Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0035078 (renal failure)
31,970 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Four patients with end-stage renal failure on intermittent hemodialysis in whom rhabdomyolysis developed after major surgery are described. This possibly underdiagnosed complication was manifested by extreme hyperphosphatemia, hypocalcemia, and elevated creatine phosphokinase levels. Serum myoglobin levels further supported the diagnosis. The metabolic abnormalities reached a peak on the fourth postoperative day. The possible precipitating factors included opiates used for anesthesia and postoperative pain control, anesthetic agents, and surgical position. The preferred treatment option is increasing dialysis to control hyperphosphatemia and hypocalcemia.
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PMID:Postoperative rhabdomyolysis in patients with end-stage renal failure. 950 95

A patient with severe metabolic acidosis and an extremely elevated (57 mEq/L) serum anion gap (AG) is described, and the multiple factors that produced the patient's complex abnormalities are discussed in detail. These include renal failure, rhabdomyolysis, marked hyperphosphatemia, hemoconcentration, and an unidentified organic metabolic acidosis. A review of the literature indicates that the common thread observed in almost each instance of profoundly elevated AG values is a multifactorial pathogenesis that usually includes renal insufficiency, associated with a proven or likely cause of organic metabolic acidosis, or with exogenous phosphate intoxication.
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PMID:Metabolic acidosis with extreme elevation of anion gap: case report and literature review. 989 70

The number of patients with significant chronic renal failure is expanding rapidly in the United States. All physicians and medical-care providers will have an increasingly important role in the detection and management of renal failure in patients who are not undergoing dialysis. Patients with diabetes or hypertension should be carefully monitored for the development of renal insufficiency by using screening tools such as blood pressure measurement, determination of serum creatinine, urinalysis, and determination of 24-hour urinary microalbuminuria. In order to slow the progression of renal disease, attenuate uremic complications, and prepare patients with renal failure for renal replacement therapy, all medical-care providers should "take care of the BEANS." Blood pressure should be maintained in a target range lower than 130/85 mm Hg, and in many patients, angiotensin-converting enzyme inhibitors may be beneficial. Erythropoietin should be used to maintain the hemoglobin level at 10 to 12 g/dL. Access for long-term dialysis should be created when the serum creatinine value increases above 4.0 mg/dL or the glomerular filtration rate declines below 20 mL/min. Nutritional status must be closely monitored in order to avoid protein malnutrition and to initiate dialysis before the patient's nutritional status has deteriorated. Nutritional care also involves correction of acidosis, prevention and treatment of hyperphosphatemia, and administration of vitamin supplements to provide folic acid. Specialty referral to nephrology should occur when the creatinine level increases above 3.0 mg/dL or when the involvement of a nephrologist would be beneficial for ongoing management of the patient.
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PMID:A practical approach to the management of patients with chronic renal failure. 1008 97

A case of calcinosis cutis, appeared since childhood in a woman 73-years-old, affected by diabetes mellitus with complications, is described. This uncommon disorder is discussed on the basis of data from recent literature. Calcinosis cutis is a condition characterized by the deposition of crystals of calcium phosphate (hydroxyapatite) in the skin. Calcinosis cutis may be idiopathic or secondary. The idiopathic calcinosis cutis is uncommon, may be solitary or multiple, sporadic or associated with Down syndrome (MICC or "milialike idiopathic calcinosis cutis") and appears more often in childhood or adolescence. Secondary calcinosis cutis may appear in the course of juvenile dermatomyositis or in the form of systemic scleroderma named CREST syndrome (calcinosis cutis, Raynaud's phenomenon, esophageal dysfunction, sclerodactyly and telangectasia). Calcinosis cutis may also be seen later in the course of renal failure, associated with hyperphosphatemia and secondary hyperparathyroidism. In this case report, calcinosis cutis appeared early in life and the laboratory data showed normal erythrocyte sedimentation rate and leukocyte count, negative LE test and absence of rheumatoid factor and non-organ-specific auto-antibodies, and multiple localizations. On these grounds, the diagnosis of idiopathic multiple calcinosis cutis was made. This is a rare and benign syndrome, which does not cause any late complication and whose prognosis is therefore favourable.
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PMID:[A case of idiopathic multiple calcinosis cutis]. 1018 2

