Cases reported "Hypophosphatemia"

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1/3. Pseudo-(tumor-induced) rickets.

    An athletic 8-year-old boy developed severe muscle weakness over 2 years. At the age of 10 years, investigation for possible neuromuscular disease disclosed hypophosphatemia (1.8 mg/dl) and rickets. There was selective renal tubular wasting of inorganic phosphate (Pi) but no history of toxin exposure, familial bone or kidney disease, or biochemical evidence of vitamin d deficiency. urine amino acid quantitation was unremarkable. serum 1,25-dihydroxyvitamin D [1,25(OH)2D] concentration was in the lower half of the reference range. Our presumptive diagnosis was tumor-induced rickets; however, physical examination and bone scanning in search of a neoplasm were unrevealing. Soon after 1,25(OH)2D3 and Pi treatment began, muscle strength improved considerably. After 6 months of therapy, radiographic abnormalities were substantially better. During the next 6 years, physical examinations, a second bone scan, whole-body and nasal sinus magnetic resonance imaging, and octreotide scintigraphy were unremarkable. When his physes fused at the age of 16 years, assessment of his course showed excellent control of his rickets requiring decreasing doses of medication. Furthermore, fasting serum Pi levels and tubular maximum phosphorus/glomerular filtration (TmP/ GFR) values had increased steadily and normalized after 3 years of treatment. Accordingly, therapy was stopped. Seven months after stopping medication, he continues to feel completely well. fasting serum Pi levels, TmP/GFR, other biochemical parameters of bone and mineral homeostasis, creatinine clearance, and renal sonography are normal. Neither spontaneous or pharmacologic cure of tumor-induced rickets or osteomalacia nor a patient matching ours has been reported. His disorder, which we call pseudo-(tumor-induced) rickets, should be considered when investigation for oncogenic rickets or osteomalacia discloses no causal lesion. Consequently, prolonged medical therapy and futile searches for a neoplasm may be avoided.
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2/3. Early detection of infants with hypophosphatemic vitamin D resistant rickets (HDRR).

    The onset of physical signs in infants with hypophosphatemic vitamin D resistant rickets (HDRR) has generally been considered to be at the age of 12 months, but the time of appearance of hypophosphatemia and rachitic signs on radiographs remains unclear. We report a prospective study in three neonates whose mothers were HDRR. At birth, despite a low maternal serum inorganic phosphorus (Pi) level, the serum Pi level was normal together with a negligible renal Pi leak in one neonate. At age 3 months, their serum Pi levels, percentages of tubular reabsorption of Pi, and renal tubular maximal rates of Pi reabsorption in relation to the glomerular filtration rate were low except for one infant. Radiographically, their rickets were not apparent at birth but at age 3 months in all. A premature born infant, born at 28 weeks' gestation weighing 1240 g, was diagnosed as HDRR based on hypophosphatemia due to low renal tubular maximal rate of phosphorus reabsorption in relation to the glomerular filtration rate (TmP/GFR) and normal urine Ca excretion at age 5 months. They were initially treated with 1 alpha-hydroxyvitamin D3 (1 alpha OHD3) and later with 1 alpha OHD3 in combination with Pi, which results in healing of the rickets and a normal increase in height. Thus, early detection and treatment of patients born from mothers with HDRR before physical signs of bow-leg and short stature is possible, but the outcome of early treatment requires further study.
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3/3. paraplegia due to ossification of ligamenta flava in X-linked hypophosphatemia. A case report.

    STUDY DESIGN: spinal canal decompression at the most prominent of multiple posterior calcified thoracic lesions in a case of X-linked hypophosphatemia was undertaken for treatment and diagnosis purposes, as well as to assess possible nature of the pathophysiology underlying the presenting deficits. OBJECTIVES: To discuss the clinical assessment diagnostic and treatment aspects of this rare coincidence of ossification of ligamenta flava in the patient with the skeletal deformities of X-linked hypophosphatemia. SUMMARY OF BACKGROUND DATA: The patient with the stigmata and chemical findings of an X-linked hypophosphatemia presented with paraplegia and multiple calcified posterior spinal thoracic lesions. This was studied with magnetic resonance imaging and electrophysiologic studies of the spinal sensory pathways of the legs. These data constituted the preoperative information required to assess later results of surgical intervention. methods: Presurgical clinical, imaging and electrophysiologic studies and laboratory and pathologic investigations of the surgical specimens. RESULTS: Resolution of the paraplegia with walking and return to work in a physically demanding job for the last 4 or 5 years of postoperative follow-up after surgical decompression of the spinal cord only at the worst and highest of the effected spinal levels. CONCLUSION: The coincidence of X-linked hypophosphatemia and ossification of ligamenta flava has been reported only in two or three cases in the literature. Removal of the offending ossifying lesion is known to result in resolution of the clinical deficits but similar lesions at other spinal levels are suspected of producing recurrences. The return of function and of the corresponding electrophysiologic correlates indicate a neurono-apractic nature of the neurologic symptoms.
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