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Query: UMLS:C0016199 (
flank pain
)
2,189
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The manifestations, clinical course and treatment of 14 patients with non-malignant renal vein thrombosis are described. Most patients (10 of 14) had generalized vague illness and nephrotic syndrome but 4 were initially seen with acute symptoms of
flank pain
, hematuria or hypertension. Renal vein thrombosis affected young men 2.5 times more often than women and occurred on the left side 2.6 times more commonly than on the right or both sides. Red blood cell casts in the urinary sediment, heavy proteinuria and hypoalbuminemia were useful indicators of the disease. Excretory urographic signs were suggestive of renal vein thrombosis in all patients and these were corroborated by angiographic studies. Systemic anticoagulation with or without a
renal failure
program and diuretics, or simply a combination of the last 2 modalities, was used in 9 patients. In 2 of the 9 patients who were unresponsive the adjuvant use of cyclophosphamide and steroids effected a cure. The remaining 5 patients underwent nephrectomy or thrombectomy. All 14 patients were followed for 1 to 7 years (mean 1.6 years). Ten patients were cured or improved, 1 patient was unchanged, and in the remaining 3 patients the condition deteriorated and they subsequently required a renal allograft. The rationale for various forms of treatment is discussed.
...
PMID:Renal vein thrombosis. 105 24
Two college students who developed reversible acute deterioration in renal function following binge drinking of beer and the use of nonsteroidal antiinflammatory drugs (NSAIDs) are reported. Both patients presented with back and
flank pain
with muscle tenderness, but showed no evidence of overt rhabdomyolysis. The first case had marked
renal failure
, with a peak serum creatinine reaching 575 mumol/L (6.5 mg/dL), and acute tubular necrosis was documented by renal biopsy. The second case had only modest elevation in serum creatinine, and renal function rapidly improved on rehydration. The contribution of the potential muscle damage associated with alcohol ingestion to the changes in renal function in these two cases is not clear. However, the major mechanism for the acute renal failure was thought to be related to inhibition of renal prostaglandin synthesis in the face of compromised renal hemodynamics secondary to alcohol-induced volume depletion.
...
PMID:Acute renal failure following binge drinking and nonsteroidal antiinflammatory drugs. 151 10
Cocaine abuse is associated with a constellation of serious medical complications. An unrecognized and recently described complication of cocaine use is rhabdomyolysis with acute renal failure. We describe the first patient identified in our institution with this entity, admitted to the medical services with oliguric acute renal failure. Three days prior to admission the patient had a cocaine snorting binge. He presented with bilateral
flank pain
, gross hematuria, vomiting and chills. No history of crush injury, prolonged immobilization and or seizures was reported. On admission the vital signs were normal, physical exam revealed periorbital edema and marked soft tissue neck swelling. Lab values: Bun 120 mgs%, Creat. 10.7 mgs%, Na 132 meq/lt, Co2 13mq/lt, Cl, 103meq/lt, Co2 13meq/lt, Ca 5.3 mgs%, CPK 30,800 U/L with a MM fraction of 98%, LDH 600 U/L, SGOT 300 U/L. The urine was dark red with a ph of 6.5 and 100 rbc/hpf. The anti-GBM antibody and blood cultures were negative. An abdominal sonogram was normal. He received peritoneal dialysis and was discharged on his 14th hospital day with a CPK of 2,800 U/L and decreasing azotemia. Cocaine associated rhabdomyolysis has only been recently described in the literature (AJM April, 88). Acute myoglobinuric
renal failure
needs to be added to the growing list of medical complications of cocaine use.
...
PMID:Cocaine and rhabdomyolysis: report of a case and review of the literature. 207 48
A 14 year old boy was admitted for vomiting, anorexia,
flank pain
and leukocyturia/hematuria. Shortly after admission, he developed anuria and acute renal failure so that hemodialysis had to be started. Pre- and post-renal causes were excluded. There were no signs of acute glomerulonephritis; liver enzymes were normal. The 123Iodine-Hippuran scan showed a shock kidney pattern lacking tubular clearance. Renal biopsy revealed an interstitial nephritis with edema and a mixed cellular infiltration. History was empty for nephrotoxic agents except for mushroom ingestion: Five days before admission the boy ate Cortinarius speciocissimus mushrooms, the toxine of which is known to be nephrotoxic, causing irreversible
renal failure
in severe cases (Orellanus Syndrome). Renal function did not improve much and renal transplantation was performed after 14 months on hemodialysis. In interstitial nephritis of unknown etiology the possibility of mushroom poisoning should be considered.
...
PMID:[Terminal renal failure caused by interstitial nephritis following mushroom poisoning by Cortinarius speciocissimus]. 361 24
A case report of acute
flank pain
with reversible
renal failure
in a young adult after taking three doses of suprofen is presented. Blood urea nitrogen and serum creatinine values returned to normal from significantly elevated levels on admission.
...
