Clinical aspects of autosomal recessive polycystic kidney disease (ARPKD)

2010 
Introduction: Autosomal Recessive Polycystic Kidney Disease (ARPKD) is an important pediatric cause of morbidity and mortality, with a variable clinical spectrum. Methods: The clinical presentation and evolution of 25 patients (Pts) were analyzed by clinical record review, according to the forms proposed by Guay-Woodford et al. Morbidities associated with the disease were evaluated with respect to their frequencies and age of onset. Results: The median age at the diagnosis was 61.45 months (0 to 336.5 months), with similar gender distribution (52% of the patients were female). A family ARPKD history was found in 20% of the cases (5/25), two of them associated with consanguinity. On arrival, arterial hypertension (SAH) was diagnosed in 56% of the Pts (14/25); chronic kidney disease stage ≥ 2 (CKD ≥ 2) in 24% (6/25); urinary tract infection (UTI) in 40% (10/25); and portal hypertension (PH) in 32% of the cases (8/25). Eighty percent of the initial abdominal ultrasonograms detected echogenic kidneys with gross cysts and 64% demonstrated normal liver and biliary ducts. ACE inhibitors were used in 36% of the analyzed patients, beta-blockers in 20%, calcium channel blockers in 28%, and diuretics in 36% of them. In the final evaluation, after an average follow-up time of 152.2 months (29.8 to 274.9 months), SAH was detected in 76% of the cases, CKD ≥ 2 in 44%, UTI in 52% and PH in 68%. Conclusion: The high morbidity and mortality associated with ARPKD justify the assembly of an international database, with the aim of establishing an early thera
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