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  1. Home
  2. Browse by Author

Browsing by Author "Cavagnaro, F"

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    A suicide attempt with an oral calcium channel blocker
    (COMPARATIVE TOXICOLOGY LAB, 2000) Cavagnaro, F; Aglony, M; Rios, JC; Paris, E
    Calcium channel blockers are widely used in all-aged populations. The drugs are generally safe in therapeutic dosage, but severe side effects with elevated intake are increasingly described, mainly in adult patients. We report an adolescent girl who intentionally ingested an overdose of nifedipine.
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    Captopril scintigraphy in the study of arterial hypertension in pediatrics
    (2004) Lagomarsino, E; Orellana, P; Muñoz, J; Velásquez, C; Cavagnaro, F; Valdés, F
    Renovascular hypertension (RVH) is responsible for 10% of arterial hypertension in children. The early diagnosis of RVH permits specific treatment leading to the cure of hypertension and avoidance of parenchymal damage. Captopril renal scintigraphy (CRS) provides information on the renovascular cause of the arterial hypertension. To validate the usefulness of CRS in hypertensive children, clinical, scintigraphic, and radiological data from 20 patients (mean age 6.1 +/- 5.5 years) were reviewed. Two patients were newborns. All had renal ultrasound scans and 9 had aortograms. In 7 children, RVH was confirmed by angiography, and CRS was positive for RVH in 6 of these. CRS was negative for RVH in 12 of 13 children without RVH. CRS was nondiagnostic in 3 children with abnormal baseline renal scintigraphy and severely decreased relative renal function (It;35%), 1 of whom had RVH. No side effects of captopril renography were observed. Captopril renography provides a logical, non-invasive, safe, and cost-effective approach in the evaluation of children suspected of having RVH.
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    Chronic renal failure in pediatrics 1996 - Chilean survey
    (SPRINGER VERLAG, 1999) Lagomarsimo, E; Valenzuela, A; Cavagnaro, F; Solar, E
    The Nephrology Branch of the Chilean Pediatric Society has greatly influenced the development of government health plans regarding the management and care of patients under 18 years with chronic renal failure (CRF). In order to assess the status of children with CRF in Chile up to 1996, a questionnaire was sent to all pediatric nephrologists in charge of those children. The total sample was of 227 patients under 18 years, giving a national prevalence of 42.5 and an incidence of 5.7 per million inhabitants; of these patients, 50.7% were male, 58.6% over 10 years and 15% younger than 5 years. The most frequent etiologies of CRF were: obstructive uropathy, 18.1%; hypo/dysplasia, 16.7%; reflux nephropathy, 16.7%; and glomerulopathies, 16.3%. Although 48% of patients were on conservative medical treatment, 42.2% of these were in end-stage renal disease, 22.9% were on dialysis, and 29.1% had undergone renal transplantation. Of the dialysis group, 75% were on peritoneal dialysis. Of the transplanted children, 78.8% had normal renal function, but 16.7% returned to dialysis. Three-year graft survival and patient survival were 68% and 94%, respectively.
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    Hemolytic uremic syndrome in a child with leukemia and cytomegalovirus infection
    (2000) Cavagnaro, F; Barriga, F
    A 2-year-old boy had a severe cytomegalovirus (CMV) infection with multi-organ involvement, while on maintenance therapy for acute lymphoblastic leukemia. The patient was treated with intravenous gancyclovir, with a marked improvement in his clinical status, with the exception of a progressive deterioration of the renal function. He also developed hemolytic anemia and thrombocytopenia, suggesting a diagnosis of atypical hemolytic uremic syndrome (HUS). A percutaneous renal biopsy showed lesions consistent with HUS, but no evidence of CMV infection. The patient had a good clinical outcome with no evidence of renal sequelae. We report a rare association of CMV infection and HUS in the pediatric age-group, which suggests a possible cause-effect relationship that deserves further evaluation.
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    Peritonitis as a risk factor of acute renal failure in nephrotic children
    (2000) Cavagnaro, F; Lagomarsino, E
    Idiopathic acute renal failure (IARF) is an uncommon but severe complication in children with relapsing nephrotic syndrome and may require long-term dialytic support until recovery of renal function takes place. Due to limited understanding of the pathophysiology of IARF, specific guidelines for its prevention and therapy have not been developed. Among triggering factors, peritonitis was present in half of all pediatric patients with this complication described in the English literature over the past 15 years. We report an additional nephrotic child who developed IARF following spontaneous bacterial peritonitis. The renal biopsy showed tubular epithelial changes consistent with acute tubular necrosis. A discussion of related literature and possible pathogenesis of this association is presented.

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