Artículo de revista
Hypophosphatemic osteomalacia acquired after renal transplantation: a a cause of severe osteoporosis Osteomalacia hipofosfémica adquirida post-trasplante renal: una causa de osteoporosis grave.
Fecha
1995Registro en:
Revista medica de Chile, Volumen 123, Issue 1, 2018, Pages 85-89
00349887
Autor
González González, Larry Javier
Gómez Gómez, Fredy Arizmendy
Ayala,
Roessler, Emilio
Institución
Resumen
Renal osteodystrophy improves after renal transplantation but, after the procedure, other forms of bone disease emerge. We report a male patient that received a renal allograft four years before, who consulted for low back pain secondary to multiple vertebral compression fractures. The patient had good renal function, a parathormone independent hyperphosphaturia, normal 25-OH cholecalciferol, increased urinary hydroxyproline, decreased osteocalcin, reduced bone density and a bone biopsy revealing osteomalacia. The diagnosis of hypophosphatemic osteomalacia was reached and treatment with phosphates and ergocalciferol was started but, despite this, the patient suffered a new fracture two years later. Two mechanisms can produce hypophosphatemia after a renal transplantation: a parathormone excess due to the previous renal failure, that disappears during the first year after the transplantation or a derangement in renal phosphate transport that can be due to a generalized proximal tubule s