Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Pivot Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Target Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Query: EC:3.4.23.15 (
renin
)
35,795
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Total body elemental composition was measured in 40 patients with well documented heart failure who were oedema-free on digoxin and diuretics. The results were compared with values for 20 patients with untreated essential hypertension matched for height, weight, age, and sex. Total body potassium alone was also measured in 20 normal subjects also matched for anthropomorphic measurements. Patients with hypertension had a very similar total body potassium content to that of normal subjects, but patients with heart failure had significantly reduced total body potassium. This could not be explained by muscle wasting because total body
nitrogen
, largely present in muscle tissue, was well maintained. When total body potassium was expressed as a ratio of potassium to
nitrogen
mass a consistent depletion of potassium was revealed in the group with heart failure. Potassium depletion was poorly related to diuretic dose, severity of heart failure, age, or renal function. Activation of the
renin
-angiotensin-aldosterone system was, however, related to hypokalaemia and potassium depletion. Such patients also had significantly lower concentrations of serum sodium and blood pressure. Serum potassium was related directly to total body potassium. Despite the absence of clinically apparent oedema total body chlorine was not consistently increased in heart failure, but the calculated extracellular fluid volume remained expanded in the heart failure group. Total body sodium was significantly increased in patients with heart failure, but less than half of this increase could be accounted for by extracellular fluid volume expansion. Potassium depletion in heart failure may account in part for the high frequency of arrhythmias and sudden death in this condition.
...
PMID:Total body electrolyte composition in patients with heart failure: a comparison with normal subjects and patients with untreated hypertension. 331 Oct 97
Determinations were made of peripheral plasma
renin
activity, blood pressure, plasma volume and blood urea
nitrogen
in rabbit models of two-kidney one-clip, two-kidney two-clip or one-kidney one-clip hypertension that were created by staged operation to produce functionally significant renal artery stenosis. The plasma
renin
activity in the divided renal veins and inferior caval vein was also measured in animals with two-kidney two-clip hypertension. In rabbits with two-kidney two-clip hypertension the plasma
renin
activity was significantly higher in the renal vein on the more involved side and comparable in the renal vein on the less involved side and the inferior caval vein. This response pattern of
renin
secretion, unilateral hypersecretion with contralateral suppression, was identical with that observed in animals with two-kidney one-clip hypertension. In animals with one-kidney one-clip hypertension there was a marked increase in plasma volume and blood urea
nitrogen
. The renovascular hypertension was in decreasing order of severity in animals with one-kidney one-clip hypertension, those with two-kidney two-clip hypertension and those with two-kidney one-clip hypertension.
...
PMID:Divided renal and caval vein plasma renin activity in two-kidney two-clip hypertension in rabbits and variations of blood pressure, plasma volume and renal function following unilateral nephrectomy. 331 18
It has recently been shown that repeated large-volume paracentesis associated with intravenous albumin infusion is a rapid, effective, and safe therapy of ascites in cirrhosis. To investigate whether intravenous albumin infusion is necessary in the treatment of cirrhotics with large-volume paracentesis, 105 patients with tense ascites were randomly allocated into two groups. Fifty-two patients (group 1) were treated with paracentesis (4-6 L/day until disappearance of ascites) plus intravenous albumin infusion (40 g after each tap), and 53 (group 2) with paracentesis without albumin infusion. After disappearance of ascites, patients were discharged from the hospital with diuretics. Patients developing tense ascites during follow-up were treated according to their initial schedule. Paracentesis was effective in eliminating the ascites in 50 patients from group 1 and in 48 from group 2, with the duration of the hospital stay being approximately 11 days in both groups. Paracentesis plus intravenous albumin did not induce significant changes in standard renal function tests, plasma
renin
activity, and plasma aldosterone. In contrast, paracentesis without albumin was associated with a significant increase in blood urea
nitrogen
, a marked elevation in plasma
renin
activity and plasma aldosterone concentration, and a significant reduction in serum sodium concentration. One patient from group 1 and 11 from group 2 developed renal impairment or severe hyponatremia after treatment, or both (chi 2 = 9.19; p less than 0.01). The development of these complications could not be predicted by clinical and laboratory data before treatment. Although the probability of survival after entry into the study was similar in patients from both groups, a multivariate analysis identified the development of hyponatremia or renal impairment, or both, following the first paracentesis treatment and the occurrence of other complications during the first hospitalization (encephalopathy, gastrointestinal bleeding, and severe infection) as being the only independent predictors of mortality. These results indicate that intravenous albumin infusion is important in avoiding renal and electrolyte complications and activation of endogenous vasoactive systems in cirrhotics with ascites who are treated with repeated large-volume paracentesis. The development of such complications may impair survival in these patients.
