0521779407-23 CUNY1086/Karliner 0 521 77940 7 June 4, 2007 21:24
Wilson’s Disease X-Linked Hypophosphatemia 1557
■CBC & urinalysis every 2 weeks during first 2 months of penicillamine
therapy
■CBC, AST, and ALT every 2 weeks during therapy with ammonium
tetrathiomolybdate
■Annual slit-lamp examination
complications and prognosis
■Hepatic: occurs at mean age of 8–12 years; 5–30% of patients with
Wilson’s present with chronic hepatitis; consider liver transplanta-
tion for fulminant hepatitis or decompensated cirrhosis.
■Neurologic: often occurs in 2ndto 3rddecades of life; initial presen-
tation in one-third of patients
■Psychiatric: occurs in one-third of patients; requires chelation ther-
apy
■Acute intravascular hemolysis: presenting feature in up to 15%; often
seen with fulminant hepatitis; usually transient
■Renal: includes renal tubular acidosis, nephrocalcinosis, hematuria,
aminoaciduria; chelation improves renal function.
■Symptomatic arthropathy: occurs in 25–50% of all patients, resem-
bling premature osteoarthritis; 50% have osteomalacia, osteoporo-
sis, or both
■Cardiac: arrhythmias & cardiomyopathy may develop; rarely clini-
cally evident
■Cholelithiasis: pigment & cholesterol gallstones
■Malignancy: cholangiocarcinoma, HCC, and adenocarcinoma of
indeterminate origin may develop in 4–15% of patients, regardless
of treatment
Prognosis
■Generally excellent in patients compliant with therapy
X-LINKED HYPOPHOSPHATEMIA
MICHEL BAUM, MD
history & physical
■Rickets resistant to vitamin D therapy, failure to thrive, short stature,
dental abscesses, males more severely affected
tests
■Hypophosphatemia, inappropriately normal serum 1,25 dihydroxy
vitamin D