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Query: UMLS:C0011570 (
depression
)
172,036
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
In 35 initially normotensive patients with chronic glomerulonephritis and lupus nephritis (including 27 patients with nephrotic syndrome; NS), blood pressure (BP), urinary sodium excretion, plasma renin activity (PRA), plasma aldosterone level (PA), urinary aldosterone excretion (Au and blood volume were measured before and during prednisolone treatment. In 7 patients (all with NS) steroid-induced hypertension has developed. The patients prone to develop hypertension were hypervolemic nephrotics with initial
depression
of PRA, PA, Au, and severe sodium retention. In these patients prednisolone did not produce diuresis of natriuresis nor did it decrease proteinuria. In normo- and hypovolemic patients prednisolone produced significant diuresis and natriuresis and failed to induce hypertension. Thus, two types of response to prednisolone could be observed in patients with NS.
Nephron
1988
PMID:Steroid-induced hypertension in patients with nephrotic syndrome. 328 84
Two cases of childhood nephrotic syndrom (NS) were diagnosed in September 1981 and February 1982, respectively. The patients were first cousins. There was no other family history of renal disease. Five months after onset of nephrosis in 1 patient and 1 month after onset of nephrosis in the other both had an intercurrent measles infection and the NS rapidly went into spontaneous remission. However, relapses occurred 3 and 7 months later. At that time both patients were started on steriod treatment and obtained remission. Unfortunately, both relapsed again 14 months later. Kidney biopsies were performed, the pathologic findings demonstrated that both were mild mesangial proliferative glomerulonephritis. The mononuclear cell subsets and lymphoproliferative responses were studied during the acute measles infection, 4 weeks later, in remission and relapse of NS. The mononuclear cell subsets and lymphoproliferative response in medium containing autologous serum with complement were decreased during the acute measles infection. Both patients had an increase of OKT8 cells and Leu-7 cells in relapse and a decrease in remission. Taken together, natural measles infection caused a prolonged
depression
of cell-mediated immunity, T cell subset and induced a temporary remission of steroid-sensitive NS.
Nephron
1986
PMID:Histopathological and immunological studies in spontaneous remission of nephrotic syndrome after intercurrent measles infection. 348 7
A quantitative, noninvasive method of assessing autonomic control, based on the spectral analysis of beat-to-beat fluctuations in heart rate (HR), was applied to patients with chronic renal failure (RF). Since the power spectrum of HR fluctuations measures the dynamic nervous control of HR, it can be used to quantitate a normal control system as opposed to a disturbed or depressed system. Indeed, in RF patients, a strong reduction in the HR power spectrum was observed in all frequency ranges, both sympathetically and parasympathetically mediated. A similar
depression
in autonomic control was demonstrated in patients on hemodialysis or peritoneal dialysis. RF patients not yet undergoing dialysis show a lesser degree of
depression
. Spectral analysis of HR fluctuations in RF patients makes it possible to quantitate autonomic dysfunction and to reliably measure its development as a function of time, and requires only a 10-min standard electrocardiogram recording.
Nephron
1987
PMID:Spectral analysis of fluctuations in heart rate: an objective evaluation of autonomic nervous control in chronic renal failure. 357 69
Infection often complicates renal failure and frequently causes death, but the association between renal failure, impaired immunity and infection has not been proved. A recent study showed that patients on dialysis did not show an expected leucocytic response to infection, suggesting that the blunted response was evidence of the immunocompromised state of the uraemic patient. In this study, the relationship between leucocytic responses and infectious challenge was investigated in an animal model of chronic renal failure. Bacteraemia, peritonitis and a chronic lung infection were induced in normal and uraemic rats; the leucocytic response was then monitored. In all three infections, the total white blood cell response was significantly less in the uraemic animals. Neutrophil numbers actually increased, but this response was disguised by a pronounced
depression
in lymphocyte numbers. Our conclusion is that, although the leucocytic response of the uraemic host to infection may be depressed, the changes to individual leucocyte components in the peripheral blood are sufficiently characteristic to provide useful evidence of infection.
Nephron
1985
PMID:Host immune status in uraemia. VI. Leucocytic response to bacterial infection in chronic renal failure. 388 87
This study examines the effects of 12 months of endurance exercise training (cycling, walking and jogging) on lipid profiles, glucose metabolism, blood pressure, anemia and psychological function in 14 hemodialysis patients. Maximal aerobic capacity (VO2max) increased 18% in the exercisers (p less than 0.01), but did not change in 11 controls. This was associated with a reduction in
depression
, a decrease in dosages of antihypertensive medications, a significant increase in hematocrit and hemoglobin levels (red cell mass rose, plasma volume did not change), a decrease in plasma triglyceride by 23% (p less than 0.05) and an increase in high-density lipoprotein cholesterol (HDL-C) levels by 21% (p less than 0.01) (both HDL-C and triglyceride levels worsened in the sedentary controls), and an 18% increase in glucose disappearance rates (p less than 0.05) in spite of a 52% decrease in fasting insulin levels (p less than 0.01), suggesting that insulin sensitivity improved. These results demonstrate that some of the complications present in hemodialysis patients may be caused by their sedentary life-style, rather than endstage renal disease itself. This suggests that rehabilitation through exercise is possible for these patients. By reducing coronary risk factors in hemodialysis patients, exercise training may also decrease their heightened morbidity and mortality from atherosclerotic complications. These possibilities need to be examined in a longitudinal study.
