In renal osteodystrophy the OPG/OPGL system is involved in the regulation of bone turnover induced by PTH. The determination of serum OPG levels could be of use in the diagnosis of low turnover bone disease, at least in association with PTH levels < or =300 pg/ml.
Background: Comparison of renal osteodystrophy in predialysis and hemodialysis has been rarely reported. Distinct patterns of renal osteodystrophy could be found in these conditions. In addition the use of parathyroid hormone (PTH) and other markers for noninvasive diagnosis may result in different predictive values in predialysis and hemodialysis patients. Methods: 79 consecutive patients with conservative chronic renal failure and 107 patients on hemodialysis were studied. All patients were subjected to bone biopsy for histological and histomorphometric evaluation. The patients had no exposure to aluminium before dialysis and relatively low exposure while on hemodialysis. Results: In the predialysis patients, bone biopsies showed 9 cases of adynamic bone disease (ABD) and 8 cases of osteomalacia (OM), 50 patients with mixed osteodystrophy and 2 cases of hyperparathyroidism. Among the hemodialysis patients 12 cases had ABD, 3 cases OM, 30 mixed osteodystrophy, and 61 patients hyperparathyroidism. In the predialysis patients with chronic renal failure, bone aluminium was on average 4.5 mg/kg dry weight, while in dialysis patients the average value was 35.4 mg/kg dry weight. Discriminant analysis of low turnover osteodystrophy (ABD and OM) by intact PTH showed higher accuracy in dialysis than in predialysis patients. Correlation studies of intact PTH versus bone formation rate, osteoblast surface/bone surface and osteoclast surface/bone surface showed significantly steeper slopes in dialysis than in predialysis patients, which indicates that bone resistance to PTH is more marked in predialysis patients. Conclusions: The prevalence of ABD and OM in the geographic area investigated is lower than in other reports. Aluminium exposure does not seem to be the cause of low turnover osteodystrophy in the present population. The predictive value of intact PTH in the noninvasive diagnosis of renal bone disease is higher in hemodialysis patients than in predialysis patients. Predialysis chronic renal failure, when compared to the dialysis stage, seems to be characterized by resistance of bone tissue to PTH.
To evaluate the long-term results of parathyroidectomy (PTX) on parathyroid function, blood pressure and anemia, data of 45 patients with secondary Hyperparathyroidism in dialysis who had undergone PTX were collected retrospectively from 8 different dialysis units. The patients, 25 M and 20 F, mean age 56 ± 11 years, who were followed up for an average period of 3.3 ± 2.3 years, were divided into four groups according to the surgical procedure: 19 patients had had a subtotal PTX; 10 patients had undergone total PTX with autotransplantation (AT); 10 patients had had total PTX without AT, and 6 patients had undergone partial PTX. Taking a reduction in intact PTH >50% as sign of successful PTX, only 5 patients did not attain this result. Considering values of PTH between 20 and 200 pg/ml at the mid-term observation (1–2 years) as the optimal result, values under 20 pg/ml as an expression of permanent hypoparathyroidism, and those above 200 pg/ml as indicating persistent/recurrent hyperparathyroidism, 65.5% of patients operated with subtotal PTX and total PTX + AT had a therapeutic success, versus 31.2% of patients in the other two groups, due to excess permanent hypoparathyroidism and persistent/recurrent hyperparathyroidism; 20 of 45 patients with preoperative hypertension experienced a statistically and clinically significant decrease in blood pressure levels. An increase in serum hemoglobin was also observed, despite a reduction of administered erythropoietin. In conclusion, the results of PTX obtained from this multicenter study are comparable to those reported by single leading centers. Recommended surgical procedures are subtotal PTX and total PTX with AT. The fall in blood pressure in hypertensive patients is clinically significant, and improvement in anemia is also observed with a reduction in erythropoietin dosage.
BackgroundAtherosclerotic ischemic renal disease is a frequent cause of end-stage renal failure leading to dialysis among the elderly; Its prevalence is inferred from autopsy or retrospective arteriographic studies. This study has been conducted on 269 subjects over 50 with hypertension and/or CRF, unrelated to other known causes of renal disease.MethodsAll 269 patients were studied either by color-flow duplex sonography (n = 238) or by renal scintigraphy (n = 224), and 199 of the 269 patients were evaluated using both of these techniques. 40 patients, found to have renal artery stenosis (RAS), were subjected to 3D-contrast enhancement Magnetic Resonance Angiography (MRA) and/or Selective Angiography (SA). An additional 23 cases, negative both to scintigraphy and to ultrasound study, underwent renal angiography (MRA and/or SA).ResultsColor-duplex sonography, carried out in 238 patients, revealed 49 cases of RAS. MR or SA was carried out in 35 of these 49 patients, and confirmed the diagnosis in 33. Color-duplex sonography showed a PPV value of 94.3% and NPV of 87.0% while renal scintigraphy, carried out in 224 patients, had a PPV of 72.2% and a NPV of 29.4%. Patients with RAS showed a higher degree of renal insufficiency compared to non stenotic patients while there were no differences in proteinuria. RAS, based on color-duplex sonography studies, was present in 11% of patients in the age group 50–59, 18% in the 60–69 and 23% at age 70 and above.ConclusionsA relatively large percentage of the elderly population with renal insufficiency and/or hypertension is affected by RAS and is at risk of developing end-stage renal failure. Color-duplex ultrasonography is a valid routine method of investigation of population at risk for renal artery stenosis.
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