PMID:Suprofen-induced acute renal failure. 378 Apr 18
We describe a unique clinical syndrome of
flank pain
and acute renal failure that is associated with suprofen, a nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drug that has recently been made available in the United States. In the initial 6 months of the drug's distribution in this country, at least 16 patients developed this syndrome. All 16 had acute
flank pain
and 13 developed mild reversible
renal failure
within 12 hours of ingestion of one to three suprofen capsules. This syndrome is unlike other nephrotoxic syndromes related to nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs. The mechanism is not known.
...
PMID:Suprofen-related nephrotoxicity. A distinct clinical syndrome. 380 Jan 83
Fifty-three symptomatic adults with autosomal dominant polycystic kidney disease were studied retrospectively for a mean follow-up of 12 years (range 10 months to 33 years). Diagnosis was confirmed by either x-ray, ultrasound, laparotomy, or autopsy. Commonest presenting clinical findings were
flank pain
(30%), hypertension (21%), symptomatic urinary tract infection (UTI) (19%), gross hematuria (19%), and palpable masses (15%). A total of nine patients (17%) progressed to end-stage renal disease. Change in renal function measured using the reciprocal of plasma creatinine plotted against time was linear for each individual patient with a maximum functional decline of 0.7 mg/dL/yr (slope = -0.07). Past the age of sixty
renal failure
was uncommon. Easily controlled hypertension developed in 64% attended by mild retinopathy. UTIs were common (53%), often recurrent (61%), precipitated by instrumentation in 6 of 14 patients (43%), leading to death in two (33%). Renal calculi were extremely common (34%) and had no defined metabolic cause. The presence of hematuria (64%), gross or microscopic, bore no relationship to the decline in renal function. Pregnancy was normal in these patients with no increase in fetal or maternal morbidity or mortality. We conclude the following: Renal functional deterioration is linear, less than previously reported, and bears no relationship to hematuria. Hypertension is common, easily treated, and causes minor end-organ damage. Renal calculi are frequent. Urinary tract instrumentation often induces infection with considerable morbidity and mortality and must be avoided. Pregnancy is not contraindicated if renal function is normal. The prognosis for survival in this disease is better than previously reported.
...
PMID:Autosomal dominant polycystic kidney disease: presentation, complications, and prognosis. 397 15
Acute hemolysis as a reaction to rifampicin is extremely rare; case reports number less than 15. We recently evaluated a 65-year-old Cambodian refugee who self-regulated the use of rifampicin and isoniazid for pulmonary tuberculosis. Fifteen minutes after a single discontinuous oral dose, he developed
flank pain
, chills, rigors, vomiting, diarrhea, fever, and brown turbid urine. Laboratory tests at presentation showed acute intravascular hemolysis. Nonoliguric
renal failure
ensured, and he was transferred to our institution 2 days later. The patient was group A, Rh (D) positive, P1 negative with a cold autoantibody and cold anti-P1 alloantibody. The direct antiglobulin test was negative at the time of transfer. To evaluate the hemolysis, studies were done to test for rifampicin- or isoniazid-dependent antibodies. Rifampicin-dependent antibodies were detected in the antiglobulin phase with broad spectrum anti-human globulin, monospecific anti-gamma chain, and anti-complement antisera. Agglutination titers did not change after dithiothreitol reduction of the patient's serum. We conclude that this patient developed rifampicin-dependent IgG antibodies with complement-fixing capability. The presence of rifampicin-dependent antibodies should be suspected in a patient with hemolysis and/or
renal failure
taking rifampicin.
...
PMID:Acute hemolysis and renal failure with rifampicin-dependent antibodies after discontinuous administration. 398 5
Renal infarction is most frequently due to emboli from the heart or aorta. Other causes include atheromatous disease, renal artery aneurysm, vasculitis, hypotension, hypercoagulable states, aortic dissection, and major trauma. Most renal infarctions are segmental. The extent of disease is dependent upon the size and number of renal vessels involved, coexistent renal disease, and collateral circulation.
Flank pain
, fever, leukocytosis, hematuria,
renal failure
, or hypertension may suggest the diagnosis, but these findings are nonspecific and diagnosis will depend not only on history and physical examination, but also on the appropriate imaging tests. The type of treatment is dictated by the etiology of the infarction.
...
PMID:Renal infarction after aerobics. 639 75
A 47-year-old chronic alcoholic white male with previously normal renal function and no prior history of urinary tract infection developed the sudden onset of fever, bilateral
flank pain
, oliguria, and deterioration of renal function. Subsequent workup revealed massive pyuria, bilaterally enlarged kidney, and positive urine and blood cultures for E. coli. In spite of successful treatment with appropriate antibiotics and gradual improvement of the patient's clinical status, pyuria and
renal failure
persisted, necessitating institution of hemodialysis. 8 weeks after admission a renal biopsy revealed renal parenchymal malakoplakia.
...
PMID:Renal parenchymal malakoplakia presenting as acute oliguric renal failure. 743 82
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