226 peritoneal dialyses were performed on 100 patients. 28 patients presented with acute renal failure. Uraemia was the most frequent indication for dialysis. Peritonitis was an important complication and Acinetobacter species accounted for 51.5% of the positive cultures. Other complications included poor dialysate drainage and hypokalemia. Mortality was mainly due to causes unrelated to peritoneal dialysis.
Myxomas are uncommon primary cardiac tumours that usually affect the left atrium. We herein report the case of a patient who presented with right heart failure and proteinuria, leading to the diagnosis of atrial myxoma. Surgical resection resulted in resolution of the patient's symptoms.
A patient with severe hyponatreamia secondary to chronic renal failure was treated with peritoneal dialysis (PD). On the third day of admission, she developed progressive obtundation. Neurological examination showed bilateral brisk reflexes with intact brain stem reflexes. Magnetic resonance imaging demonstrated patchy demyelination of the pontine area indicating central pontine myelinolysis (CPM). Despite supportive measures, the patient died on the fifteenth day of admission. The rate of correction of hyponatraemia with peritoneal dialysis can be rapid and detrimental to hyponatraemic chronic renal failure patients and careful monitoring of serum sodium level is advocated.