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Hyperphosphatemia in Children Receiving Peritoneal Dialysis--an Educational Program

Overview
Journal Pediatr Nephrol
Specialties Nephrology
Pediatrics
Date 2005 May 6
PMID 15875218
Citations 2
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Abstract

Hyperphosphatemia has been associated with the development of secondary hyperparathyroidism, renal osteodystrophy, cardiovascular calcification and increased risk of death. Using a one group, pretest-posttest study design, we sought to evaluate changes in serum phosphorus, calcium, parathyroid hormone and subject knowledge in response to a 3-month educational intervention. Mean serum phosphorus levels did not differ significantly between the three evaluation periods: pretreatment (5.69 mg/dl), treatment (5.84 mg/dl) and posttreatment (6.17 mg/dl). Mean serum calcium, calcium-phosphorus product and PTH values also did not differ significantly between the treatment periods. We observed no difference between the subject test scores between the two testing periods. Calcium-phosphorus product, serum phosphorus and PTH values on average, despite the education program, remained outside the K/DOQI target guidelines 44, 56 and 81% of the time, respectively. The results of this study suggest that an aggressive 3-month patient education program targeting dietary phosphorus knowledge, phosphate binder name and dosing, and knowledge of medical consequences associated with non-compliance had no effect on the serum phosphorus, calcium, PTH or phosphate binder need.

Citing Articles

Assessment of Dietary Phosphorus Intake and Implementation of Parental Phosphate Education in Pediatric Chronic Kidney Disease.

Rahman R, Mattilda A, Iyengar A Indian J Nephrol. 2023; 33(3):188-194.

PMID: 37448899 PMC: 10337224. DOI: 10.4103/ijn.ijn_149_21.


Interventions for metabolic bone disease in children with chronic kidney disease.

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