Abstract

Chronic kidney disease-mineral bone disorder is a common clinical picture encountered in patients with end-stage renal disease and is the result of additive pathophysiological processes. Renal transplantation remains the treatment of choice for these patients, especially as advances in this field have allowed for enhanced allograft survival. However, with increasing success of renal transplantation has come a greater appreciation of some of its subsequent complications, such as posttransplantation bone disease. Recently, persistent hyperparathyroidism and osteopenia-osteoporosis have been given specific attention. Traditionally, persistent hyperparathyroidism has been treated with parathyroidectomy, although the role that calcimimetics may play in the future is promising. Newer aspects to medical management of osteopenia-osteoporosis, such as the efficacy of bisphosphonate therapy and early steroid withdrawal, are becoming apparent and some of the newer drugs for the treatment of osteoporosis are yet to be investigated in this subgroup of patients.

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