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Management of hyperphosphatemia in patients with renal failure

 

作者: Abderrahmane Ghazali,   Fethi Hamida,   Mouloud Bouzernidj,   Najeh Esper,   Pierre Westeel,   Albert Fournier,  

 

期刊: Current Opinion in Nephrology and Hypertension  (OVID Available online 1993)
卷期: Volume 2, issue 4  

页码: 566-579

 

ISSN:1062-4821

 

年代: 1993

 

出版商: OVID

 

数据来源: OVID

 

摘要:

Phosphate retention plays a major role in the pathogenesis of hyperparathyroidism at all stages of renal insufficiency. Dietary phosphate restriction is mandatory only for adults and is not advised for children because of the recommended diet allowance. Dietary restriction is usually not sufficient, and phosphate binders are almost always necessary when the glomerular filtration rate falls below 40 mL/min. Because long-term administration of aluminum phosphate binders is associated with risk of aluminum intoxication despite the use of so-called “safe doses,” alternative phosphate binders should be used. Magnesium hydroxide and carbonate can be used only for dialysis patients because a low dialysate magnesium concentration is necessary to prevent the hazards of hypermagnesemia. Therefore, the major alternative is the use of alkaline salts of calcium. The most recently proposed salt, acetate, has a higher phosphate-binding capacity than carbonate but exposes patients to the same incidence of hypercalcemia despite the use of half the dose of elemental calcium. These salts should be taken with meals in order to complex more dietary phosphate and decrease calcium absorption and therefore the risk of hypercalcemia. Oral calcium alone, without 1aOH-vitamin D3derivatives, can prevent hyperphosphatemia and hyperparathyroidism in most uremic patients before dialysis and in about half of the patients dialyzed with a dialysate calcium of 1.5 to 1.65 mmol/L. 1αOH-vitamin D3derivatives, which increase intestinal absorption of phosphate, should be used only when hyperphosphatemia has been prevented by oral calcium and diet and when plasma parathyroid hormone levels increase above three times the upper limit of normal. To decrease hypercalcemic risk, patients should be given 1αOH-vitamin D3derivatives, preferably at night, as an intermittent bolus (intravenous or oral). In dialysis patients, the dialysate concentration of calcium may have to be further decreased in order to prevent hypercalcemia when high doses of oral calcium are necessary to control hyperphosphatemia.

 

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