Most Viewed Abstracts
1. Report Shows Shift in Starting Salaries for Physicians 2. 2008 Exclusive Survey—Earnings: Good news for primary care income 3. Medicare pay-for-reporting effort draws fire from frustrated doctors 4. Debunking Myths in the US Healthcare System 5. Doctors and the DEA Free full text
Your Article Summary
Intravenous versus oral iron supplementation for correction of post-transplant anaemia in renal transplant patients
BMC Nephrology, 06/08/09
Mudge DW et al. - Intravenous iron is frequently administered to dialysis patients and the authors sought to investigate this mode of administration in transplant recipients after noticing less anaemia in several patients who had received intravenous iron just prior to being called in for transplantation. If the trial shows a reduction in the time to correction of anaemia with intravenous iron or less side effects than oral iron, then intravenous iron may become the standard of treatment in this patient group.
Today in Transplantation...keeping you current
Receive free subspecialty "5-minute updates" via email
Tubular Toxicity in Sirolimus- and Cyclosporine-Based Transplant Immunosuppression Strategies: An Ancillary Study From a Randomized Controlled Trial
American Journal of Kidney Diseases, 11/19/09
Hyperuricemia Is a Mediator of Endothelial Dysfunction and Inflammation in Renal Allograft Recipients
Transplantation Proceedings, 11/02/09
Anemia and Erythrocytosis After Kidney Transplantation: A 5-Year Graft Function and Survival Analysis
Transplantation Proceedings, 11/11/09
Article Search
Sponsor


See Latest Articles