We report a case of a 23-year-old Japanese woman who had severe hyperparathyroidism associated with chronic renal failure before the start of dialysis treatment. Her chief complaints were swelling and pain in both shoulders. Laboratory examination revealed renal failure (BUN 134 mg/dl, serum Cr 7.3 mg/dl), severe normocytic normochromic anemia (hemoglobin 4.3 g/dl), hypercalcemia (11.8 mg/dl), and hyperphosphatemia (9.7 mg/dl). Serum PTH levels were extremely increased (intact PTH >1,000 pg/ml: normal range 10-50 pg/ml). X-ray examination of the skull and shoulders showed a salt and pepper appearance, and cauliflower-like deformity of the distal end of both clavicles, respectively. Accelerated ectopic calcification was observed in the costal cartilages, internal carotid arteries, and splenic arteries. Ultrasonographic examination revealed enlargement of the four parathyroid glands. Thallium-technetium subtraction scintigraphy of the parathyroid glands showed increased uptake into the upper two. Renal needle biopsy revealed severe impairment of the interstitium and tubules with much milder changes in glomeruli. The etiology of the renal failure could not be identified. Hemodialysis, total parathyroidectomy and auto-transplantation into the forearm were immediately performed. The pathological diagnosis was chief cell hyperplasia of the parathyroid glands. Based on the presence of chronic renal failure, remarkable hyperphosphatemia with mild hypercalcemia, an unusually high level of serum PTH, and accelerated ectopic calcification, the patient was diagnosed to have severe secondary hyperparathyroidism caused by chronic renal failure with major impairment of the renal interstitium and tubules.
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PMID:Severe hyperparathyroidism with hypercalcemia associated with chronic renal failure at pre-dialysis stage. 1042 82

In patients with chronic renal insufficiency, phosphate retention is a major factor in the development of secondary hyperparathyroidism, renal osteodystrophy, and soft tissue calcification, and may contribute to progression of renal failure. Prevention of phosphate retention with dietary and pharmacological means, along with the administration of calcitriol, may prevent or reverse secondary hyperparathyroidism. With more-advanced renal failure, phosphate binders become necessary to maintain phosphate balance and to prevent hyperphosphatemia. Because of toxicity, aluminum-containing phosphate binders are no longer used. Currently, calcium-containing phosphate binders, such as calcium carbonate and calcium acetate, are the most widely prescribed. Although calcium salts eliminate the problems associated with aluminum toxicity, they often result in transient hypercalcemia, requiring discontinuation of calcitriol and the use of low-calcium dialysate. Several new non- aluminum- and non-calcium-containing phosphate binders are currently at various stages of development, and may provide an alternative to the currently used binders. It is unlikely, however, that the newer compounds will completely replace calcium salts, since mild hypercalcemia may be necessary in chronic renal failure patients to suppress parathyroid hormone production. Other areas of investigation must include the development of drugs to inhibit soft tissue and renal calcifications, and to enhance urinary phosphate excretion.
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PMID:Phosphate binders for control of phosphate retention in chronic renal failure. 1050 31

Alterations in phosphate homeostasis play an important role in the development of secondary hyperparathyroidism in renal failure. Until recently, it was accepted that phosphate retention only increased parathyroid hormone (PTH) secretion through indirect mechanisms affecting calcium regulation and calcitriol synthesis. However, recent in vitro studies have suggested that phosphate may directly affect PTH secretion. Our goal was to determine whether in vivo an intravenous phosphate infusion stimulated PTH secretion in the absence of changes in serum calcium. Three different doses of phosphate were infused intravenously during 120 minutes to increase the serum phosphate concentration in dogs. Sulfate was also infused intravenously as a separate experimental control. A simultaneous calcium clamp was performed to maintain a normal ionized calcium concentration throughout all studies. At the lowest dose of infused phosphate (1.2 mmol/kg), serum phosphate values increased to approximately 3 mM, but PTH values did not increase. At higher doses of infused phosphate (1.6 mmol/kg and 2.4 mmol/kg), the increase in serum phosphate to values of approximately 4 mM and 5 mM, respectively, was associated with increases in PTH, even though the ionized calcium concentration did not change. Increases in PTH were not observed until 30-60 minutes into the study. These increases were not sustained, since by 120 minutes PTH values were not different from baseline or controls despite the maintenance of marked hyperphosphatemia. During the sulfate infusion, serum sulfate values increased by approximately 3-fold, but no change in PTH values were observed. In conclusion, an acute elevation in serum phosphate stimulated PTH secretion in the intact animal, but the magnitude of hyperphosphatemia exceeded the physiologic range. Future studies are needed to determine whether PTH stimulation is more sensitive to phosphate loading in states of chronic phosphate retention. Moreover, the mechanisms responsible for the delay in PTH stimulation and the failure to sustain the increased PTH secretion need further evaluation.
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PMID:Effect of phosphate on parathyroid hormone secretion in vivo. 1057 84

