Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: EC:3.4.23.15 (renin)
35,795 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

A 7-year-old female was discovered to be severely hypertensive. Urinary noradrenaline excretion and plasma noradrenaline level were elevated. Plasma renin activity was markedly elevated. She was found to have a mass in the hilus of the left kidney and left renal artery stenosis. Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) of the mass revealed an extremely bright lesion on T2 weighted image. DMSA renal scintigraphy revealed a low uptake rate (4.7%) in the left kidney. A diagnosis of extra-adrenal pheochromocytoma associated with left sided renal artery stenosis was made. The mass and left kidney were removed. Electronmicroscopic examination of the mass revealed characteristic neurosecretory granules. There was only slight fibrosis in the wall of the removed left renal artery.
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PMID:[A case of a child with extra-adrenal pheochromocytoma associated with renovascular hypertension]. 141 54

The results of the investigations of all patients who underwent renal arteriography for hypertension due to renovascular disease over a three and a quarter year period prior to January 1st 1981 are reviewed and discussed. The experience gained has helped demonstrate the usefulness of DMSA scans, segmental renal vein renin estimations, and AP and oblique selective renal arteriograms with macroradiography.
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PMID:Comparison of aortography, renal vein renin sampling, radionuclide scans, ultrasound and the IVU in the investigation of childhood renovascular hypertension. 641 7

Hypertension secondary to stenosis of the left renal artery developed in a thirteen-year-old male six years after completion of inverted Y irradiation (3,600 rad) for abdominal Hodgkin disease. Surgical treatment with nephrectomy resulted in control of the hypertension without the use of antihypertensive agents. We review the literature for this unusual complication of abdominal irradiation, and recommend that a 99mTc-DMSA renal scan, selective renal vein sampling for renin determinations, and renal arteriography be performed on any patient in whom hypertension develops following abdominal irradiation in childhood.
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PMID:Renal artery stenosis and hypertension after abdominal irradiation for Hodgkin disease. Successful treatment with nephrectomy. 686 33

The role of imaging is to establish the cause of systemic hypertension, the main focus being the kidneys. All children require a Doppler ultrasound examination followed by a radioisotope study, usually 99mTc-DMSA. This combination will resolve most clinical situations. There is no role for the intravenous urogram in the majority of children. Arteriography and renal vein renin sampling are reserved for a small proportion of children. Imaging should always start with the least invasive procedure with the lowest radiation burden and high radiation techniques reserved for selected cases. The use of ACE inhibition may allow the diagnosis of renovascular disease in paediatrics noninvasively.
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PMID:Imaging in systemic hypertension in paediatrics. 806 86

Selective transcatheter embolization using an interlocking detachable coil (IDC) or detachable balloon was performed in three patients with renal artery aneurysms. All aneurysms were of the saccular type, located on segmental branches of the renal artery. After the embolization procedures, the levels of LDH, GOT, WBC and the body temperature were transitionally elevated in all patients. Complete occlusion of the aneurysms were achieved in all cases. Good clinical results were achieved in two of these patients without any renal dysfunction. However, local infarction of ipsilateral renal parenchyma occurred in one patient immediately after the embolization and a Tc-99m-DMSA renal scintigraphy study suggested renal dysfunction after infarction, and the level of serum renin activity was slightly elevated. Selective transcatheter embolization may constitute an acceptable therapeutic approach for renal artery aneurysms because beside avoiding surgery, it has a low risk of complications.
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PMID:[Selective transcatheter embolization for renal artery aneurysms: report of three cases]. 939 47

