophysiology with the corresponding management positively affect the outcomes of patients...

Download PDF file
  • EP ID EP517130
  • DOI 10.19070/2332-2780-19000112
  • Views 75
  • Downloads 0

How To Cite

Ana Mavarez- Martinez (2019). Pediatric Renal Transplantation in Children with Weight 20kg or Less: A Single-Center Experience. International Journal of Anesthesiology & Research (IJAR), 7(1), 555-564. https://europub.co.uk/articles/-A-517130