Journal Information
Vol. 41. Issue. 4.July - August 2021
Pages 367-488
Vol. 41. Issue. 4.July - August 2021
Pages 367-488
Letter to the Editor
Open Access
Acute vision loss on hemodialysis: Mönckeberg arteriosclerosis
Pérdida de visión aguda en hemodiálisis: arterioesclerosis de Mönckeberg
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Álvaro Pérez Fernández
, Inmaculada Poveda García, Maria Teresa Cantón Yebra
UGC (Unidad de Gestión Clínica), Nefrología, Complejo Hospitalario Torrecárdenas, Almería, Spain
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Dear Editor,

Regarding the article published in the journal Nefrología [“Acute vision loss in patients with kidney failure”,1 and taking into account the scarcity of cases published in the bibliography, we propose the presentation of the following case of amaurosis in a patient on regular haemodialysis.

We present the case of a 73-year-old woman with a medical history of allergy to iodinated contrast, chronic myeloid leukaemia, insulin-dependent type II diabetes mellitus and chronic kidney disease without histological assessment, on haemodialysis since 2018, with poor tolerance to haemodialysis sessions (hypotension), secondary hyperparathyroidism and glaucoma.

During a haemodialysis session and coinciding with an episode of severe hypotension, the patient had onset of holocranial headache accompanied by acute loss of vision of the left eye. Cranial CT without IV contrast was performed with no findings of interest. She was assessed by Ophthalmology and examination of the eye fundi revealed “bilateral papilloedema with retinal haemorrhagic papillitis as a consequence of left retinal infarction” and she was discharged with a follow-up by the ophthalmology unit.

After three weeks, she presented with the same clinical picture in the right eye, reporting an altitudinal loss with progression to total amaurosis. Assessed by Neurology, a Doppler ultrasound of the supra-aortic trunks was performed without findings of interest and a temporal artery biopsy was performed, three boluses of 500mg of methylprednisolone were started due to the suspicion that the patient might be suffering from temporal arteritis.

Laboratory testing

  • -

    Acute phase reactants: CRP and ESR in normal range

  • -

    Total protein corrected serum calcium (mean): 10.5mg/dl

  • -

    Serum phosphorus (mean): 5–6 (mg/dl)

  • -

    i-PTH serum: 850pg/mL

Temporal artery biopsy

No signs of inflammation. There were calcium deposits in the middle layer of the temporal artery (Figs. 1 and 2).

Fig. 1.

Transverse section of the temporal artery revealing marked intimal thickening, with isolated calcifications in the tunica media and on the periphery of the internal elastic lamina.

(0.14MB).
Fig. 2.

Transverse section of the temporal artery showing marked intimal thickening, without other alterations. No inflammation or infiltration by giant cells can be observed.

(0.18MB).

Given these findings, she was diagnosed with Mönckeberg's arteriopathy, and finally the patient did not regain her vision.

Mönckeberg's arteriosclerosis, or Mönckeberg's medial sclerosis, was described for the first time in 1903 by Johann Georg Mönckeberg, as a calcification of the tunica media of the medium and small muscular arteries of the lower extremities and, less frequently, in the visceral or coronary arteries.2,3 It is the calcification that has been commonly associated with kidney disease.

The aetiology of this condition is unknown.4

It is mainly related to age, diabetes, time on dialysis, and mineral metabolism. It causes stiffness of the arterial wall and, with it, an increase in systolic blood pressure as well as an increase in pulse pressure and pulse wave velocity. It contributes to the development of left ventricular hypertrophy, fibrosis, ventricular dysfunction, decreased coronary flow during diastole, and heart failure.

Clinically, the manifestations are extensive, all derived from the vascular occlusion that is generated.5,6

Differential diagnoses are mainly given by vasculitis affecting these vessels, including polyarteritis nodosa and giant cell arteritis. In the literature review, only a total of 10 publications between 1999–2019 have been found on Mönckeberg's syndrome, two of them with ocular involvement.

Symptoms can be so similar that, given the inability to determine alterations in calcium-phosphorus metabolism, tissue biopsy must be drawn upon as a means to achieve a definitive diagnosis.7

Mönckeberg's arteriopathy has been increasingly recognised in patients with end-stage renal disease in relation to calcium-phosphorus metabolism disorder.

