Solmos G R, Ali A, Rodby R A, Fordham E W
Department of Diagnostic Radiology/Nuclear Medicine, Rush-Presbyterian-St. Luke's Medical Center, Chicago, Illinois.
Clin Nucl Med. 1994 Sep;19(9):769-72. doi: 10.1097/00003072-199409000-00004.
Serial bone scanning was performed on a 23-year-old man with type 1 primary hyperoxaluria, renal failure, oxalosis, and cardiac failure. The initial bone scan (6/22/90) demonstrated diffuse increased uptake in the axial and peripheral skeleton, heart, and the soft tissues of the lower extremities. A combined liver and kidney transplant was successfully performed with subsequent resolution of the oxalosis, renal failure, and cardiac failure. A follow-up bone scan (9/24/90) demonstrated resolution of abnormal heart and soft tissue uptake, as well as decreased uptake in the long bones. This case demonstrates that bone scanning may be a useful tool in the management of patients with oxalosis. The scintigraphic findings closely paralleled the clinical response to treatment of the disease and suggested decreased total body stores of calcium oxalate.