Intoxication a la vitamine A revelee par une hypercalcemia chez un enfant insuffisant renal

V. Doireau, M. A. Macher, P. Brun, O. Bernard, C. Loirat

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    Résumé

    Background. - Patients with chronic renal failure are at risk of vitamin A intoxication, a risk that must be evoked when unexplained hypercalcemia occurs. Case report. - An 8 year-old boy with Alagille syndrome and chronic renal failure was admitted because of general deterioration, and bone pain. Severe hypercalcemia (3.9 mmol/L) was present. Serum phosphate, parathyroid hormone and 25 OH D3 levels were normal; 1-25 (OH)2 D3 levels were undetectable. Hypercalcemia was attributed to vitamin A intoxication, due to the administration of a mean daily dose of 12000 IU of vitamin A for at least 2 years. The diagnosis was confirmed by high plasma levels of retinol (1475 μg/L). Hypercalcemia only partially responded to treatment with bisphosphonates, calcitonin and dialysis with low calcium dialysate. Serum vitamin A levels remained elevated one month after vitamin A withdrawal. The boy died two months after admission from atrioventricular block. Conclusion. - Vitamin A administration induces a high risk of intoxication in patients with chronic renal failure. Serum vitamin A concentrations are elevated in these patients, because of decreased renal metabolism of retinol, and vitamin A supplements must be avoided.

    Titre traduit de la contributionHypercalcemia as the first manifestation of chronic vitamin A intoxication in a child with renal failure
    langue originaleFrançais
    Pages (de - à)888-890
    Nombre de pages3
    journalArchives de Pediatrie
    Volume3
    Numéro de publication9
    Les DOIs
    étatPublié - 1 janv. 1996

    mots-clés

    • child
    • hypercalcemia
    • kidney failure, chronic
    • poisoning
    • vitamin A

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