A Oliver

Autonomous University of Barcelona, Cerdanyola del Vallès, Catalonia, Spain

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Publications (4)11.51 Total impact

  • Article: Factors involved in baseline hyperhomocysteinemia in renal transplantation.
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    ABSTRACT: Hyperhomocysteinemia (hyperHcy) is one cardiovascular risk. The objective of this study was to establish the prevalence demographic, and clinical and analytical factors related to hyperhomocysteinemia among renal transplant patients. The mean Hcy level was 17.3 micromol/L; the prevalence of hyperHcy was 61.2%. The population was categorized as hyperHcy and normal-homocysteinemia (Hcy) patients. Those subjects with hyperHcy were mostly men, with lower intraerythrocyte folate and vitamin B(12) levels, higher fibrinogen levels, and poorer renal function. Multivariate evaluation showed that creatinine clearance, plasma intraerythrocyte folate and vitamin B(12) levels, and plasma fibrinogen levels were independently associated with Hcy levels. Even though the Hcy level was slightly higher among patients who suffered a posttransplantation cardiovascular event, this was statistically significant.
    Transplantation Proceedings 12/2005; 37(9):3799-801. · 1.00 Impact Factor
  • Article: Determining factors of the response to hyperhomocysteinemia treatment in renal transplant patients.
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    ABSTRACT: Hyperhomocysteinemia (hyperHcy) is a risk factor for cardiovascular disease. The benefits of lowering homocysteinemia (Hcy) in renal transplant recipients through vitamin treatment are not clearly understood. The objective of this study was to establish the demographic, renal, Hcy metabolism, and microinflammation factors that determined the response to folic acid and vitamin B complex treatment in stable patients with renal transplants and hyperHcy. We studied 65 renal transplant patients with baseline hyperHcy. The mean baseline Hcy level of these patients was 22.5 micromol/L. Following treatment it fell to 14.5 micromol/L, an overall reduction of 35.5%. Forty-one patients (63%) were classified as responders; the remainder (37%), nonresponders. A bivariance analysis suggested the only significant differences between responding and nonresponding patients were the pre-treatment Hcy level and the renal function level.
    Transplantation Proceedings 12/2005; 37(9):3785-7. · 1.00 Impact Factor
  • Article: Post-renal transplantation weight gain: its causes and its consequences.
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    ABSTRACT: A tendency to increased body mass index (BMI) occurs after renal transplantation. The objective of this study was to analyze the causes and consequences of this weight gain. Two hundred twelve renal transplant recipients were divided into 3 groups according to the evolution of their BMI: BMI loss (group 1); BMI increase <10% (group 2); and BMI increase >10% (group 3). The mean BMI gain was 6.2%, weight gain was 3.9 kg, and BMI gain was 1.4 kg/m(2). The patients in group 3 were younger, but there were no other significant differences in gender, preoperative diabetes, acute rejection, or prior BMI. Blood pressure was similar in all 3 groups, but more group 3 patients needed antihypertensive treatment. A progressive increase in total and low-density lipoprotein (LDL)-cholesterol was also observed as patients showed increased BMI. No differences were observed regarding carbohydrate metabolism. Groups 1 and 3 showed a more unfavorable micro-inflammatory profile. The creatinine clearance level was better in group 3 compared with group 1. We found no differences regarding the number of nonfatal postoperative cardiovascular events.
    Transplantation Proceedings 11/2005; 37(9):3839-41. · 1.00 Impact Factor
  • Article: Prognostic parameters other than Gleason score for the daily evaluation of prostate cancer in needle biopsy.
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    ABSTRACT: To evaluate in prostate needle biopsies the usefulness and the efficacy of not time-consuming morphologic parameters in order to predict whether prostate cancer is organ-confined or it is not, that could contribute additional information to pre-surgical serum PSA and Gleason score, both of them parameters already accepted as clinically significant. Three hundred and two consecutive patients were evaluated, of whom a diagnostic needle biopsy and the radical prostatectomy specimen with no pre-surgical hormone therapy were available. Bilateral or unilateral extension, number of positive cores, percentage of positive cores, intraprostatic perineural invasion (IPNI) and the presence of high-grade prostatic intraepithelial neoplasia (HGPIN) in any of the biopsy cores were evaluated in the needle biopsy. The median of cores is 6. The IPNI, the presence of bilateral tumour, and the percentage of positive cores, higher than 37.5% (ROC curve), show significant crude OR (4.0, 2.8, 6.9 respectively). The regression model discloses that only the percentage of positive cores shows a significant OR (5.8) adjusting for bilaterality, IPNI, HGPIN and age. The percentage of cores with cancer and the bilateral involvement are another two parameters predictive of cancer with extraprostatic extension. (p<0.0005 in both). IPNI has statistical significance too (p<0.002), but it is related to the tumour volume expressed through the two mentioned parameters.
    European Urology 10/2005; 48(4):566-71. · 8.49 Impact Factor