J

Judith Bernardini

University of Pittsburgh

Publishes on Dialysis and Renal Disease Management, Central Venous Catheters and Hemodialysis, Chronic Kidney Disease and Diabetes. 126 papers and 7.1k citations.

126Publications
7.1kTotal Citations

Is this you? Claim your profile.

Add your photo, update your bio, and get notified when your ranking changes.

Top publicationsby citations

Peritoneal Dialysis-Related Infections Recommendations: 2005 Update
Beth Piraino, George R. Bailie, Judith Bernardini et al.|Peritoneal Dialysis International|2005
Cited by 698

Peritonitis remains a leading complication of peritoneal dialysis (PD). It contributes to technique failure and hospitalization, and sometimes is associated with death of the patient. Severe and prolonged peritonitis can lead to peritoneal membrane failure. Therefore, the PD community continues to focus attention on prevention and treatment of PD-related infections.

ISPD Catheter-Related Infection Recommendations: 2017 Update
Cheuk‐Chun Szeto, Philip Kam‐Tao Li, David W. Johnson et al.|Peritoneal Dialysis International|2017
Cited by 323Open Access

Submitted by Biblioteca Suporte PUCRS (biblioteca.suporte@pucrs.br) on 2018-10-25T20:07:54Z No. of bitstreams: 2 ISPD_Catheter_Related_Infection_Recommendations_2017_Update.pdf: 1425857 bytes, checksum: 490a9cb93950dd19e90683c1d0b27896 (MD5) ISPD_Catheter_Related_Infection_Recommendations_2017_Update.pdf: 1425857 bytes, checksum: 490a9cb93950dd19e90683c1d0b27896 (MD5)

ISPD Position Statement on Reducing the Risks of Peritoneal Dialysis–Related Infections
Beth Piraino, Judith Bernardini, Edwina A. Brown et al.|Peritoneal Dialysis International|2011
Cited by 317Open Access

Submitted by Biblioteca Suporte PUCRS (biblioteca.suporte@pucrs.br) on 2018-10-25T19:51:28Z No. of bitstreams: 2 ISPD_POSITION_STATEMENT_ON_REDUCING_THE_RISKS_OF_PERITONEAL_DIALYSIS_RELATED_INFECTIONS.pdf: 1092725 bytes, checksum: 1e8c141805e6c1572a0c97445f3d5d93 (MD5) ISPD_POSITION_STATEMENT_ON_REDUCING_THE_RISKS_OF_PERITONEAL_DIALYSIS_RELATED_INFECTIONS.pdf: 1092725 bytes, checksum: 1e8c141805e6c1572a0c97445f3d5d93 (MD5)

Peritonitis influences mortality in peritoneal dialysis patients.
Linda F. Fried, Judith Bernardini, James R. Johnston et al.|Journal of the American Society of Nephrology|1996
Cited by 271

Mortality remains high in peritoneal dialysis (PD) patients. Known risk factors for mortality include age, diabetes, race, initial albumin level, and cardiovascular disease. Peritonitis is reported to cause death in 1 to 6% of PD patients but has not been well studied as a risk factor for mortality. This study examined 516 adults with a total of 896 yr on PD at one center to determine if peritonitis influenced mortality. Time at risk began on Day 1 of training and ended at death, transplant, or 60 days after transfer to hemodialysis or intermittent peritoneal dialysis. The overall mortality rate was 17.4/100 patient yr. Survival was lower for whites, men, diabetic patients, and older patients. Independent risk factors for mortality (by Cox proportional hazards) were race, diabetes, increased age, and increased peritonitis rate. Use of the Y-set was not associated with decreased mortality. Peritonitis was a risk factor only in whites, nondiabetic patients, and those patients over the age of 60. For every 0.5/yr increase in the peritonitis rate, the risk of death increased 10% in whites, 11% in those patients who were over the age of 60, and 4% for nondiabetic patients. Mortality rates did not decrease over time (1979 to 1995), although peritonitis rates fell significantly (P < 0.001). Rates of Gram-negative and fungal peritonitis showed no trend over time. Peritonitis contributed to 25 of 158 (15.8%) of deaths. Gram-negative/fungal peritonitis accounted for 14 deaths (9.5% of all Gram-negative/fungal episodes) whereas Staphylococcus epidermidis accounted for only 1 death (0.5% of all S. epidermidis episodes) (P < 0.001). Cardiovascular disease was more common in those patients whose deaths were unrelated to peritonitis (P < 0.01), whereas an infectious cause was more common in those patients whose deaths were peritonitis-related (P < 0.001). In this study, peritonitis was a risk factor for death in whites, nondiabetic patients, and older patients. However, the Y-set did not improve survival, perhaps because it does not decrease Gram-negative/fungal peritonitis. To have an impact on survival, efforts are needed to reduce the peritonitis that results from these more serious pathogens.