...
PMID:Randomized comparative study of therapeutic paracentesis with and without intravenous albumin in cirrhosis. 336 Feb 70
Acute oliguria in the critically ill postoperative patient, or in the trauma victim after resuscitation, is a substantial clinical problem. The mortality associated with ARF in these settings remains unacceptably high. Evaluation of the oliguric patient must include thorough monitoring for, and correction of, prerenal and postrenal causes of oliguria. In this sense, diagnosis of ARF is one of exclusion. Differential diagnosis is facilitated by microscopic examination of urine and by biochemical analyses of blood and urine for calculating indices of tubular function (urinary-to-plasma ratios of blood urea
nitrogen
and creatinine, sodium excretion, and clearances of sodium, creatinine, solute, and water). The early detection of an intrarenal defect, as accomplished by using serial measurements of free water clearance, may allow interruption of the process and prevention of ARF. Preventive measures include optimization of hemodynamic status and the use of osmotic diuretic agents (mannitol) and loop diuretics (furosemide, ethacrynic acid, and bumetanide). Dopamine is useful for increasing both renal blood flow and urine flow and may be useful for preventing ARF, but this is not firmly established. Experimentally, other approaches such as modulating the
renin
-angiotensin system, prostaglandin system, and cellular calcium fluxes have been attempted, but the clinical applicability of these measures is not established. The best approach to ARF is preventing it by knowing which patients are at high risk, by studiously preventing renal insults, and by aggressively treating early indications of renal malfunction using established therapies.
...
PMID:Acute renal failure following traumatic injury or major operation. 355 12
The natural course of renal function in patients with cirrhosis and ascites but without azotemia is unclear. Therefore, a prospective evaluation of 23 non-azotemic cirrhotic patients with ascites was carried out over a three-year interval. Assessment included evaluation of serum electrolyte values, liver function tests, plasma
renin
levels, and parathyroid hormone levels. Renal function was determined by measurement of clearances of water and solute excretion, and simultaneous clearances of para-amino hippurate, inulin, and creatinine. The initial mean glomerular filtration rate was 66 ml/minute, serum creatinine level was 1.1 mg/dl, and blood urea
nitrogen
value was 13 mg/dl. The glomerular filtration rate showed marked variability among patients. On the basis of initial glomerular filtration rate, the patients were divided into three groups. Group I consisted of patients with supranormal filtration rates (mean 183 ml/minute), Group II constituted patients with normal filtration rates (mean 92 ml/minute), and Group III comprised patients with severely impaired filtration rates (mean 32 ml/minute). The serum creatinine level was below 1.5 mg/dl in all three groups. Serial measurement of renal function was performed in 18 patients over a mean of 310 days (range four to 1,176 days). Eighty-six percent of patients studied from Groups I and II maintained a normal or supranormal glomerular filtration rate over one year. However, most patients in Group III showed a progressive decline in filtration rate, despite no change in serum creatinine value. Sixty-seven percent of Group III patients died over a mean of one year. The mean 24-hour solute excretion among Group III patients was only 263 mOsm per day, significantly less than the control value of 874 mOsm per day in other hospitalized non-cirrhotic patients. The serum creatinine level frequently failed to rise above normal even when the glomerular filtration rate was very low (less than 25 ml/minute), and creatinine clearance overestimated inulin clearance by a factor of two in Group III patients. However, the creatinine index was an aid in determining true glomerular filtration rate and may be a useful clinical test in the evaluation of renal insufficiency in cirrhotic patients with normal serum creatinine values. Many patients with cirrhosis and ascites will have a glomerular filtration rate of less than 60 ml/minute but a normal serum creatinine level. These patients may constitute a previously unrecognized large group.
