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The steady improvement in short-term success rates in renal transplant patients has translated into better long-term success rates and a large number of patients with long-functioning renal transplants. The necessity for the lifelong administration of immunosuppressive medications to prevent rejection, coupled with the presence in many patients of a variety of other medical problems dating from the period of renal insufficiency prior to the time of renal transplantation, has created a large group of patients with a unique and complex set of long-term medical care needs. Due to the constraints of managed care, considerations of geography, or patient preference, the long-term care of an increasing number of renal transplant recipients has shifted away from the transplant center to the community-based nephrologist or internist. For optimal care to be delivered, it is important that the physicians managing these patients be cognizant of the complex and interacting medical issues involved in their care. Appropriate management can significantly prolong the life of the allograft as well as that of the patient. Guidelines for understanding and managing some of the more important and common general medical problems facing the long-term renal transplant recipient (eg, infectious complications, cardiovascular disease, hypertension, diabetes, hyperlipidemia, malignancy, pregnancy, bone disease, dental care, preventive care) are addressed in this section.
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PMID:General health management and long-term care of the renal transplant recipient. 1172 2

Three categories of highly active antiretroviral therapy (HAART)-associated major toxic effects have been identified: nucleoside-related toxic effects (e.g., neuropathy, myopathy, pancreatitis, hepatic steatosis, lactic acidosis, and possibly lipoatrophy), metabolic complications (e.g., fat redistribution, insulin resistance, and hyperlipidemia), and bone disease (e.g., osteopenia and/or osteoporosis). The toxic effects caused by nucleosides are hypothesized to be a result of mitochondrial injury and include myopathy, pancreatitis, liver failure, and lactic acidosis. Alterations in lactic acid metabolism range from common instances of asymptomatic lactic acidemia to rare occurrences of life-threatening lactic acidosis with hepatic steatosis. A metabolic syndrome consisting of lipodystrophy (i.e., fat redistribution), hyperlipidemia and insulin resistance has been observed, particularly with protease inhibitor treatment. Some additive interaction between protease inhibitors and nucleosides has also been described. The potential relationship of these metabolic abnormalities to increased risk of cardiovascular disease and diabetes has broad implications on long-term patient management. Lipodystrophy associated with HAART is generally accompanied by potentially serious abnormalities, including dyslipidemia (i.e., hypercholesterolemia and hypertriglyceridemia) and altered glucose metabolism (i.e., insulin resistance). Regimens of HAART may have adverse effects on bone metabolism, as indicated by emerging reports of osteopenia, osteoporosis, and avascular necrosis.
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PMID:Long-term exposure to lifelong therapies. 1183 99

Diabetic bone disease is characterized by low bone turnover resulting from either impaired secretion of parathyroid hormone (PTH) or refractoriness of osteoblasts to PTH. The present study was performed to elucidate which factor contributes more to the reduction in bone turnover by comparison between 64 hemodialyzed patients with diabetes mellitus and 106 hemodialyzed patients without diabetes mellitus. Only men were enrolled to avoid the influence of the menstrual cycle on bone metabolism. Serum intact PTH (iPTH) levels were significantly lower in hemodialyzed patients with diabetes than those without diabetes, although no significant difference existed in age, duration of hemodialysis therapy, or serum calcium or phosphate levels. Of the biochemical markers measured, serum intact osteocalcin (iOC) and deoxypyridinoline levels were significantly lower in patients with diabetes, although serum bone-specific alkaline phosphatase (BAP) and pyridinoline levels did not differ significantly between the two groups of patients. When patients were restricted to those with serum iPTH levels greater than 180 pg/mL, this parameter correlated significantly in a positive manner with both serum iOC and BAP levels and negatively with bone mineral density at distal radius 1/3. Regression slopes between iPTH levels and these parameters were not significantly different between the two groups of patients, indicating the absence of refractoriness of bone to PTH in patients with diabetes. In conclusion, our findings suggest that impaired PTH secretion, but not refractoriness of osteoblasts to PTH, may be responsible for the low bone turnover in hemodialyzed patients with diabetes.
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PMID:Impaired secretion of parathyroid hormone, but not refractoriness of osteoblast, is a major mechanism of low bone turnover in hemodialyzed patients with diabetes mellitus. 1204 40

