%0 Journal Article %T Pediatric Renal Transplantation in Children with Weight 20kg or Less: A Single-Center Experience SciDoc Publishers | Open Access | Science Journals | Media Partners %A A Arruza Echevarr¨ªa %A A Martinez Ruiz %A A Mavarez-Martinez %A C Gonzalez Paniagua %A G Najarro Ajuria %A G Ojinaga Garc¨ªa %A G Ortiz Labrador %A I Grijalba Ipi£¿aza %A L Madariaga Dominguez %A L Martinez Goenaga %A M Aguirre Me£¿ica %A M Herrero Go£¿i %A N Stoicea %A SD Bergese %A I Arruza Urquijo %J Anesthesiology & Research (IJAR) %D 2018 %R http://dx.doi.org/10.19070/2332-2780-19000112 %X Abstract Background: Renal transplantation (RT) is the treatment of choice for children with Chronic Kidney Disease (CKD). This technique benefits survival and quality of life. Long-term outcomes in pediatric transplantation have significantly improved over the past 20 years; however, children less than 5 years of age weighing 20 kg or less still remain a considerable challenge, with higher mortality rate and graft loss. Methods: In this article, we present the pediatric RT experience at Hospital Universitario de Cruces, the main center for transplants in Spain. Children who underwent RT within the period of January 2012 - January 2017 were retrospectively reviewed to identify those with weight less than 20 Kg. The following parameters were collected: pre-transplant characteristics, surgical technique, anesthesia characteristics, intra-operative and post-operative surgical or medical complications, pre and post-transplant creatinine levels, renal graft survival, and late post-operative complications. Results: Within a period of 5 years, a total of 13 pediatric patients (weight ¡Ü 20kg) underwent RT at Hospital Universitario de Cruces. The patient sample represented 37.14 % of the 35 renal transplants performed on pediatric patients at this institution. All 13 patients received a standard surgical and anesthetic perioperative management. Post-transplant creatinine levels significantly decrease after surgery during the early postoperative period from 6.45 mg/dl preoperatively (range, 1.90 - 12.26) to 0.59 mg/dl postoperatively (range, 0.27 - 1.27). The mean follow-up period was 1.5 year (range, 1 - 3) with 12 patients out of 13 (92.31%) presenting with 1-year graft survival. Conclusions: A multidisciplinary collaboration, including surgeons, nephrologists, and anesthesiologists specialized in handling transplants for underweight children should be a priority. Close intraoperative monitoring of vital signs and optimal fluid therapy is essential for anesthetic management due to the possible perioperative hemodynamic changes %K Renal Transplantation %K Anesthesia %K Kidney Failure %K Pediatric %K Low weight %K Transplant Surgery. %U https://scidoc.org/IJAR-2332-2780-07-101.php