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  Vol. 235 No. 7, February 16, 1976 TABLE OF CONTENTS
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Fatal Papillary Necrosis in a Kidney Graft

Samir Tuma, MD; Cidio Chaimowitz, MD; David Erlik, MD; Baruch Gellei, MD; Alexander Rosenberger, MD; Ori S. Better, MD

JAMA. 1976;235(7):754-755.

Since this article does not have an abstract, we have provided the first 150 words of the full text PDF and any section headings.

RENAL papillary necrosis has been reported as complicating pyelonephritis and diabetes,1 ureteral obstruction,2 and other ischemic processes.3-5 Although it has been associated with kidney transplant,6,7 it has not, to the best of our knowledge, caused primary acute failure of a kidney graft. We describe such a case.

Report of a Case

A 14-year-old girl with terminal renal failure owing to medullary cystic disease was admitted to our hospital for long-term hemodialysis in 1967. Fasting and postprandial blood glucose levels were repeatedly within normal range. A year later, in January 1968, a cadaveric kidney transplantation was performed. The warm and cold ischemic times were 55 and 140 minutes respectively. The graft failed to function, although the donor's other kidney had been successfully transplanted to another recipient, and long-term satisfactory renal function has been achieved.

Angiograms made 18 days after the transplantation showed patent arterial anastomosis of the . . . [Full Text PDF of this Article]


Author Affiliations

From the departments of nephrology (Drs Better and Tuma), surgery (Dr Erlik), pathology (Dr Gellei), diagnostic radiology (Dr Rosenberger), and the S. R. Isenberg Hemodialysis Unit, Rambam University Hospital, Aba Khoushy School of Medicine, Haifa, Israel. Dr Better is an established investigator, Bureau of the Chief Scientist, Israel Ministry of Health.


Footnotes

Reprint requests to Department of Nephrology, Rambam University Hospital, Aba Khoushy School of Medicine, Haifa, Israel (Dr Better).



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