The Japanese journal of thoracic diseases
Online ISSN : 1883-471X
Print ISSN : 0301-1542
ISSN-L : 0301-1542
An Autopsy Case of Sarcoidosis Associated with Renal Failure
Hajime TakizawaKen OhtaNobuyuki KobayashiAkira IshiiShuji SuzukiHirokazu OkudairaTerumasa MiyamotoKoji Ito
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1992 Volume 30 Issue 4 Pages 648-652

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Abstract
A 62-year-old woman presented with uveitis and abnormal chest X-ray (bilateral hilar adenopathy). Skin biopsy in 1983 had revealed non-caseating epithelioid cell granuloma consistent with sarcoidosis. Her serum biochemical investigations and exploratory laparoscopy suggested nodular liver cirrhosis, but biopsy was not performed. Both blood urea nitrogen (BUN) and serum creatinine values were within normal limits. She received prednisolone therapy of 15mg daily initially, and later a maintenance dose of 5mg daily. In 1985, she complained of skin itching and her laboratory data revealed severe renal insufficiency (BUN 97mg/dl, serum creatinine 12.2mg/dl) and hypercalcemia (corrected serum calcium level: 11.5mg/dl). Prednisolone treatment (40mg daily) resulted in a dramatic improvement of renal function as well as other clinical abnormalities due to sarcoidosis, without any significant changes in liver function. She died of cerebral infarction in 1989. Autopsy showed interstitial nephritis with tubular calcinosis and hyalinized glomeruli. It is postulated that hypercalcemia due to sarcoidosis contributed to the renal failure in this patient. This case suggests that renal damage due to sarcoidosis may be reversible with appropriate corticosteroid therapy.
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© by The Japanese Respiratory Society
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