Early improvement in cardiac function occurs for pancreas-kidney but not diabetic kidney-alone transplant recipients. Academic Article uri icon

Overview

abstract

  • Noninvasive M mode echocardiography with Doppler recording was prospectively performed on type I diabetic recipients of pancreas-kidney (n = 20), pancreas-after-kidney (n = 2), and kidney-alone (n = 11) allografts to determine whether the return of euglycemia by pancreas transplantation in the uremic diabetic person was associated with improved cardiac function. Each patient was studied preoperatively and at 6 and 12 months posttransplant. Echocardiographic parameters which were compared included measures of systolic function (shortening fraction), diastolic function (early/active peak velocity ratio, early/active integral ratio), and left ventricular geometric parameters (interventricular septal thickness, posterior wall thickness, left ventricular mass). The only statistically significant improvement observed for kidney-alone recipients was an increased shortening fraction from baseline (24.91%) to 6 months (32.13%, P < or = 0.0188). In contrast, the pancreas group demonstrated sustained improvement in all outcomes with measures at 12 months consistently showing a significant improvement from baseline which was also significantly better than that reported for the kidney-alone group. This study showed stabilization of cardiac function by echocardiography for diabetic kidney-alone recipients, whereas significant improvement in function occurred for pancreas-kidney recipients. The improvement in cardiac function for pancreas recipients was seen at 6 months with continued improvement evident at 12 months.

authors

  • Gaber, A.
  • el-Gebely, Soliman
  • Sugathan, Prasanna
  • Elmer, D S
  • Hathaway, D K
  • McCully, R B
  • Shokouh-Amiri, M H
  • Burlew, B S

publication date

  • April 27, 1995

Research

keywords

  • Diabetic Nephropathies
  • Echocardiography, Doppler
  • Heart
  • Kidney Transplantation
  • Pancreas Transplantation

Identity

Scopus Document Identifier

  • 0029020457

PubMed ID

  • 7732555

Additional Document Info

volume

  • 59

issue

  • 8