...
PMID:Unpredictability of clinical evaluation of renal function in cirrhosis. Prospective study. 357 63
We reviewed our 10-year experience with neonatal hypertension. Fifty-three cases were identified, which represented 0.7% of all neonatal tertiary care admissions. Causes were identified in 23 (43%) neonates. These included acute tubular necrosis (n = 7), renal vascular abnormalities (n = 8), renal structural abnormalities (n = 4), interstitial nephritis (n = 2), and coarctation of the aorta (n = 2). No cause was identified in 30 (57%) infants. If the two neonates with coarctation are excluded, infants who had normal urinalyses, blood urea
nitrogen
(BUN), serum creatinine and plasma
renin
activity (PRA), had non-malignant hypertension that tended to be short-lived and always resolved spontaneously. In contrast, a cause of hypertension was found in 68% of those having an abnormal urinalysis, BUN, serum creatinine or PRA. There were two hypertensive deaths in this group. While the hypertension was usually more prolonged, it still generally resolved spontaneously by 1 year of age or following corrective surgery. Our experience indicates that diagnostic studies can be postponed if the urinalysis, BUN, serum creatinine and PRA are normal and if coarctation of the aorta has been excluded. If these preliminary studies are abnormal, however, a renal cause is likely and further studies are indicated.
...
PMID:Hypertension in the first month of life. 379 27
The effect of a continuous intra-aortal infusion of prostaglandin E2 (PGE2) (0.03 microgram . min-1 . kg-1) on the course of postischemic renal failure (180 min cessation of blood flow by inflation of a pneumatic cuff) has been investigated in 11 conscious sodium-replete dogs. The glomerular filtration rate (51Cr-EDTA: endogenous creatinine clearance) was less decreased in the PGE2 group (group B, n = 6) than in the control group (group A, n = 5; 13 ml . min-1 vs. 22 ml . min-1; p less than 0.05). Renal blood flow (electromagnetic flow probe) was markedly lower in the control group (82 ml . min-1) than in the PGE2 group (130 ml . min-1; p less than 0.05), even exceeding baseline levels in the latter group. Accordingly, the excessive rise in renal vascular resistance in the control group (+277%) was abolished in the PGE2 group (-20%) (p less than 0.05).
Nitrogen
retention was also markedly improved. Plasma
renin
activity, which was markedly raised initially (25.8 ng angiotensin I . ml-1 . h-1) was not significantly further increased during the subsequent 7 days. Urinary excretion of PGE2 was diminished in the control group and elevated following PGE2 infusion. It is suggested that the beneficial effects of PGE2 are mediated by preservation of renal perfusion. Additional effects of prostanoids on the ultrafiltration coefficient (KF) and cytoprotection by reduction of intracellular calcium accumulation must also be taken into consideration.
...
