
HC24: Introduction MOOC
Lectures
Mandatory MOOC lectures:
- The kidney in health and disease
- Options if kidneys fail
- Immunogenetics
- Histocompatibility
- The diabetic patient
- SPK and islet cell transplantation
- Introduction and overview of early challenges (from 1,15 to the end)
- Cellular rejection
- Antibody mediated rejection
- Cases from daily practice A: patient cases with early challenges
- Cases from daily practice B: patient cases with early challenges
- Introduction and overview of late challenges (from 0,56 to the end)
- Infections: overview and CMV infection
- Infections: BK and EBV infection
- Cases from daily practice A: patient cases with late challenges
- Cases from daily practice B: patient cases with late challenges
- MOOC module 1: Etivity, which treatment do you advise?
- MOOC module 2: Etivity, which donor do you advise?
Functions
The kidney has several functions:
- Clearance of toxins
- Ureum
- Creatinine
- Potassium
- Acid
- Regulation
- Water
- Salt
- Blood pressure
- Production
- Erythropoietin
- Vitamin D
Renal failure
Renal failure can have multiple causes:
- Prerenal
- For example a very low blood pressure
- Renal
- Lie within the kidney
- Postrenal
- For example a tumor which presses on the urinary tract
There are many types of chronic renal failure:
- Diabetic
- Non-diabetic
- Vascular: nephrosclerosis
- Glomerular
- Primary: IgA nephropathy
- Secondary
- Interstitial: reflux nephropathy
- Cystic kidneys
- Chronic transplant dysfunction
Renal replacement therapy
There are several options if the kidneys do not work:
- Dialysis
- Hemodialysis (1960)
- Peritoneal dialysis (1970)
- Transplantation (1966)
- Deceased donor
- Living donor
Diabetes
Diabetes leads to severe vascular complications:
- Microvascular
- Adenopathy
- Nephropathy
- Neuropathy
- Macrovascular
- Cerebral artery disease
- Cardiac disease
- Peripheral artery disease
Simultaneous pancreas kidney transplantation:
In case of diabetes type 1, a simultaneous pancreas and kidney transplantation can be made. This way, the patient can make new insulin.
Problems after transplantation
A kidney transplantation isn't always succesful:
- Week 1 post-transplantation
- Acute tubular necrosis
- Hyperacute rejection
- Urologic
- Obstruction
- Urine leak
- Vascular thrombosis
- Renal artery
- Renal vein
- <12 weeks post-transplantation
- Acute rejection
- Calcineurin inhibitor toxicity
- Volume contraction
- Urologic
- Obstruction
- Infection
- Pyelonephritis
- Viral infections
- Interstitial nephritis
- Recurrent disease
- >12 weeks post-transplantation
- Acute rejection
- Volume contraction
- Calcineuron inhibitor toxicity
- Urologic
- Obstruction
- Infection
- Pyelonephritis
- Viral infections
- Chronic allograft nephropathy
- Decline in renal function
- Recurrent disease
- Renal artery stenosis
- Post-transplantation lymphoproliferative disorder
Infections following renal transplantation:
- 1st month after transplantation: mostly due to the operation
- Long term: opportunistic infections
- Important factor for later renal failure
Rejection
Diagnosis:
In case of rejection, donor antigen presenting cells present an antigen, which triggers reactions of T-cells.
Clinical signs of rejection are:
- Malaise
- Fever
- Oliguria
- Hypertension
- Graft tenderness
Diagnosis hinges on serial creatinine measurements. Elevation of 20% over the baseline creatinine triggers further evaluation. Non-immunologic causes need to be ruled out:
- Ultrasonography
- Renal scanning
- Percutanous biopsy
Graft rejection:
Graft rejection is an allogenic response. It is the result of the recipient immune system recognizing "alloantigens" in the graft as foreign and mounting an immune response. Alloantigens are endogenous (self)antigens whose structure can vary between individuals in the population.
