Internal Medicine

(Wang) #1

0521779407-09 CUNY1086/Karliner 0 521 77940 7 June 4, 2007 21:13


Hyperoxaluria Hyperphosphatemia 757

Routine
■monitor renal function regularly (frequency determined on individ-
ual basis)
complications and prognosis
Complications
■PHI: recurrent urolithiasis
■end-stage renal disease in nearly all if untreated (50% by age 15 years,
80% by age 30 years)
■recurrent disease in 100% if renal transplant alone (15–25% 3-year
graft survival)
■systemic oxalate deposition (e.g., liver, brain not affected)
■pathologic fractures
■cardiac conduction defect: sudden death
■PHII: may have recurrent urolithiasis
■may be asymptomatic
Prognosis
■PHI: end-stage renal disease in 50% by 15 years
■80% 5 year survival with combined liver/kidney transplant, 70% at
10 years
■15–25% 3 year survival of graft if kidney only transplant
■reversal of systemic storage in bone, heart, vessels, nerve after liver
transplant
■PHII: considered more benign that PHI, but end-stage renal disease
may develop (12% of patients 23–50 years)
■outcome of organ transplantation unknown

Hyperphosphatemia..................................


SHARON M. MOE, MD


history & physical
History
■Renal failure
■Tumor lysis syndrome
■Rhabdomyolysis

Signs & Symptoms
■Asymptomatic unless hypocalcemia occurs leading to tetany, or with
metastatic calcification due to precipitation of insoluble calcium
phosphorus complexes and decreased calcitrol synthesis
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