Uremic patients on maintenance hemodialysis are in positive phosphate balance. This is mainly the result of the complex elimination kinetics of phosphate during dialysis. Removal of phosphate is less than net dietary intake. Classical phosphate binders such as calcium carbonate, calcium acetate, and aluminum-based compounds are limited by side effects (hypercalcemia) and outright toxicity (aluminium). There have been numerous recent attempts to develop alternative phosphate binders, e.g., polyallylamine-hydrochloride (Renagel), lanthanum carbonate, and trivalent iron-containing compounds. The latter is based on old observations that iron salts may cause hyperphosphatemia and rickets in experimental animals and in patients. This idea has recently been taken up again, and effective inhibition of net intestinal phosphate uptake in non-uremic and uremic rats has been shown using simple iron salts (citrate, chloride, ammonium citrate) and complex compounds (cross-linked dextran and stabilized polynuclear iron hydroxide). In uremic rats, the latter compound reduces urinary phosphate excretion as an indicator of reduced intestinal phosphate uptake and has also been shown to be effective in subjects with preterminal renal failure. So far, no side effects or short-term toxicity has been observed. The compound appears promising and deserves further evaluation.
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PMID:Phosphate binders on iron basis: a new perspective? 1063 63

Despite three decades of intensive research on the derangements of calcium phosphate metabolism of renal failure, several unresolved issues are still with us at the turn of the millennium: poor control of hyperphosphatemia, relative inefficacy of active vitamin D to prevent progressive parathyroid hyperplasia, and persistence of bone disease despite lowering of parathyroid hormone (PTH) and administration of active vitamin D. Although predictions are problematic, it is not unreasonable to hope that, barring unforeseen side effects, calcimimetics will prove to be valuable for suppressing or even preventing hyperparathyroidism, thus potentially replacing, at least in part, active vitamin D. There is also reason to hope that more effective phosphate binders with fewer side effects will become available and that controlled studies will provide a rationale for the administration of estrogens to dialyzed women. As regards understanding the pathological mechanisms, one can anticipate that the disturbances leading to autonomous growth of parathyroid cells will be elucidated and the signals involved in osteoclast/osteoblast differentiation pathways and osteoclast/osteoblast coupling will be clarified, with obvious impact on patient management.
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PMID:Osteodystrophy in the millennium. 1063 73

Histopathological and pathophysiological investigations including the genetic approach have been contributing to management of renal hyperparathyroidism (HPT). In renal failure, parathyroid glands initially proliferate diffusely and polyclonally, and then are transformed to monoclonal nodular hyperplasia with aggressive growth potential and diminished expression of both the vitamin D receptor and calcium-sensing receptor. When more than one parathyroid gland progresses to nodular hyperplasia, HPT is refractory to medical treatment. To prevent advanced renal HPT, progression to nodular hyperplasia should be avoided. Control of hyperphosphatemia is very important to prevent advanced renal HPT, but it is usually difficult. Administration of vitamin D metabolites constitutes the most promising form of prophylaxis and should be performed with monitoring of the PTH level to avoid adynamic bone disease. Calcitriol pulse therapy is effective for advanced renal HPT; however, when parathyroid glands progress to nodular hyperplasia, surgical treatment should be considered. Measuring parathyroid volume by ultrasonography is useful for detecting nodular glands and deciding treatment options. Parathyroidectomy (PTx) is an effective treatment for advanced renal HPT. However, the timing of the operation is important, because the improvement of skeletal deformity and vessel calcification inducing high mortality risk cannot be expected even after successful surgery. Total PTx with forearm autograft is a suitable procedure for renal HPT. Recently. selective percutaneous ethanol injection therapy has been adopted as an alternative treatment to PTx, and new vitamin D analogues, phosphate binders without calcium, and calcimimetics have been developed as new options for management of renal HPT.
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PMID:Management of renal hyperparathyroidism. 1091 87


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