Primary hyperoxaluria
Primary hyperoxaluria, also referred as primary oxalosis, is a congenital autosomal recessive disease related to a liver enzyme deficiency leading to massive cortical nephrocalcinosis and renal failure.
Please, refer on secondary oxalosis for a discussion on the acquired form of hyperoxaluria.
Epidemiology
Hyperoxaluria is an autosomal recessive disorder and is more common in the Mediterranean countries. The most common subtype is primary hyperoxaluria type 1 which is responsible for approximately 80% of the cases.
Clinical presentation
Typical presentation is nephrolithiasis and global (cortical and medullary) nephrocalcinosis at an early age.
Pathology
It has three types due to the defects in the gene that encodes following enzymes:
- glyoxylate aminotransferase
- glyoxylate reductase/hydroxypyruvate reductase
- liver-specific mitochondrial 4-hydroxy-2-oxoglutarate aldolase enzyme
Radiographic features
Plain radiograph
Plain radiographs demonstrate osteosclerosis as well as osteopenia. Other skeletal abnormalities include fine transverse lines of increased bone density located in areas of rapid growth, submarginal metaphyseal lucency, wide translucent metaphyseal zone with sclerosis of the adjacent diaphysis, and metaphyseal “waisting” or focal narrowing.
Diagnosis by usually by bone (iliac crest) biopsy.
Treatment and prognosis
Treatment is with a combined liver and renal transplantation (the liver is to rectify the enzyme deficiency, not because of liver failure).
The pyridoxine supplementation may be used in conjunction with combined liver-kidney transplantation to enhance the alternative pathway of glyoxylate metabolism to glycine and, therefore, reduce the amount of glyoxylate available for conversion to oxalate.