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. 2015 Jul-Aug;36(4):187-91.
doi: 10.11138/gchir/2015.36.4.187.

Drug-induced retroperitoneal fibrosis: short aetiopathogenetic note, from the past times of ergot-derivatives large use to currently applied bio-pharmacology

Drug-induced retroperitoneal fibrosis: short aetiopathogenetic note, from the past times of ergot-derivatives large use to currently applied bio-pharmacology

C Alberti. G Chir. 2015 Jul-Aug.

Abstract

Among the secondary forms of retroperitoneal fibrosis (RPF), that drug-induced shows very intriguing aspects given both the broad range of involved pharmaceuticals and the considerable interest arisen from the related pathogenetic mechanisms. The particular incidence, in the last four decades past century, of the RPF due to long-term use of ergot alkaloid derivatives (ergotamine, methysergide, pergolide, bromocriptine, cabergoline) and specific L-dopa derived agents, such as methyldopa, as well as to different analgesics, came progressively down given that their long-term use for either the prevention of migraine attacks or the therapy of chronic pathologies (Parkinson's disease, prolactinoma, pain management, etc) has been, year after year, supplanted or even made unavailable in many countries. More recently, instead, the occurrence of the RPF has been sometimes identified with the use of antitumoral chemotherapeutics, such as carboplatin and methotrexate, and, just lately, as an unusual side-effect of certain biological agents, about which it is timely to go into specific pathogenetic problems in more depth.

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