Al-Absi et al.8 described a case similar to ours with a 50-year-old man on haemodialysis with symptoms of temporal artery arteritis (temporal headache, blurred vision, jaw claudication) who was found to have Mönckeberg's arteritis on temporal artery biopsy.

Korzets et al.9 describe two cases of anterior ischaemic optic neuropathy in haemodialysis patients with extensive medial calcification. Both patients had hypotension and acute unilateral vision loss.

At present, there are no specific e treatment for Mönckeberg's sclerosis, and actions are only chosen aiming to optimise calcium metabolism, including chelators such as sodium thiosulfate. In our case, despite intensifying medical treatment, the ocular involvement was irreversible.10

In conclusion, the development of Mönckeberg's sclerosis is closely linked to senescence, but risk factors such as chronic kidney disease and diabetes mellitus can directly favour its development and progression. In addition, thediagnosis of this condition continues to be an incidental finding in histopathological samples, and there are currently no laboratory diagnostic aids or specific images of the disease. Clinical suspicion will be the cornerstone of diagnosis that may allow for early medical management, thus avoiding an accelerated progression of the disease, and to avoid the prescription of futile treatments.

References
[1]
V. Martín, G.L. Sención Martínez, R. Cañones Zafra, K. del Rocío Samillán Sosa, M. Velo Plaza, M.A. Teus Guezala, et al.
Pérdida aguda de visión en pacientes con insuficiencia renal.
NefroPlus., 9 (2017), pp. 77-183
[2]
S. Silbert, H. Lippmann, E. Gordon.
Monckeberg’s arteriosclerosis.
JAMA., 151 (1953), pp. 1176-1179
[3]
P.A. McCullough, V. Agrawal, E. Danielewicz, G.S. Abela.
Accelerated atherosclerotic calcification and Monckeberg’s sclerosis: a continuum of advanced vascular pathology in chronic kidney disease.
Clin J Am Soc Nephrol., 3 (2008), pp. 1585-1598
[4]
C.J. Díaz, S. Herrera Uribe, M.R. González, G.C. Posada, M. Mejía Zuluaga.
Manifestaciones clínicas de la esclerosis de Monckeberg. Reporte de caso y revisión de la Literatura.
Rev Colomb Reumatol., 24 (2017), pp. 118-122
[5]
C.E. Couri, G.A. da Silva, J.A. Martínez, F. de Assis Pereira, F.J. Albuquerque de Paula.
Mönckeberg’s sclerosis—is the artery the only target of calcification?.
BMC Cardiovasc Disord., 5 (2005), pp. 34
[6]
B. Castling, S. Bhatia, F. Ahsan.
Mönckeberg’s arteriosclerosis: vascular calcification complicating microvascular surgery.
Int J Oral Maxillofac Surg., 44 (2015), pp. 34-36
[7]
L. Pesona, K. Latha, S. Nikhil, G. Amlan.
Monckeberg’s arteriosclerosis in uterine vessels: an unusual presentation.
J Obstet Gynaecol India., 64 (2014), pp. 436-437
[8]
A.I. Al-Absi, B.M. Wall, C.R. Cooke.
Medial arterial calcification mimicking temporal arteritis.
Am J Kidney Dis., 44 (2004), pp. E73-8
[9]
A. Korzets, I. Marashek, A. Schwartz, I. Rosenblatt, M. Herman, Y. Ori.
Ischemic optic neuropathy in dialyzed patients: a previously unrecognized manifestation of calcific uremic arteriolopathy.
Am J Kidney Dis., 44 (2004), pp. E93-E99
[10]
B.V. Castillo Jr, E. Torczynski, D.R. Edward.
Monckeberg’s sclerosis in temporal artery biopsy specimens.
Br J Ophthalmol., 83 (1999), pp. 1091-1092

Please cite this article as: Poveda García I, Cantón Yebra MT. Pérdida de visión aguda en hemodiálisis: arterioesclerosis de Mönckeberg. Nefrologia. 2021;41:485–487.

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