SUMMARY Continuous oral dimethylsulphoxide (DMSO) treatment (7-15 g/day) was given to 3 patients with amyloidosis of familial Mediterranean fever (FMF), 3 patients with idiopathic amyloidosis, and 7 patients with secondary amyloidosis. The nephrotic syndrome and various degrees of renal insufficiency were the major clinical manifestation in all cases. Renal function was used as the main parameter for evaluation of therapy. DMSO treatment for 7-16 months produced no effect in the FMF patients and in the patients with idiopathic amyloidosis; they all ran the predictable clinical course of their disease and either died of cardiac failure or have been maintained on chronic haemodialysis. In the 7 patients with secondary amyloidosis an unequivocal improvement of renal function was observed following 3-6 months of DMSO treatment. It was shown by a 30-100 % rise of creatinine clearance and a decline in proteinuria. This new equilibrium has been maintained as long as DMSO was administered. No serious side effects of DMSO were encountered. Mild nausea and an unpleasant breath odour were the patients' main concern. We conclude that a therapeutic trial with oral DMSO is warranted in all patients with secondary amyloidosis. This treatment is unpleasant but bears no exceptional risks. It may significantly prolong life, though its effects on amyloid deposits themselves is doubtful.
Perforating foot ulcers constitute a major problem in diabetics with peripheral neuropathy for which no specific therapy is available. Twenty patients with chronic, resistant mal perforant were treated by local application of dimethylsulfoxide (DMSO) solution. Complete healing of the ulcers was achieved in 14 patients following 4-15 weeks of daily treatment. Partial resolution was observed in another four patients, and in the remaining two there was no effect. A control group, equal in number, was treated conventionally. Complete healing of the ulcers took place in only two patients. The therapeutic effect of DMSO most probably results from an increase in tissue oxygen saturation via a combined mechanism of local vasodilatation, decreased thrombocyte aggregation, and increased oxygen diffusion. Local DMSO is effective, simple, devoid of systemic side effects, and inexpensive. It should be employed for diabetic foot ulcers prior to the consideration of surgical measures.
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