Acute rejection:
There are 2 types of acute rejection:
- Type I acute cellular rejection: manifested by interstitial mononuclear cell infiltration with invasion of the tubules
- Type II acute cellular rejection: manifested by endothelialitis with mononuclear cell infiltration beneath the arterial endothelium
- Also called acute vascular rejection
- More severe
Survival rates
The 1 year survival rates of renal transplantation are 90-95%. The 5 year survival rates are 55-70%. This can have 2 reasons:
- Death with function (50%) → death isn't caused by the kidneys
- Cardiovascular disease
- Diabetes
- Hypertension
- Dyslipidemia
- Renal function
- Malignancy
- Infection
- Miscellaneous
- Cardiovascular disease
- Kidney graft loss (40%)
- Organ quality and IR-injury
- Acute rejection episodes
- Drug-related nephrotoxicity
- Recurrent kidney disease
- Vascular disease
- Hypertension
- Hyperlipidemia
- Nicotine abuse
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Mechanisms of Disease 1 2020/2021 UL
- Mechanisms of Disease 1 HC1: Introduction to G2MD1
- Mechanisms of Disease 1 HC2: Introduction to the immune system
- Mechanisms of Disease 1 HC3: Innate and adaptive immune responses & key cytokines
- Mechanisms of Disease 1 HC4: Pathology of normal immune response
- Mechanisms of Disease 1 HC5: B- and T-cell generation and diversity
- Mechanisms of Disease 1 HC6: Mechanisms of adaptive immunity
- Mechanisms of Disease 1 HC7: Effector mechanisms of antibodies
- Mechanisms of Disease 1 HC8: B-cell development and antibodies
- Mechanisms of Disease 1 HC9: Tissue injury and repair
- Mechanisms of Disease 1 HC10: Repair mechanism
- Mechanisms of Disease 1 HC11: Pathology of inflammatory reactions
- Mechanisms of Disease 1 HC12: Introduction to infectious diseases
- Mechanisms of Disease 1 HC13: Bacteria
- Mechanisms of Disease 1 HC14: Viruses
- Mechanisms of Disease 1 HC15: Fungi and parasites
- Mechanisms of Disease 1 HC16: Invaders
- Mechanisms of Disease 1 HC17: Host versus invader
- Mechanisms of Disease 1 HC18: Immune deficiencies and infection risk
- Mechanisms of Disease 1 HC19: Pathology of infectious diseases
- Mechanisms of Disease 1 HC20: Diagnostics of infectious diseases
- Mechanisms of Disease 1 HC21: Essential microorganisms
- Mechanisms of Disease 1 HC extra: Mycobacterial infections (tuberculosis)
- Mechanisms of Disease 1 HC22: Antimicrobial therapy
- Mechanisms of Disease 1 HC23: Principles of antibiotic pharmacotherapy
- Mechanisms of Disease 1 HC24: Introduction MOOC
- Mechanisms of Disease 1 HC25: Epidemiology
- Mechanisms of Disease 1 HC26: Prevention and control
- Mechanisms of Disease 1 HC extra: COVID-19
- Mechanisms of Disease 1 HC27: Mechanisms of hypersensitivity reactions
- Mechanisms of disease 1 HC28: Pathology of allergy
- Mechanisms of Disease 1 HC29: Asthma
- Mechanisms of Disease 1 HC30: Pathology of autoimmunity
- Mechanisms of Disease 1 HC31: HLA and autoimmunity
- Mechanisms of Disease 1 HC32: Vasculitis
- Mechanisms of Disease 1 HC33: Systemic Lupus Erythematosus
- Mechanisms of Disease 1 HC35: Infections and autoimmunity
- Mechanisms of Disease 1 HC36: Immune cells in rheumatoid arthritis
- Mechanisms of Disease 1 HC37+38: Pharmacology: immunosuppression
- Mechanisms of Disease 1 HC39: Pathology of transplantation

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Mechanisms of Disease 1 2020/2021 UL
Deze bundel bevat aantekeningen van alle hoorcolleges van het blok Mechanisms of Disease 1 van de studie Geneeskunde aan de Universiteit Leiden, collegejaar 2020/2021.
This bundle contains notes of all lectures from the module Mechanisms of Disease 1, Medicine, Leiden
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