Skip to the main content

Professional paper

TRENDS OF REPLACEMENT KIDNEY FUNCTION BY DIALYSIS

DRAGAN KLARIĆ ; Department of Nephrology and Centre for Dialysis, Zadar General Hospital, Zadar, Croatia


Full text: croatian pdf 127 Kb

page 255-259

downloads: 392

cite


Abstract

Haemorrhagic and thrombotic events occur in both children and adults. The underlying causes are congenital or acquired disorders. The maturation and postnatal development of the human coagulation system results in significant and important differences in the coagulation and fibrinolysis of neonates and young children compared to older children and adults. Platelet function, pro- and anticoagulant protein concentrations and fibrinolytic pathway protein concentrations are developmentally regulated and generate hemostatic homeostasis that is unique to the neonatal period. At the same time, neonates have a predisposition to bleeding and develepment of thrombosis. These differences, which mostly reflect the immaturity of the neonatal haemostasis system, are functionally balanced. Central lines, fluid fluctuations, sepsis, liver dysfunction and inflammation contribute to the risk profile for thrombosis development in ill neonates. Hemophilia is the most common of the severe bleeding disorders and should be considered in the neonatal period in case of unusual bleeding or positive family history. Later, hemophilia should be suspected mainly in males because of abnormal bleeding following invasive procedures. Prophylactic treatment that is started early with clotting-factor concentrates has been shown to prevent hemophilic arthropathy and is therefore the gold standard of care for hemophilia A and B. Children with coagulation disorders should be clinically and laboratory treated according to the exact type and degree of clotting disorder and appropriate treatment should be conducted. This significantly reduces the possibility of acute complications and long-term consequences.

Keywords

coagulation; children

Hrčak ID:

229945

URI

https://hrcak.srce.hr/229945

Publication date:

5.12.2019.

Article data in other languages: croatian

Visits: 1.410 *