Renal scarring with and without vesicoureteral reflux (VUR) has been now recognized as an important cause of paediatric hypertension for many years [1-5]. However, its pathogenesis has still remained uncleared. The widespread concept implicated the activation of renin-angiotensin system finding a powerfull support in higher peripheral plasma renin activity (PRA) in children with reflux nephropathy than in controls [6, 7] and in beneficial antihypertensive effects of ACE inhibitors. The latter, in form of captopril, has also been used in captopril test and in renal scintigraphy and isotope renography following the administration of captopril to provide evidence for renin dependent hypertension [8, 9]. Published studies of captopril test have centred on the identification of renovascular as opposed to essential hypertension [10-18, 20-22]. The aim of our study was to assess the usefulness of captopril test in differentiation between hypertensive children with renal scarring from those with essential hypertension. We studied blood pressure (BP) and PRA responses to a single dose of captopril in two groups of hypertensive children. Group A consisted of 29 patients, 14 boys and 15 girls, who had renal scaring as demonstrated by renal 99mTc dimercaptosuccinid acid scan (99m Tc DMSA) and/or intravenous pyelography. Group B included 19 patients, 19 boys and 10 girls who had arterial hypertension, while clinical examination excluded renal and other definable causes of BP elevation, and they were therefore considered to have essential hypertension. At the time of the study all patients had normal glomerular filtration rate and were not salt depleted. They did not receive any antihypertensive medication for at least two weeks. The test was performed in the morning in fasting sitting patients. At the start of the test a small vein in the hand or forearm was cannulated to permit blood sampling. BP was measured 10, 20, and 30 minutes before captopril administration to get baseline BP (mean of these three measurements) and to allow the children to become accustomed to the test procedure. A single oral dose of captopril 0.64 +/- 0.04 mg/kg body weight was given to patients from group A and almost the same dose of captopril, 0.63 +/- 0.05 mg/kg body weight, to patients from group B. The patients remained sitting and BP was measured every 15 minutes during an hour. Blood for PRA was drown in the sitting position (17 patients from group A and 16 patients from group B) before and one hour after the dose of captopril. Samples of blood for basal PRA were collected from 16 patients from group A and in 14 patients from in B in lying position after waking up in the morning. PRA was measured by radioimmunoassay using a commercially available kit, SB-REN 2, from CIS Bio International. According to the criteria of Muller et al. [10] the captopril test was positive if the post-captopril PRA (ng/ml/h) was greater than or equal to 12 with an increase of greater than or equal to 10 and relative increase of greater than or equal to 15% (400% if initial PRA was < 3). The results of our study are presented in Tables 1 and 2 and in Graphs 1 and 2. The age of patients, doses of captopril, initial BP and PRA before the use of captopril did not much differ between studied groups. Fall of BP and PRA increase were highly significant (p < 0.001) both in group A and group B. However, the hypotensive reaction of diastolic BP and MAP were more pronounced in group A (14.45 +/- 1.67% and 15.81 +/- 1.62%) than in group B (6.95 +/- 2.21% and 8.96 +/- 1.75%; p < 0.01), but there were no significant differences in PRA and systolic BP changes and positive results of captopril test between the studied groups. Hypotensive responses of diastolic BP and MAP greater than 10% of initial values were found to be more frequent in group A (79.32% and 79.31%) than in group B (26.61% and 31.57 degrees %; p < 0.001 and p < 0.01). Diastolic BP and MAP were directly related to the dose of cap
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PMID:[The captopril test--an aid in the detection of scarring nephropathy as a cause of arterial hypertension in children]. 1064 99

Deletion polymorphism of angiotensin I converting enzyme (ACE) gene has been studied as a risk factor in various cardiovascular diseases and chronic nephropathies. Perturbation of local and systemic renin-angiotensin systems is one of the possible mechanisms of the progression of reflux nephropathy. In this study, the implication of ACE gene polymorphism in renal scarring and deterioration of renal function was analyzed in 66 children with vesicoureteral reflux. The genotype for the polymorphism was determined by PCR, and renal scar was identified by (99m)Tc-DMSA renal scan. The allelic frequency of the deletion polymorphism showed no significant difference either between patients with normal renal function and those with decreased renal function or between patients with renal scar and those without. We conclude that deletion polymorphism of ACE gene, as an independent variable, is not associated with reflux nephropathy in children with vesicoureteral reflux.
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PMID:Association of angiotensin I converting enzyme gene polymorphism with reflux nephropathy in children. 1154 9