The effect of antihypertensive treatment on CMD is not exclusively dependent on BP reduction. Compounds with comparable antihypertensive efficacy may exert different effects on CF and induce different degrees of reverse arteriolar remodeling.
Medullary sponge kidney (MSK) is a cause of nephrocalcinosis, associated with hematuria, renal colic, pyelonephritis. There are rare and atypical MSK cases characterized by chronic severe pain (CP), whose features are unknown, in particular the relationship with the stone disease activity. This study analyzes a cohort of MSK-CP patients belonging to three North-America self-support Facebook groups. Patients had to self-administer an on-line questionnaire (on intensity, progression and MSK-associated conditions, stone-related disease, pain features, drug use), the Brief Pain Inventory, the Fatigue Severity Score, and Wisconsin Quality of Life (WQL) in stone formers questionnaires. Ninety-two patients with a diagnosis of MSK joined our survey. Stone rate was very high (3.1 stones per patient-year, < 15% of patients had ≤ 1 stone per year). Most patients had repeated hospitalizations for stones symptoms (p < 0.001) or pain (p < 0.005). 71% of participants referred a daily pain that interfered strongly with everyday life and quality of life (WQL mean value 29.4). 69% used pain medications daily (70% opioids). In most cases, pain was associated with stone passage, while 15% referred a sine materia pain. We showed how MSK-CP symptoms affect very negatively on the quality of life of these patients. They also have a definite risk of progressing to end-stage kidney disease. Generally, CP seems to be associated with an exceptionally high lithogenic activity, suggesting that a better and earlier metabolic treatment for stone prevention should be the first approach in these patients before mini-invasive treatments to prevent pain.
BACKGROUND AND AIMS Haemolytic uremic syndrome (HUS) is a rare disease characterized by macroangiopathic haemolytic anaemia, thrombocytopaenia and severe AKI, belonging to the thrombotic microangiopathies (TMAs). It is divided into typical and atypical HUS: the first one occurs most frequently in children within the first 5 years of life and it is associated with Shiga-like toxin producing Escherichiacoli infection; the second one (aHUS) is less common (10%) and it is due to complement abnormalities with coexisting disease or trigger such as autoimmunity, transplantation, cancer, infection, certain cytotoxic drugs or pregnancy. There is an increasing interest in SARS-CoV-2 infection as new trigger for complement activation. Nine cases of aHUS were recently associated with COVID-19, most of them occurring within 1 month from the infection. Available data suggest that SARS-CoV-2 is a potential trigger for aHUS: it can induce an over inflammatory state and to activate coagulation and complement pathway. Likewise, mRNA-based vaccines against COVID-19 inducing the expression of SARS-CoV-2 spike protein to stimulate immune recognition and antibody response could be a suitable trigger for HUS. METHOD We report the case of a 17-year-old woman, who presented at our emergency department with fever, dyspnoea, acute kidney injury AKI III with anuria, hypertension, severe anaemia, no diarrhoea, severe thrombocytopaenia and myocarditis, about 2 weeks after the first administration of SARS-CoV-2 vaccine (Comirnaty) and recent exposition to SARS-CoV-2 positive individual. SARS-CoV-2 nasal PCR swab was negative (as well as successive ones) and she was immediately admitted to paediatric intensive care unit and treated with transfusions and haemodialysis. Laboratory exams suggested a thrombotic microangiopathy with normal ADAMTS-13 activity and no E. coli infection. She underwent a renal biopsy that confirmed our hypothesis of aHUS: wrinkled capillaries, subendothelial expansion, mesangiolysis and rare thrombi in capillaries lumen. Arterioles had intimal proliferation with mucoid oedema who gave rise to onionskin like lesion that obliterates lumens. One glomerulus showed extracapillary proliferation (crescent), and there was interstitial lymphomonocytic inflammatory infiltration in the nearby. Also signs of acute tubular injury and atrophy were reported. Positive stain to fibrinogen in the arterioles at immunohistology was noted. She immediately performed genetic exams for aHUS-related complement mutations and she started immunosuppression with corticosteroids and eculizumab infusions. After 2 months of eculizumab, she was still oliguric, requiring renal replacement therapy. Genetic analysis showed no mutations. Therefore, she was examined for other genetic causes of thrombotic microangiopathies. RESULTS Finally, came to light that she had high levels of homocysteine, and she was diagnosed with secondary HUS associated with cobalamin C deficiency, which manifests with methylmalonic aciduria and homocystinuria due to a recessive mutation in the MMACHC gene, causing a cobalamin C type deficiency, which is the common functional variant of vitamin B12. After metabolic therapy with hydroxocobalamin, she gradually recovered diuresis and partially renal function without need for replacement therapy. CONCLUSION Reports from immunization programs show as myocarditis and thrombotic thrombocytopaenia are considered among main serious complications caused by COVID-19 vaccines, representing 12.6 cases per million doses and 0.73 cases per 100 000, respectively. This interesting case probably supports data about the role of mRNA-based anti-SARS-CoV-2 vaccines like a precipitant factor for TMAs. Moreover, our patient turned out to be an extremely rare case of HUS secondary to cobalamin C deficiency, that is generally diagnosed in early infancy and show typically neurological symptoms (absent in our case). Probably, the mRNA-based vaccine acted like ‘a second hit’, but existing predisposition should always be investigated including also the less frequent forms.
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