Saudi Journal of Kidney Diseases and Transplantation (Jan 2016)

Severe metastatic calcifications in a hemodialysis patient

  • Jannet Labidi,
  • Yosra Ben Ariba,
  • Abdelkader Ben Gabsia,
  • Faida Ajili,
  • Riadh Battikh,
  • Bassem Louzir,
  • Nadia Ben Abdelhafidh,
  • Saleh I Othman

DOI
https://doi.org/10.4103/1319-2442.190884
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 27, no. 5
pp. 1037 – 1042

Abstract

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Tissue calcification is a common complication in patients on continuous hemodialysis (HD) for chronic renal failure; however, severe calcification is unusual. Three distinct clinical types of extraosseous calcifications are found in uremic patients: vascular calcification, periarticular (tumoral) calcification, and visceral calcification (heart, lung, and kidney). We report a case of a young chronic HD patient who presented with extensive metastatic calcifi cations both vascular, visceral specially localized in the lungs, and periarticular with progressively increasing multiple subcutaneous swellings. This evolution was secondary to noncompliance of the patient to the treatment of a malignant hyperparathyroidism with a marked elevation of phosphocalcium product.