Nephron
1986
PMID:Exercise training reduces coronary risk and effectively rehabilitates hemodialysis patients. 396 Feb 42
Potassium and magnesium deficiency have been reported as risk factors for experimental gentamicin nephrotoxicity. Amiloride, a potassium-sparing diuretic, also leads to increased renal magnesium reabsorption. Amiloride, 2 mg/kg/day, was given to groups of 8-12 Fischer 344 rats receiving gentamicin, 20 mg/kg b.i.d., for 3, 7, 10 and 14 days. Control animals received the vehicle for gentamicin, amiloride alone or gentamicin alone. The degree of renal failure and weight loss were similar in gentamicin and gentamicin + amiloride groups at all time points despite increases in serum potassium and magnesium in the amiloride-treated animals. Tubular dysfunction as assessed by
depression
of renal cortical slice uptake of p-aminohippurate and N-methylnicotinamide was not improved by the addition of amiloride. In addition, a comparable degree of tubular necrosis and regeneration was observed in all gentamicin-treated groups. Maximum gentamicin concentrations in the renal cortex did not differ. Thus, despite reduction of urinary losses of potassium and magnesium with resultant increased serum values, amiloride did not protect against experimental gentamicin nephrotoxicity. The tubular electrolyte wasting noted clinically is likely to be a result, rather than a cause of proximal tubular cell damage.
Nephron
1985
PMID:Effect of amiloride on experimental gentamicin nephrotoxicity. 400 Mar 46
Cell-mediated immunity (CMI) was evaluated in 8 patients with focal glomerular sclerosis (FGS), 50 patients suffering from chronic mesangial proliferative glomerulonephritis without renal insufficiency and 24 healthy controls. The following parameters were measured: delayed skin reactivity to purified protein derivative, circulating lymphocytes, lymphocyte cell-surface markers (neuraminidase-treated sheep erythrocyte and erythrocyte-antibody-complement rosettes) and functional markers (mitogenic responses to concanavalin A and phytohemagglutinin). The FGS patients with nephrotic syndrome (NS) had a significant
depression
in CMI, characterized by decreased responses of the lymphocytes to both concanavalin A and phytohemagglutinin, impaired delayed hypersensitivity to purified protein derivative and a decreased proportion of T lymphocytes as compared with normal subjects. In contrast, the levels of all CMI parameters studied in FGS patients in remission and in patients with chronic glomerulonephritis with or without NS did not differ from normal subjects. Thus, the majority of FGS patients with NS demonstrated an impaired response in a CMI assay system. The possible significance of these phenomena in the pathophysiology of FGS is discussed.
Nephron
1983
PMID:Impaired cell-mediated immunity in focal glomerular sclerosis. 660 85
To assess the psychological effects of exercise training in hemodialysis patients 4 dialysis patients, matched by age, sex, and medical history with 4 controls, received psychological testing before and after a 6-month period of exercise training. The trained patients had a 28% improvement in graded exercise treadmill stress test duration and a 13% improvement in aerobic capacity. This was associated with a significant reduction in anxiety and
depression
(p less than 0.06), but no measurable change in these moods occurred in the control groups. These results suggest that exercise training may improve psychological functioning in dialysis patients.
Nephron
1983
PMID:Psychological effects of exercise training in hemodialysis patients. 684 45
137 patients on maintenance dialysis were studied. All but 2 patients were ambulatory, and all patients demonstrated good to normal strength on manual motor tests. With the exception of systemic lupus erythematosus, no correlation was found between primary diagnosis and patients' fatigue ratings. Laboratory studies of hematocrit, BUN, creatinine, calcium, and phosphorus did not correlate with fatigue ratings for the majority of patients. Fatigue appeared more problematic for patients who had been dialyzing for less than 4 years.
Depression
was pronounced among patients who reported feeling fatigued upon arising.
Nephron
1982
PMID:The problem of fatigue in dialysis patients. 711 Apr 64
Currently accepted concepts of renal and vascular physiology are inadequate to explain the reversible increases in vascular permeability which occur during episodes of increased blood viscosity. On the basis that all basement membranes exhibit biological thixotropy, it has been suggested that basement membranes are pressure dependent. The physiological significance of increased blood viscosity lies in the associated increase in peripheral vascular resistance which develops because of altered blood rheology. In order to overcome the peripheral resistance, intravascular pressure rises, and if adequate pressures develop, plasma proteins may deform and pass through the vascular basement membrane. This is considered to be the mechanism of proteinuria. In the treatment of high blood viscosity disorders it is suggested that the immunosuppressant drug, Thiamphenicol, may be useful because of its ability to induce a reversible dose-related
depression
of erythropoiesis, and thereby reduce blood viscosity.
Nephron
1982
PMID:A hypothesis proposing increased blood viscosity as a cause of proteinuria and increased vascular permeability. 711 Apr 79
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