Kidney disease has not been considered a frequent complication in Down syndrome (DS) patients; a variety of urological abnormalities and glomerulopathies have been reported in this population, and some DS patients develop chronic renal failure (CRF). The aim of this study was to improve the understanding of renal disease in patients with DS, focusing on the incidence and range of kidney and urological abnormalities in a population of DS patients. A cross-sectional study was carried out in DS patients referred from a pediatric genetics unit of a tertiary care center. Medical records were reviewed. A 24-h urine specimen and a blood sample were obtained. Fractional excretion of sodium and potassium, tubular reabsorption of phosphate, urinary excretion of calcium, magnesium, uric acid, creatinine clearance and proteinuria were determined. Ultrasound was performed to evaluate the kidneys and the urinary tract. Laboratory data were reviewed for any possible renal disorder. Sixty-nine patients, aged 12 months to 24 years, were recruited. Pathological findings included three cases of voiding disturbances and a case of hypertension in a 7-year old girl. Eight patients (11.6%) had hyperuricemia without gout. Eighteen patients (24.2%) had hyperuricosuria. Urinalysis revealed three cases of mild proteinuria and two patients with microscopic hematuria. Minor radiological abnormalities were found in five patients (7.3%). Three patients (4.5%) had CRF. Renal disease in patients with DS is not as rare as previously thought, although the majority of findings are of minor relevance. According to the variety of pathologies, and in order to detect early irreversible renal injury, it seems quite reasonable to perform regular monitoring of renal function in these patients.
Nutritional status was evaluated in 15 children (11 males) with moderate chronic renal failure (CRF). Two 3-day prospective dietary records, anthropometric measures and biochemical determinations were performed 3 months apart. Energy, protein, carbohydrate, fat, polyunsaturated, monounsaturated and saturated fatty acid intakes, expressed as percentages of international recommendations, were 87 +/- 14, 223 +/- 42, 73 +/- 12, 110 +/- 27, 55 +/- 31, 129 +/- 51 and 111 +/- 26%, respectively. The relative distribution of calories was 15 +/- 2% from proteins, 48 +/- 5% from carbohydrates and 37 +/- 5% from lipids. Anthropometric indices, expressed as standard deviation score, were: weight -0.50 +/- 0.8, height -0.94 +/- 1.3, growth velocity -0.61 +/- 1.8, triceps skinfold thickness -0.30 +/- 0.6, subscapular skinfold thickness -0.19 +/- 0.8, mid-arm muscle circumference 0.38 +/- 0.3 and body mass index -0.22 +/- 1.0. Serum concentrations of albumin, total protein, transferrin, IgG, IgA, IgM, C3 and C4 and blood lymphocyte counts were within normal limits. The mean serum insulin-like growth factor-I concentration, expressed as standard deviation score, as 0.74 +/- 1.5. No anthropometric or biochemical signs of malnutrition were found in children with moderate CRF. However, their dietary intake of calories and carbohydrates was low and the protein and saturated fatty acid intake excessively high.
The syndrome of renal tubular acidosis (RTA) and nerve deafness is a distinct nosological entity that is inherited as an autosomal recessive trait. We studied a pair of dizygotic twin brothers both with nerve deafness but only one with RTA. Distal RTA was diagnosed in twin A because of inappropriately high urinary pH (6.9) and low net acid excretion (40.0 muEq/min per 1.73 m2) in the presence of hyperchloraemic metablic acidosis, and fractional bicarbonate excretion of 1.6% at a normal serum bicarbonate concentration. The urine minus blood PCO2 differences (U-B PCO2) during a neutral sodium phosphate load and in alkaline urine induced by bicarbonate supplementation were: 11 and 0 mm Hg, respectively. Twin A developed nephrocalcinosis and, after a 9.5-year follow-up period, was 5.3 cm taller than his brother. Twin B remained asymptomatic. Periodic determinations of blood pH and serum bicarbonate were normal and urine pH decreased to 4.6 in the face of ammonium chloride-induced metabolic acidosis. The U-B PCO2 assessed in alkaline urine was 33.5 mm Hg. Audiograms demonstrated bilateral nerve deafness in both brothers. The presence of deafness without RTA has not been previously reported in this syndrome. This report also shows that a primary distal acidification defect is responsible for the RTA observed in this syndrome.
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