Impact of Acute Rejection and New-Onset Diabetes on Long-Term Transplant Graft and Patient Survival
Clinical Journal of the American Society of Nephrology2008Vol. 3(3), pp. 814–821
Citations Over TimeTop 10% of 2008 papers
Abstract
Acute rejection and new-onset diabetes have a similar impact on long-term transplant survival but lead to transplant failure through different mechanisms. The mechanisms by which new-onset diabetes leads to transplant failure should be prospectively studied. Targeted therapeutic strategies to minimize the impact of various early posttransplantation complications may lead to improved long-term outcomes.
Related Papers
- → Hyperglycemia without diabetes and new-onset diabetes are both associated with poorer outcomes in COVID-19(2020)181 cited
- → Diabetes status affects long-term changes in coronal caries - The SHIP Study(2019)29 cited
- → Diabetes and life expectancy among Japanese – NIPPON DATA80(2012)19 cited
- Investigation and analysis on the status of diabetes cognition among COPD patients complicated with diabetes mellitus(2014)
- → FREQUENCY OF DIABETES MELLITUS IN PATIENTS WITH COVID-19 INFECTION(2023)