Disease-specific quality of life in Turkish patients after successful kidney transplantation

被引:14
|
作者
Franke, GH
Yücetin, L
Yaman, H [1 ]
Reimer, J
Demirbas, A
机构
[1] Univ Akdeniz, Fac Med, Dept Family Med, Transplant Ctr, Antalya, Turkey
[2] Univ Appl Sci Magdeburg Stendal, Stendal, Germany
[3] Univ Akdeniz, Fac Med, Dept Family Med, Antalya, Turkey
[4] Univ Hamburg, Dept Psychiat & Psychotherapy, Hamburg, Germany
关键词
D O I
10.1016/j.transproceed.2005.12.110
中图分类号
R392 [医学免疫学]; Q939.91 [免疫学];
学科分类号
100102 ;
摘要
To investigate disease-specific quality of life (OOL) in Turkish patients after successful kidney transplantation, the End-Stage Renal Disease Symptom Checklist Transplantation Module (ESRD-SCL-TM), a multidimensional questionnaire measuring disease-specific QOL, was translated and administered to a sample of successfully transplanted patients. Intercultural differences between Turkish and German patients as well as the influence of demographic (age, gender) and clinical (duration of graft function, living versus cadaver transplantation) data in the Turkish patients were evaluated by multivariate analyses of variance, and correlative techniques. The 152 investigated Turkish patients, including 106 (69.7%) men and 46 (30.3%) women, had a mean age of 34.8 years (SD = 10.8, range, 14 to 67 years). Time since successful kidney transplantation varied between 1 and 297 months (mean = 19.2 months; SD = 36.9). One hundred twelve patients (73.7%) received a kidney from a living donor, and 40 (26.3%) from a cadaver. The Turkish patients suffered statistically significantly more from disease-specific distress than the German patients (19% explanation of variance). They reported higher distress regarding four of six subscales. Turkish women suffered statistically significantly more from "Limited Physical Capacity," and "Side-effects of Corticosteroids" (10% explanation of variance) than men. The demonstrated higher disease-specific distress in successfully transplanted Turkish patients compared to the German samples may be the result of intercultural differences in reporting psychological and disease-specific distress. On the other hand, the higher distress of women compared to men is well known. Both results pointed out the necessity of psychological support.
引用
收藏
页码:457 / 459
页数:3
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [1] Switching from cyclosporine to tacrolimus leads to improved disease-specific quality of life in patients after kidney transplantation
    Franke, G. H.
    Trampenau, C.
    Reimer, J.
    [J]. TRANSPLANTATION PROCEEDINGS, 2006, 38 (05) : 1293 - 1294
  • [2] Kidney Disease-Specific Quality of Life among Patients on Hemodialysis
    Al Salmi, Issa
    Kamble, Pramod
    Lazarus, Eilean Rathinasamy
    D'Souza, Melba Sheila
    Al Maimani, Yaqoob
    Hannawi, Suad
    [J]. INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF NEPHROLOGY, 2021, 2021
  • [3] Successful disease-specific induced pluripotent stem cell generation from patients with kidney transplantation
    Thatava, Tayaramma
    Armstrong, Adam S.
    De lamo, Josep Genebriera
    Edukulla, Ramakrishna
    Khan, Yulia Krotova
    Sakuma, Toshie
    Ohmine, Seiga
    Sundsbak, Jamie L.
    Harris, Peter C.
    Kudva, Yogish C.
    Ikeda, Yasuhiro
    [J]. STEM CELL RESEARCH & THERAPY, 2011, 2
  • [4] Successful disease-specific induced pluripotent stem cell generation from patients with kidney transplantation
    Tayaramma Thatava
    Adam S Armstrong
    Josep Genebriera De Lamo
    Ramakrishna Edukulla
    Yulia Krotova Khan
    Toshie Sakuma
    Seiga Ohmine
    Jamie L Sundsbak
    Peter C Harris
    Yogish C Kudva
    Yasuhiro Ikeda
    [J]. Stem Cell Research & Therapy, 2
  • [5] Disease-specific quality of life in patients with lupus nephritis
    Jolly, M.
    Toloza, S.
    Goker, B.
    Clarke, A. E.
    Navarra, S. V.
    Wallace, D.
    Weisman, M.
    Mok, C. C.
    [J]. LUPUS, 2018, 27 (02) : 257 - 264
  • [6] Disease-specific quality of life in patients with diabetic neuropathy
    Alghamdi, Mushabab
    Owolabi, Lukman F.
    Adamu, Bappa
    Taura, Magaji G.
    Jibo, Abubakar
    Almansour, Mohammed
    Alaklabi, Saeed N.
    Alghamdi, Mohammed A.
    Imam, Isa A.
    Abdelrazak, Reda
    Rafaat, Ahmad
    Aliyu, Muktar H.
    [J]. SAUDI MEDICAL JOURNAL, 2022, 43 (04) : 408 - 417
  • [7] INCOME IS STRONGLY ASSOCIATED WITH KIDNEY STONE DISEASE-SPECIFIC QUALITY OF LIFE
    Ahmad, Tessnim R.
    Tzou, David T.
    Reliford-Titus, Shalonda
    Wu, Clinton
    Goodman, Jeremy
    Francisco, San
    Antonelli, Jodi A.
    Viprakasit, Davis P.
    Averch, Timothy D.
    Sivalingam, Sri
    Chew, Ben H.
    Bird, Vincent G.
    Paise, Vernon M., Jr.
    Streeper, Necole M.
    Sur, Roger L.
    Nakada, Stephen Y.
    Penniston, Kristina L.
    Chi, Thomas
    [J]. JOURNAL OF UROLOGY, 2018, 199 (04): : E173 - E174
  • [8] Protein-Energy Nutritional Status and Kidney Disease-specific Quality of Life in Hemodialysis Patients
    Mazairac, Albert H. A.
    de Wit, G. Ardine
    Penne, E. Lars
    van der Weerd, Neelke C.
    Grooteman, Muriel P. C.
    van den Dorpel, Marinus A.
    Nube, Menso J.
    Buskens, Erik
    Levesque, Renee
    ter Wee, Piet M.
    Bots, Michiel L.
    Blankestijn, Peter J.
    [J]. JOURNAL OF RENAL NUTRITION, 2011, 21 (05) : 376 - U92
  • [9] Disease-Specific Quality of Life in Young Patients With Tourette Syndrome
    Cavanna, Andrea E.
    Luoni, Chiara
    Selvini, Claudia
    Blangiardo, Rosanna
    Eddy, Clare M.
    Silvestri, Paola R.
    Cali, Paola V.
    Gagliardi, Emanuela
    Balottin, Umberto
    Cardona, Francesco
    Rizzo, Renata
    Termine, Cristiano
    [J]. PEDIATRIC NEUROLOGY, 2013, 48 (02) : 111 - 114
  • [10] Research on disease-specific quality of life in patients with anal fistula
    Liu, Qianqian
    Zhan, Mengjun
    Hong, Zihan
    Zhang, Lu
    [J]. JOURNAL OF ADVANCED NURSING, 2024, 80 : 15 - 15