The metabolic syndrome of chronic critical illness (CCI) consists of multisystem organ dysfunction resulting from the initial acute injury and chronic immune-neuroendocrine axis activation, adult kwashiorkor-like malnutrition, and prolonged immobilization with suppression of the PTH-vitamin D axis and hyper-resorptive metabolic bone disease. CCI patients can also present unique challenges in the management of diabetes mellitus, thyroid and adrenal diseases, electrolyte abnormalities and hypogonadism.
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PMID:Endocrine and metabolic issues in the management of the chronically critically ill patient. 1214 Sep 16

Osteoporosis is the most prevalent metabolic bone disease in the United States. Although the disease has historically been reported mostly in white women, it can affect individuals of both sexes and all ethnic groups. The presence of osteoporosis related to diabetes is not well acknowledged and the impact of osteoporosis in a diabetic patient is often not considered. Routine screening or initiation of preventive medications for osteoporosis in all patients with type 1 or type 2 diabetes is not recommended at the present time. However, in all patients with diabetes, besides optimal glycemic control, general recommendations regarding adequate dietary calcium intake, regular exercise, and avoidance of other potential risk factors such as smoking should be given. In patients who have positive risk factors for osteoporosis, or in those who present with fractures, evaluation of bone density should be done and respective preventive or therapeutic interventions should be applied.
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PMID:Osteoporosis and diabetes. 1264 44

Many of the end-organ effects of cystinosis are known to be risk factors for osteopenia; these include deposition of cystine crystals in bone, hypothyroidism, diabetes mellitus, primary hypogonadism, urinary phosphate wasting, and chronic renal failure. While transplantation may correct the latter, it exposes the child to other risk factors for diminished bone mass, notably the use of high-dose glucocorticoids. Our objective was to determine if these multiple risk factors translate into an increased occurrence of osteopenia, as measured by dual-energy X-ray absorptiometry (DEXA), and/or fractures in this population. We examined the charts, X-rays, and bone mineral density (BMD) of all cystinotic patients post renal transplant for whom this information was available. Lumbar spine BMD was measured by DEXA scan (Hologic 4500). Z-scores were corrected for growth parameters using previously published reference data. Fracture history and pertinent serum markers of bone metabolism were also analyzed. Of the 63 renal transplants performed at our institution, 11 children were transplanted due to cystinosis. Nine of these patients, 5 male and 4 female, had had BMD evaluations, with an average age of 14.3 years (range 5-17 years) at the time of initial BMD post transplant. The mean interval between transplant and BMD evaluation was 39 months (range 3-90 months). Surprisingly, 7 of 9 patients had normal uncorrected BMD values (z-scores -1.92 to +0.02) and 7 of 9 patients had normal corrected values (z-scores -1.20 to +1.93). Three patients suffered from a total of eight fractures. Of the 3 fracture patients, 2 had normal BMD. All patients maintained good graft function and had normal calcium/phosphate mineral status. Of note, 3 of 5 male patients had evidence of primary testicular failure at earlier ages than often described, and this may be an unrecognized risk factor for bone disease in this population. Despite the numerous risk factors for developing osteopenia, these results suggest that the majority of cystinotic patients post renal transplant do not experience reduced bone mineral content as measured by DEXA. However, the significant fracture history among these patients demonstrates that DEXA cannot be used to assess fracture risk in patients with nephropathic cystinosis.
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PMID:Osteopenia and fractures in cystinotic children post renal transplantation. 1270 Sep 67

