The identification of ultrastructural patterns in these nephropathies is important. GN with organized microtubular monoclonal deposits (GOMMID) probably accounts for a large proportion of immunotactoid (microtubular) GN cases.
The aim of this study was to estimate the incidence of COVID-19 disease in the French national population of dialysis patients, their course of illness and to identify the risk factors associated with mortality. Our study included all patients on dialysis recorded in the French REIN Registry in April 2020. Clinical characteristics at last follow-up and the evolution of COVID-19 illness severity over time were recorded for diagnosed cases (either suspicious clinical symptoms, characteristic signs on the chest scan or a positive reverse transcription polymerase chain reaction) for SARS-CoV-2. A total of 1,621 infected patients were reported on the REIN registry from March 16th, 2020 to May 4th, 2020. Of these, 344 died. The prevalence of COVID-19 patients varied from less than 1% to 10% between regions. The probability of being a case was higher in males, patients with diabetes, those in need of assistance for transfer or treated at a self-care unit. Dialysis at home was associated with a lower probability of being infected as was being a smoker, a former smoker, having an active malignancy, or peripheral vascular disease. Mortality in diagnosed cases (21%) was associated with the same causes as in the general population. Higher age, hypoalbuminemia and the presence of an ischemic heart disease were statistically independently associated with a higher risk of death. Being treated at a selfcare unit was associated with a lower risk. Thus, our study showed a relatively low frequency of COVID-19 among dialysis patients contrary to what might have been assumed.
Contradictions exist in the literature regarding the effect of gastric secretion inhibition on phosphate absorption. In healthy controls, omeprazole would decrease the hyperphosphatemia or the hyperphosphaturia induced by an acute phosphate load, suggesting an inhibition of phosphate absorption. In chronic hemodialysis patients, gastric hypersecretion is associated with hyperphosphatemia, but inhibition of gastric hypersecretion by ranitidine in those receiving calcium carbonate (CaCO3) as a phosphate binder would paradoxically exacerbate their hyperphosphatemia. Because of these conflicting observations, we performed an open crossover study on 16 chronic stable hemodialyzed patients with a daily mean intake of 9.4+/-4 g of CaCO3, and we compared the plasmatic predialysis levels of phosphate, calcium, protides, bicarbonates, intact parathyroid hormone (PTH), urea, and creatininemia during 2 successive periods of 2 months, the first one without omeprazole and the second one with 20 mg omeprazole intake in the morning. Phosphatemia increased with omeprazole but not significantly from 1.80+/-0.38 to 1.89+/-0.42 mM whereas corrected calcemia decreased significantly (p = 0.04) from 2.41+/-0.18 to 2.36+/-0.16 mM as did bicarbonatemia from 26.7+/-3.5 to 25.7+/-3.1 mM (p < 0.05). No change in creatininemia or in blood urea was observed, suggesting the stable efficiency of dialysis as well as the stable intakes of protein and therefore of phosphate during the two study periods. In conclusion, inhibition of gastric secretion by omeprazole increases the plasmatic phosphate predialytic level but in a nonsignificant way. This increase may be explained by a slight but significant concomitant decrease of calcemia and bicarbonatemia. These results do not support the phosphate binding efficiency of CaCO3 being decreased by the inhibition of gastric acid secretion.
This article reviews the clinical, biological, radiological, and pathological procedures and their respective indications for the practical diagnosis of the following various histological patterns of renal osteodystrophy: osteitis fibrosa due to parathyroid hormone (PTH) hypersecretion: osteomalacia or rickets due to native vitamin D deficiency and/or aluminum overload; and adynamic bone disease (ABD) due to aluminum overload and/or PTH secretion oversuppression. Our advice regarding bone biopsy is to restrict it to patients with symptoms and hypercalcemia, especially those who have been previously exposed to aluminum. In other cases, we propose relying merely on the determination of the plasma concentrations of calcium, protide, phosphate, bicarbonate, intact PTH, aluminum, 25(OH)D3, and alkaline phosphatase (total and bony if hepatic disease is associated) to choose the appropriate treatment. Because of the danger of the desferrioxamine treatment necessary to chelate and remove aluminum, the suspicion of aluminic bone disease (osteomalacia or ABD) will always be confirmed by a bone biopsy. In the case of nonaluminic osteomalacia, correction of the vitamin D deficiency by native vitamin D or 25(OH)D3, and of the calcium deficiency and acidosis by alkaline salts of calcium and if necessary sodium bicarbonate are sufficient to cure the disease. In the case of nonaluminic ABD, the stimulation of PTH secretion by the discontinuation of 1alpha hydroxylated vitamin D and the induction of a negative calcium balance during dialysis by decreasing the calcium concentration in the dialysate will allow an increase of the CaCO3 dose to correct for hyperphosphatemia without inducing hypercalcemia. For hyperparathyroidism, i.e., plasma intact PTH levels greater than two- or four-fold the upper limit of normal levels (according to the absence or presence of previous aluminum exposure), the treatment will consist in increasing the CaCO3 dose to correct for hyperphosphatemia together with a decrease of the calcium concentration in the dialysate if the dose of CaCO3 is so high that it induces hypercalcemia. When the hyperphosphatemia has been corrected and there is still a low or normal corrected plasma calcium level, 1alpha(OH)D3 in an oral bolus 2 or 3 times a week should be given at the minimal dose of 1 microg. When the PTH level stays above 400 pg while hypercalcemia occurs and hyperphosphatemia persists, surgical subtotal parathyroidectomy is recommended or the injection of calcitriol into the big nodular hyperplastic parathyroid glands under sonography control in high surgical risk patients. Special recommendations are given for children.
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