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Sodium-Thiosulfate Induced Life-Threatening Metabolic Acidosis Limiting Treatment of Calciphylaxis

Patient: Male, 53-year-old Final Diagnosis: Calciphylaxis Symptoms: Non-healing skin ulcers • confusion • metabolic acidosis Medication: STS Clinical Procedure: Hemodialysis Specialty: General and Internal Medicine • Nephrology OBJECTIVE: Rare disease BACKGROUND: Calcific uremic arteriolopathy (CUA)...

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Autores principales: Sohal, Raman, George, Tanya
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: International Scientific Literature, Inc. 2020
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7200089/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/32336746
http://dx.doi.org/10.12659/AJCR.919926
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author Sohal, Raman
George, Tanya
author_facet Sohal, Raman
George, Tanya
author_sort Sohal, Raman
collection PubMed
description Patient: Male, 53-year-old Final Diagnosis: Calciphylaxis Symptoms: Non-healing skin ulcers • confusion • metabolic acidosis Medication: STS Clinical Procedure: Hemodialysis Specialty: General and Internal Medicine • Nephrology OBJECTIVE: Rare disease BACKGROUND: Calcific uremic arteriolopathy (CUA) is a rare and incredibly painful cutaneous disorder secondary to micro-vascular involvement in which calcium dysregulation leads to stenosis of medium sized arterial blood vessels along with endothelial dysregulation and thrombosis. Ultimately, these patients are at high risk for non-healing wounds with risk of death from sepsis and multi-organ failure. It is a poorly understood condition with limited therapies that do not offer mortality benefit. Prevalence is about 4% in hemodialysis patients. Sodium thiosul-fate (STS) can be used in hemodialysis patients but therapy is often limited by the development of high anion gap metabolic acidosis. CASE REPORT: A 53-year-old male who had end stage renal disease and who was on hemodialysis and taking warfarin for bio-prosthetic mitral valve replacement and atrial fibrillation presented with non-healing right lower extremity cellulitis which had failed outpatient treatment. A skin biopsy of the lesion was consistent with CUA. The patient failed to improve on calcitriol and cinacalcet and was started on intravenous STS. Subsequently, he developed life threatening metabolic acidosis requiring a bicarbonate drip. He died 12 weeks after his initial diagnosis of CUA. CONCLUSIONS: This article seeks to describe how the treatment of CUA; a rare disease with high mortality, is limited by the development of metabolic acidosis when using STS therapy. There is an 80% mortality rate within 6 months from CUA with major adverse effect of a high anion gap metabolic acidosis. Further research is needed in the field of establishing optimal dosing and frequency.
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spelling pubmed-72000892020-05-08 Sodium-Thiosulfate Induced Life-Threatening Metabolic Acidosis Limiting Treatment of Calciphylaxis Sohal, Raman George, Tanya Am J Case Rep Articles Patient: Male, 53-year-old Final Diagnosis: Calciphylaxis Symptoms: Non-healing skin ulcers • confusion • metabolic acidosis Medication: STS Clinical Procedure: Hemodialysis Specialty: General and Internal Medicine • Nephrology OBJECTIVE: Rare disease BACKGROUND: Calcific uremic arteriolopathy (CUA) is a rare and incredibly painful cutaneous disorder secondary to micro-vascular involvement in which calcium dysregulation leads to stenosis of medium sized arterial blood vessels along with endothelial dysregulation and thrombosis. Ultimately, these patients are at high risk for non-healing wounds with risk of death from sepsis and multi-organ failure. It is a poorly understood condition with limited therapies that do not offer mortality benefit. Prevalence is about 4% in hemodialysis patients. Sodium thiosul-fate (STS) can be used in hemodialysis patients but therapy is often limited by the development of high anion gap metabolic acidosis. CASE REPORT: A 53-year-old male who had end stage renal disease and who was on hemodialysis and taking warfarin for bio-prosthetic mitral valve replacement and atrial fibrillation presented with non-healing right lower extremity cellulitis which had failed outpatient treatment. A skin biopsy of the lesion was consistent with CUA. The patient failed to improve on calcitriol and cinacalcet and was started on intravenous STS. Subsequently, he developed life threatening metabolic acidosis requiring a bicarbonate drip. He died 12 weeks after his initial diagnosis of CUA. CONCLUSIONS: This article seeks to describe how the treatment of CUA; a rare disease with high mortality, is limited by the development of metabolic acidosis when using STS therapy. There is an 80% mortality rate within 6 months from CUA with major adverse effect of a high anion gap metabolic acidosis. Further research is needed in the field of establishing optimal dosing and frequency. International Scientific Literature, Inc. 2020-04-27 /pmc/articles/PMC7200089/ /pubmed/32336746 http://dx.doi.org/10.12659/AJCR.919926 Text en © Am J Case Rep, 2020 This work is licensed under Creative Common Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International (CC BY-NC-ND 4.0 (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/) )
spellingShingle Articles
Sohal, Raman
George, Tanya
Sodium-Thiosulfate Induced Life-Threatening Metabolic Acidosis Limiting Treatment of Calciphylaxis
title Sodium-Thiosulfate Induced Life-Threatening Metabolic Acidosis Limiting Treatment of Calciphylaxis
title_full Sodium-Thiosulfate Induced Life-Threatening Metabolic Acidosis Limiting Treatment of Calciphylaxis
title_fullStr Sodium-Thiosulfate Induced Life-Threatening Metabolic Acidosis Limiting Treatment of Calciphylaxis
title_full_unstemmed Sodium-Thiosulfate Induced Life-Threatening Metabolic Acidosis Limiting Treatment of Calciphylaxis
title_short Sodium-Thiosulfate Induced Life-Threatening Metabolic Acidosis Limiting Treatment of Calciphylaxis
title_sort sodium-thiosulfate induced life-threatening metabolic acidosis limiting treatment of calciphylaxis
topic Articles
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7200089/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/32336746
http://dx.doi.org/10.12659/AJCR.919926
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