Although steroid avoidance and withdrawal in renal transplant recipients (RTR) are actively being evaluated by physicians, the attitudes of recipients toward steroid use have not been systematically studied in the modern era. We conducted a confidential written survey of single-organ adult RTR pertaining to prednisone-related side-effects. Recipients were asked which drug they felt maximized graft life, which drug they wished to avoid if graft life was unaffected, and which drug they had most compliant with. They also rated 16 common immunosuppressive-related side-effects on a Likert scale with 1 meaning complete disagreement and 10 complete agreement with their own prednisone-attributed experience. A comparison of responses based on RTR demographic characteristics was made by ANOVA or chi-square analysis with Bonferroni correction. The questionnaire was completed by 223 recipients, of whom 93% were primary recipients, 57% were cadaveric organ recipients, and 69% were white people, 7% black people, and 23% Asian people. Age at transplant, age at survey and time since transplant were 41.5 +/- 11, 47.5 +/- 11 and 6.0 +/- 5 yr, respectively. For the entire group, overall side-effect profile for prednisone was rated as 6.1 +/- 3 on the Likert scale, while efficacy was rated as 7.3 +/- 3. If offered monotherapy, 67% preferred a calcineurin-inhibitor (CI), 23% mycophenolate mofetil (MMF)/azathioprine (AZA), and 10% prednisone. When asked which drug they would like to discontinue, 19% chose CI, 16% MMF/AZA, and 65% prednisone. Most recipients felt that CI was the most efficacious drug (80%), followed by MMF/AZA (12%), and prednisone (8%). The side-effects reported as most common were unacceptable weight gain (5.8 +/- 3) and bone/joint disease (5.3 +/- 3). The least common side-effects were blood disorders (2.2 +/- 2) and cancer (2.3 +/- 2). Black people were more likely than non-black people to report developing diabetes (p = 0.02), blood disorders (p = 0.003) and headaches (p = 0.003) as a result of prednisone use. Males reported more liver damage (p = 0.01) while females reported more body fat (p = 0.01) and fluid retention (p = 0.006). RTR >5 yr post-transplant reported more infections (p = 0.008), skin/hair problems (p = 0.02), gastrointestinal irritation (p = 0.02), and bone disease (p = 0.02) compared with RTR <1 yr. Donor source and recipient age did not determine any responses. If given a 'risk-free' choice, the majority of recipients prefer withdrawal of steroids over other agents. Demographic data may be used to predict prednisone-related side-effects and guide steroid use in this population. Study designs related to steroid withdrawal should account for patient preferences in this context.
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PMID:Renal transplant recipient attitudes toward steroid use and steroid withdrawal. 1270 80

