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Liver Transplantation-associated Hypercalcemia Followed by Acute Renal Dysfunction

Authors :
Makoto Ito
Yuichi Shirasawa
Genjiro Kimura
Atsuhiro Yoshida
Takashi Hashimoto
Tomoyuki Nomura
Source :
Internal Medicine. 43:802-806
Publication Year :
2004
Publisher :
Japanese Society of Internal Medicine, 2004.

Abstract

A 34-year-old woman with liver insufficiency due to glycogen storage disease III underwent a living spousal liver transplantation. Soon after the successful operation, moderate hypercalcemia along with hyperbilirubinemia emerged without clarified reasons. The hypercalcemia persisted for over a month despite calcitonin treatment and the serum calcium level surged to 13.2 mg/dl with albumin correction. Renal dysfunction was indicated by an acute increase in serum creatinine (approximately 0.8 to approximately 2.8 mg/ml), which was assumed to be hypercalcemia-induced and was effectively treated with bisphosphonate, pamidronate (30 mg, i.v.). Recent topics related to transplantation-associated hypercalcemia are discussed.

Details

ISSN :
13497235 and 09182918
Volume :
43
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Internal Medicine
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....5c3ed4556c548a417f0a7acb4ef70eba