Summary:
Renal bone disease is a serious complication associated with chronic renal failure. The pathogenetic
mechanisms are very complicated. The disorder develops as a result of hypophosphataemia,
hypocalcaemia and calcitrol deficiency already during the period when renal functions decline
below 50 %. Formerly the form with an excessive bone turnover predominated, nowadays we
encounter ever more frequently so-called a dynamic bone disease. A serious manifestation are
extraosseous calcifications. In treatment phosphate binding substances in the gastrointestinal
tract are involved (along with other provisions, correcting hypophosphataemia), supplementation
of calcium in case of hypocalcaemia correction of metabolic acidosis and administration of the
active vitamin D metabolite (continuously as supplementation in deficient endogenous production,
in a pulsatile pattern with the aim to suppress the activity of parathyroid bodies). In case of
"resistant" hyperparathyroidism surgery is indicated (parathyroidectomy). Treatment of the dynamic
form is not known, prevention of suppression of excessive parathyroid activity is important.
New trends in the treatment of renal bone disease are non-calcium phosphate binding substances
in the gastrointestinal tract, vitamin D analogues (with a lower hypercalcaemic potential) and
calcium mimetics.
Key words:
Chronic renal failure - Renal osteopathy - Hyperparathyroidism - Hypoparathyroidism
- Calcitrol - Hyperphosphtaemia
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