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. 1991 Jun;81(6):818-21.

[Radiologic and clinical aspects of osteoarticular amyloidosis caused by dialysis]

[Article in Italian]
Affiliations
  • PMID: 1857788

[Radiologic and clinical aspects of osteoarticular amyloidosis caused by dialysis]

[Article in Italian]
L Baldrati et al. Radiol Med. 1991 Jun.

Abstract

Many long-term (greater than 60 months) hemodialysis patients develop a severe osteoarticular disease, called "dialysis arthropathy", which is characterized by the deposition in bone and synovia of a new type of amyloid made mainly of beta 2-microglobulin. In the present study, 31 patients (17 males, 14 females; age 54.1 +/- 13 years), undergoing chronic hemodialysis for 60-125 months, were examined for dialysis arthropathy by means of clinics and of radiological investigations (conventional radiography and computed tomography). Sixteen patients (51.6%) had radiographic evidence of dialysis arthropathy: geodes (shoulders, 12 cases; wrists, 11; hips, 2; knees, 2) and/or destructive arthropathies (cervical spine, 13 cases, dorsolumbar spine, 2; hands, 2; hips, 1). Within 24 months, these lesions were found to progress slowly in the majority of cases. In the diagnostic process, CT should be employed in the study of spine, shoulders and hips when the lesions have not been sufficiently demonstrated by conventional radiography in the presence of evident clinical signs. Patients with dialysis arthropathy had undergone dialysis for longer periods than those without it (p less than 0.005) and showed a significantly higher incidence of both carpal tunnel syndrome (p less than 0.0005) and shoulder pain (p less than 0.005). Our findings confirm the high incidence and clinical importance of dialysis arthropathy in long-term hemodialysis patients and the value of diagnostic imaging in screening such patients for those lesions.

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