Six patients with stable end stage chronic renal failure have been studied while receiving keto-acid supplements that provided a daily calcium load of 42 +/- 2 mM. None of the patients had intercurrent illness. All patients showed elevated serum calcium concentration levels while on keto-acid supplements, reaching significance on 5 occasions. Reciprocal falls in serum phosphate concentrations were noted in all patients, and this observation was not due to an anabolic effect of the keto-acids. In 3 patients, the rise in serum calcium concentration was associated with marked clinical manifestations that required curtailment of treatment. The risk of hypercalcemia occurs early and certain high risk categories can be identified. Recommendations about the use of calcium salts of alpha-keto-acid analogues are given and it is suggested that a choice should be made available between calcium and sodium salt analogues.
The flow cytometric crossmatch (FCXM) has been reported to be more sensitive and capable of detecting very low levels of antibodies than the normally used complement dependent cytotoxicity test. We studied both the two colour IgG T cell FCXM and CDC‐XM in 146 renal allograft recipients, 111 primary and 35 regrafts, of which 26 % (29/111) of 1st and 20 % (7/35) of regrafts had a positive FCXM. There was no overall correlation between the FCXM results and early graft outcome in primary renal allografts. The FCXM did not appear to have any advantage over the CDC‐XM in predicting graft outcome in unsensitized first grafts. In the small number of regrafts studied, a positive FCXM was associated with a higher degree of graft failure. FCXM can exhibit false negative results if sera are used solely neat although these prozone phenomena do not influence subsequent graft outcome.
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