2018
DOI: 10.15562/ijbs.v12i1.145
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The early onset of Chronic Kidney Disease stage five in 11 years old boy with Autosomal Dominant Polycystic Kidney Disease due to PKD-1 mutation

Abstract: Background: Autosomal dominant polycystic kidney disease (ADPKD) is the most common inherited kidney disease. Only a few renal cysts are detected in most affected individuals before 30 years of ages and only 2% of patients with ADPKD present with early clinical manifestations before 15 years old. The average age at onset of chronic kidney disease (CKD) was 50 years. ADPKD is caused by mutations in one of two genes, PKD 1 and PKD 2. PKD1 was associated with more severe disease than PKD2, with earlier age at dia… Show more

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“…Based on TKV measurement, the patient was classified into Mayo class 1C, with a TKV score of 685.3 cm 3 , suggesting a rapid disease progression to end-stage kidney diseases (ESKD). Several factors, such as PKD1 gene mutations, age, male gender, early decrease in GFR, early onset of hypertension, high TKV (Mayo classification 1C-1E), early onset or repeated episodes of gross hematuria, hypertensive women with ≥3 pregnancies, proteinuria, microalbuminuria, elevated serum copeptin levels, and overweight/obesity have been associated with rapid progression of ADPKD [9][10][11][12][23][24][25]. However, PKD1 mutations in this patient are unknown since the test was done due to resource limitations.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Based on TKV measurement, the patient was classified into Mayo class 1C, with a TKV score of 685.3 cm 3 , suggesting a rapid disease progression to end-stage kidney diseases (ESKD). Several factors, such as PKD1 gene mutations, age, male gender, early decrease in GFR, early onset of hypertension, high TKV (Mayo classification 1C-1E), early onset or repeated episodes of gross hematuria, hypertensive women with ≥3 pregnancies, proteinuria, microalbuminuria, elevated serum copeptin levels, and overweight/obesity have been associated with rapid progression of ADPKD [9][10][11][12][23][24][25]. However, PKD1 mutations in this patient are unknown since the test was done due to resource limitations.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%