My purpose in this article is to restore the histologic appraisal of renal bone disease to the mainstream of bone and mineral metabolism from which it has been separated for many years. Historically, both the two major components were found in varying degrees in most patients, although one or other of them often predominated. For more than 15 years bone biopsy has been used almost exclusively to classify individual patients into hyperparathyroid, osteomalacic, mixed and adynamic categories according to rigid non-overlapping criteria, and remarkably few histologic data have been reported. All metabolic bone diseases result from disordered bone remodeling, the physiologic mechanism for replacing bone that has become too old to carry out its mechanical or metabolic functions. Bone remodeling is not directly concerned with the regulation of plasma calcium, which reflects the level of equilibration at quiescent bone surfaces between systemic and bone extracellular fluid set by parathyroid hormone. The separation of remodeling from homeostasis explains the concurrence of increased turnover and decreased plasma calcium in chronic renal failure; it is the homeostatic system, rather than the remodeling system, which is resistant to parathyroid hormone. The effect of mild hyperparathyroidism is a nonspecific increase in bone turnover, of which the best index is the bone formation rate measured by double tetracycline labeling expressed per unit of bone surface. Increased turnover is always accompanied by increased reversible mineral deficit. In prolonged hyperparathyroidism there is also accelerated irreversible bone loss manifested mainly as thinning of cortical bone, detectable in chronic renal failure before any symptoms, due to increased resorption depth on the endocortical surface. In severe hyperparathyroidism resorbed bone is replaced, not by a lesser quantity of normal bone, but by a mixture of vascular fibrous tissue and woven bone, referred to as osteitis fibrosa. In osteomalacia there is increased accumulation of osteoid, due not to increased turnover, but to prolongation of mineralization lag time, which in conjunction with increased thickness, surface and volume of osteoid is diagnostic. Converting histomorphometric data into category assignment discards most of the useful information, which can be retained by two-dimensional representation of severity. For the hyperparathyroid dimension, bone formation rate measured by double tetracycline labeling expressed per unit of bone surface is the most useful although not ideal. For the osteomalacic dimension a mineralization index was constructed that is unaffected by age or race. In patients with osteitis fibrosa, bone formation rate per unit of bone surface and mineralization index were inversely correlated. For the third dimension a structure/formation index was constructed which increases with age in healthy women and shows weak inverse correlation with bone formation rate. The structure/formation index is lower than normal in patients with osteitis fibrosa, and should be useful in the study of osteopenia in chronic renal failure. Bone formation rate is low in osteomalacia, but some patients have subnormal rates through quite a different mechanism. The frequency of this finding has been overestimated for several reasons: failure to exclude atypical osteomalacia (increased surface and volume but not thickness of osteoid), use of inappropriate reference values, and failure to measure the bone formation rate on endocortical and intracortical surfaces. In healthy women bone formation rate can be zero on the cancellous surface alone. Low bone formation rate is sometimes due to diabetes but most often is the expected response to subnormal parathyroid hormone secretion accompanying an excess of calcium, a situation recognized only recently because of improvement in parathyroid hormone assay methodology. Low cancellous bone formation rate should not increase fracture risk because turnover is much lower in the peripheral than in the central skeleton, and all reports of increased fracture risk are flawed or open to different interpretation. Low bone formation rate is associated with reduced skeletal buffering of calcium and increased soft tissue calcification. This is not a new disease needing its own treatment, however, but represents the final stage of skeletal adaptation to a surfeit of calcium. The concept of adynamic bone disease has been harmful by directing attention away from the most important consequence of over-treatment of hyperparathyroidism.
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PMID:Renal bone disease: a new conceptual framework for the interpretation of bone histomorphometry. 1281 35

It is estimated that there are greater than 100000 kidney transplant recipients with a functioning graft in the United States. Recent advances in immunosuppression have improved short-term graft survival rates and decreased early mortality by decreasing the incidence and therapy for acute rejection episodes. For those accepted on the waiting list, transplant prolongs patient survival compared with remaining on dialysis. During the 1990s, 3 new immunosuppressive drugs were introduced in clinical kidney transplantation. All were approved for use by the Food and Drug Administration after large, controlled, randomized trials. Mycophenolate mofetil (MMF), when combined with cyclosporine (CSA) and prednisone, lowered acute rejection rates by nearly 50% compared with control. Tacrolimus compared with CSA also significantly reduced acute rejection rates in kidney transplant recipients, but was associated with a significant increase in posttransplant diabetes mellitus (PTDM) in the early trials. When evaluated in combination with MMF, the incidence of PTDM was much lower. At the end of the decade, sirolimus was shown in several randomized trials to lower acute rejection rates and is believed to be less nephrotoxic compared with calcineurin inhibitors. All of the randomized trials were not statistically powered to assess long-term superiority. Registry analyses have been performed that appear to show some long-term benefit of immunosuppressive therapy with MMF. Other outcome assessments in kidney transplant recipients include risk factors for chronic allograft nephropathy, hypertension, hyperlipidemia, and bone disease. Although there are few randomized trials, understanding of the significance of these common complications has progressed and strategies for therapy and intervention have been developed. This article focuses on the randomized trials of immunosuppressive therapy and complications associated with use of these drugs. In addition, we review the current management and intervention for the comorbidities associated with the long-term clinical management of the kidney transplant recipient.
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PMID:Outcomes in kidney transplantation. 1283 99

Liver transplantation is a standardized therapy for end-stage liver disease. With current immunosuppressive protocols and patient care, ten-year patient survival rate has reached 60%. Several medical complications may develop during this period, including renal dysfunction, hypertension, diabetes mellitus, hyperlipidemia, and metabolic bone disease. The aim of this article is to analyze long-term results of several clinical trials reporting common medical dysfunctions after liver transplantation and to discuss their management.
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PMID:Medical problems occurring during the long-term follow-up after liver transplantation. 1460 27


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