PMID:Beneficial effects of long-term prostaglandin E2 infusion on the course of postischemic acute renal failure. Long-term studies in chronically instrumented conscious dogs. 389 30
Plasma
renin
activity (PRA) was investigated by radioimmunoassay following short-term hypoxic hypoxia (45 min 10 per cent oxygen, 90 per cent
nitrogen
) or hypovolaemia induced by peritoneal dialysis with isotonic (305 mmol/l) glucose. The effect of the above stimuli was also followed in animals with chronic bilateral kidney denervation, beta-adrenoreceptor blockade with dl-propranolol (3 mg/kg body weight i. p.) and alpha-adrenoreceptor blockade with phentolamine (1.5 mg/kg body weight i. p.). Blood was taken by cardiac puncture ten minutes after Nembutal anaesthesia. It was found that: a) kidney denervation and beta-adrenoreceptor blockade suppressed PRA. b) Short-term general hypoxia activated
renin
secretion by a reflex mechanism involving the renal nerves and the beta-adrenergic receptors. c) The administration of phentolamine potentiated the effect of hypoxia in respect of PRA. d) Hypovolaemia elevated PRA via a possible intra renal mechanism independent from the beta-adrenoreceptors.
...
PMID:Plasma renin activity in rats with renal denervation and adrenoreceptor blockers. 389 24
Eight patients with severe congestive heart failure refractory to conventional therapy, including vasodilators, were given captopril (seven patients) or teprotide (one patient). All had dyspnea, edema, elevated pulmonary wedge pressure (28.0 +/- 2.6 mm Hg), low cardiac index (1.6 +/- 0.1 liters per minute per square meter), and elevated levels of serum creatinine (2.3 +/- 0.2 mg per deciliter [203.3 +/- 17.7 mumol per liter]), blood urea
nitrogen
(48 +/- 5 mg per deciliter [17.1 +/- 1.8 mmol of urea per liter]), plasma
renin
activity (21 +/- 7 ng of angiotensin I per milliliter per hour), plasma angiotensin II (271 +/- 51 pg per milliliter), and plasma aldosterone (65 +/- 14 ng per deciliter). After one week of therapy, all indexes improved. Creatinine and p-aminohippurate clearances were also increased (P less than 0.01). Improvement was sustained (more than six months) and was associated with a statistically significant increase in the cardiac ejection fraction (12 +/- 3 to 26 +/- 7 per cent). With a mean follow-up of seven months, the New York Heart Association Functional Class has been reduced from IV to II, and the number of days of hospitalization to less than 10 per cent of that before captopril therapy. We conclude that captopril reduces afterload in advanced congestive heart failure and induces sustained improvements in clinical status and renal function.
...
PMID:Sustained effectiveness of converting-enzyme inhibition in patients with severe congestive heart failure. 624 25
A correlation between hyponatremia and increased plasma
renin
activity (PRA) has been reported in patients with severe congestive heart failure (CHF), implying both clinical and pathophysiologic significance. To determine the impact of diuretic therapy on this relation, we evaluated the correlation of serum sodium, prerenal azotemia (blood urea
nitrogen
/creatinine ratio [BUN/Cr] ), and PRA in 44 patients with severe CHF who were maintained on diuretic therapy. Serum sodium level was inversely related to PRA (r = -0.389, p less than 0.02). However, a significant correlation also existed between the BUN/Cr ratio and PRA (r = 0.365, p less than 0.025) and an inverse correlation between serum sodium level and the BUN/Cr ratio (r = 0.332, p less than 0.025). Multiple regression analysis of the 3 variables yielded significant interdependence (p less than 0.01). To evaluate the effect of diuretic therapy, 12 patients with severe CHF discontinued diuretic therapy and received, for 1 week each, 10 and 100 mEq sodium diets in balance studies. PRA ranged from 0.14 to 16 ng/ml/h. Despite this range, there was no significant correlation between either serum sodium or BUN/Cr ratio and PRA. It is concluded that the presence of marked hyponatremia and prerenal azotemia in patients with diuretic-treated CHF may suggest increased PRA. However, substantial patient-to-patient variability limits the predictive value of these correlations. Although some clinical value may be derived from such correlations, they should not be used to draw major inferences regarding the severity of CHF or the pathophysiology of water balance in CHF.
...
PMID:Association of hyponatremia with increased renin activity in chronic congestive heart failure: impact of diuretic therapy. 634 6
<< Previous
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
Next >>