Reader Login| Users Online: 1489  
Home Print this page Email this page Small font sizeDefault font sizeIncrease font size   
Home | About us | Editorial board | Search | Ahead of print | Current Issue | Archives | Submit article | Instructions | Subscribe | Advertise | Contact us
 
Export selected to
Endnote
Reference Manager
Procite
Medlars Format
RefWorks Format
BibTex Format
  Access statistics : Table of Contents
   2004| March-May  | Volume 5 | Issue 1  
    Online since June 22, 2010

 
 
  Archives   Previous Issue   Next Issue   Most popular articles   Most cited articles
 
Hide all abstracts  Show selected abstracts  Export selected to
  Viewed PDF Cited
HISTORY OF MEDICINE
Culture of Medicine in the Wellcome Collection
Rachel Hajar
March-May 2004, 5(1):27-35
  4,653 1 -
ORIGINAL PAPER
Cardiovascular Disease and Diabetes : Effect on Recipient Outcome after Renal Transplantation
Omar Aboud, Awad Rashed
March-May 2004, 5(1):8-12
A total of 432 patients in Qatar received renal transplant (RT) from1986 through 2002 at Hamad Medical Corporation (HMC) as well as abroad. The recipients were of mixed nationalities, 238 Qatari national (Q) and 194 expatriates (NQ). Since 1986 when we started our local transplant program, 70 cases were performed at our center and 362 performed abroad. Diabetic nephropathy was the most common cause of end stage renal disease (ESRD) in Q transplants patients (23.9%), while chronic glomerulonephritis was the most common cause of ESRD in NQ (28.7%). New onset diabetes was reported after the transplant operation in 7.3% of the total cases. Recipient age ranged from 14 to 75 years with the mean age 48.5 years in diabetics and 34.5 years in non-diabetics. Immunosuppressive therapy included cyclosporine azathioprine, mycophenolate mofetil and steroids. Post-transplant acute rejection was reported in 9.7% of all cases and chronic rejection developed over the years in 14.3%. Two years survival at our center compared to other centers abroad was 98%, 97% for patients and 85.7%, 82.5% for grafts respectively. Mortality in the 432 patients was mainly related to cardiovascular disease accounting for the death of 24 cases (5.5%). In the 88 diabetic patients 11 cases suffered a fatal myocardial infarction (12.5%) compared to 13 cases of myocardial infarction in the 344 non-diabetic patients (5.3%). Other causes of mortality such as sepsis, hepatic failure, and cytomegalovirus infection did not differ significantly in diabetic patients compared to non-diabetics.
  2,435 1 -
CASE REPORT
Takayasu's arteritis and Rheumatic Heart Disease
Ahmed Almotarreb
March-May 2004, 5(1):24-25
  2,236 1 -
CARDIAC IMAGING
Cardiac MR: One-stop shop
KM Das
March-May 2004, 5(1):17-23
  2,195 1 -
CARDIOVASCULAR NEWS
Cardiovascular News

March-May 2004, 5(1):2-7
  1,349 0 -
A PICTURE IS WORTH A THOUSAND WORDS
Lutembacher's Syndrome

March-May 2004, 5(1):26-26
  1,241 0 -
  Feedback 
  Subscribe