RESUMO
Rhabdomyolysis is a major cause of acute kidney failure. The etiology is diverse, from full-blown crush syndrome to less frequent causes, such as metabolic myopathy. We describe the case of a 35-year-old male with a history of intermittent myalgias who was admitted to hospital with acute renal failure secondary to rhabdomyolysis. Moderate to intense diffuse uptake of technetium-99m was seen in soft tissues at scintigraphy. The diagnosis of metabolic myopathy was confirmed after careful workup and genetic testing.
Assuntos
Injúria Renal Aguda/etiologia , Doenças Musculares/complicações , Adulto , Humanos , Masculino , Doenças Musculares/metabolismoRESUMO
Secondary hyperparathyroidism (SHPT) is an integral component of the chronic kidney disease-mineral and bone disorder (CKD-MBD). Many factors have been associated with the development and progression of SHPT but the presence of skeletal or calcemic resistance to the action of PTH in CKD has often gone unnoticed. The term hyporesponsiveness to PTH is currently preferred and, in this chapter, we will not only review the scientific timeline but also some of the molecular mechanisms behind. Moreover, the presence of resistance to the biological action of PTH is not unique in CKD since resistance to other hormones has also been described ("uremia as a receptor disease"). This hyporesponsiveness carries out important clinical implications since it explains, at least partially, not only the progressive nature of the pathogenesis of CKD-related PTH hypersecretion and parathyroid hyperplasia but also the increasing prevalence of adynamic bone disease in the CKD population. Therefore, we underline the importance of PTH control in all CKD stages, but not aiming to completely normalize PTH levels since a certain degree of SHPT may represent an adaptive clinical response. Future studies at the molecular level, i.e. on uremia or the recent description of the calcium-sensing receptor as a phosphate sensor, may become of great value beyond their significance to explain just the hyporesponsiveness to PTH in CKD.
Assuntos
Hiperparatireoidismo Secundário , Insuficiência Renal Crônica , Uremia , Humanos , Hiperparatireoidismo Secundário/complicações , Hiperparatireoidismo Secundário/etiologia , Hormônio Paratireóideo , Fosfatos , Receptores de Detecção de Cálcio , Insuficiência Renal Crônica/complicações , Uremia/complicaçõesRESUMO
Chronic kidney disease-mineral and bone disorder (CKD-MBD) is one of the many important complications associated with CKD and may at least partially explain the extremely high morbidity and mortality among CKD patients. The 2009 Kidney Disease: Improving Global Outcomes (KDIGO) Clinical Practice Guideline document was based on the best information available at that time and was designed not only to provide information but also to assist in decision-making. In addition to the international KDIGO Work Group, which included worldwide experts, an independent Evidence Review Team was assembled to ensure rigorous review and grading of the existing evidence. Based on the evidence from new clinical trials, an updated Clinical Practice Guideline was published in 2017. In this review, we focus on the conceptual and practical evolution of clinical guidelines (from eMinence-based medicine to eVidence-based medicine and 'living' guidelines), highlight some of the current important CKD-MBD-related changes, and underline the poor or extremely poor level of evidence present in those guidelines (as well as in other areas of nephrology). Finally, we emphasize the importance of individualization of treatments and shared decision-making (based on important ethical considerations and the 'best available evidence'), which may prove useful in the face of the uncertainty over the decision whether 'to treat' or 'to wait'.
RESUMO
El hiperparatiroidismo secundario es uno de los componentes integrales de las alteraciones del metabolismo óseo-mineral en la enfermedad renal crónica (ERC) o complejo chronic kidney disease-mineral bone disorder. Se ha demostrado que en el desarrollo y progresión del hiperparatiroidismo secundario intervienen muchos factores, estrechamente interrelacionados, pero la presencia e importancia de la hiporrespuesta (o resistencia) a la acción de la hormona paratiroidea (PTH) es poco comprendida. En esta revisión analizaremos sus antecedentes, factores que intervienen, así como alguno de los mecanismos moleculares que podrían explicarla. La presencia de resistencia a la acción biológica de la PTH no es única en la ERC, ya que también se presenta para otras hormonas, habiéndose incluso usado el término de «uremia como una enfermedad de receptores». Esta hiporrespuesta a la PTH tiene importantes implicaciones clínicas, dado que no solo permite explicar parte de la patogenia progresiva de la hipersecreción de PTH e hiperplasia paratiroidea, sino también la creciente prevalencia de enfermedad ósea adinámica en la población con ERC. De este modo, subrayamos la importancia de controlar, sin normalizar completamente, los niveles de PTH en los distintos estadios de ERC, dado que un cierto incremento de sus niveles supone inicialmente una adaptación clínica. Futuros estudios a nivel molecular sobre la uremia, o la reciente descripción del efecto directo del fosfato sobre la actividad del receptor sensor de calcio como sensor de fosfato, podrían resultar valiosos incluso más allá de explicar la hiporrespuesta a la PTH en la ERC. (AU)
Secondary hyperparathyroidism (SHPT) is an integral component of the chronic kidney diseasemineral and bone disorder (CKDMBD). Many factors have been associated with the development and progression of SHPT but the presence of skeletal or calcemic resistance to the action of PTH in CKD has often gone unnoticed. The term hyporesponsiveness to PTH is currently preferred and, in this chapter, we will not only review the scientific timeline but also some of the molecular mechanisms behind. Moreover, the presence of resistance to the biological action of PTH is not unique in CKD since resistance to other hormones has also been described (uremia as a receptor disease). This hyporesponsiveness carries out important clinical implications since it explains, at least partially, not only the progressive nature of the pathogenesis of CKD-related PTH hypersecretion and parathyroid hyperplasia but also the increasing prevalence of adynamic bone disease in the CKD population. Therefore, we underline the importance of PTH control in all CKD stages, but not aiming to completely normalize PTH levels since a certain degree of SHPT may represent an adaptive clinical response. Future studies at the molecular level, i.e. on uremia, or the recent description of the calcium-sensing receptor as a phosphate sensor, may become of great value beyond their significance to explain just the hyporesponsiveness to PTH in CKD. (AU)