Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0016199 (flank pain)
2,189 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Rheumatic manifestations are common and varied in infective endocarditis. We performed a retrospective case analysis on 87 patients with 93 episodes of infective endocarditis admitted to Flinders Medical Centre over an 11 year period (1980-1990). Disabling musculoskeletal symptoms and signs were documented in 22 (25%) of the patients. Thirteen patients developed severe or moderately severe low back pain during their illness, two with radiological evidence of a septic discitis or vertebral osteomyelitis. Two patients developed polyarthralgia/arthritis, four had septic arthritis (all with acute Staphylococcus aureus endocarditis), three developed severe loin pain, two acute gout, two had severe buttock pain and sacroiliac joint tenderness and two each developed disabling jaw/facial pain, neck/scapular pain and flank pain respectively. Five patients presented initially to the orthopaedic or rheumatological unit for management of their musculoskeletal symptoms. Four of seven patients with Streptococcus bovis endocarditis demonstrated prominent low back pain supporting a previously noted association between this organism and back symptoms. Furthermore, in one patient who had three separate episodes of endocarditis involving three different organisms, florid back symptoms were only seen in the infective episode involving Streptococcus bovis.
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PMID:Rheumatic manifestations of infective endocarditis. 141 Oct 84

The current literature suggests that renal autotransplantation is nearly uniformly effective in controlling the severe and debilitating pain of the loin pain-hematuria syndrome (LPHS). However, we report two patients thought to have this syndrome in whom renal autotransplantation did not result in long-term control of pain. In case 1, autotransplantation resulted in immediate cessation of pain; however, the flank pain recurred 7 1/2 months later. The recurrent pain was also severe and debilitating, requiring narcotic medications for control. In case 2, autotransplantation of the left kidney resulted in chronic pain in the left pelvic area, the site of the autotransplanted kidney. In addition, the patient continued to experience chronic discomfort in the left flank and along the flank incision. One year after autotransplantation, the patient still requires multiple daily doses of narcotic medications for pain control. Our two patients represent the 13th and 14th reported patients subjected to renal autotransplantation for management of LPHS. They represent only the third and fourth reported patients with recurrence of pain after renal autotransplantation. Because studies with negative results are less likely to be reported in the literature than studies with positive results, it is possible that the literature overestimates the effectiveness of renal autotransplantation in the LPHS. To assess the true effectiveness of renal autotransplantation in LPHS, a survey of patients with LPHS who have undergone renal autotransplantation needs to be performed.
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PMID:Renal autotransplantation in the loin pain-hematuria syndrome: a cautionary note. 149 73

The loin pain hematuria syndrome has been characterized as a constellation of severe recurrent flank pain and hematuria, occurring predominantly in young women. We studied a 17-year-old woman who had recurrent right flank pain, gross hematuria, and fever, without evidence of urinary tract infection. Her physical exam was remarkable for right costovertebral angle tenderness and a normal BP. Her urinalysis showed blood and protein but her creatinine clearance and 24-hour urinary calcium excretion were normal. A kidney biopsy was remarkable for arteriolar subintimal fibrous thickening and fibrin deposition, but no glomerulonephritis. Her peripheral hemostasis evaluation was normal except for circulating platelet aggregates and elevated fibrinopeptide A levels. On two occasions, her serum was unable to normally support prostacyclin (PGI2) production by cultured human umbilical endothelial cells, as measured by radioimmunoassay (RIA) of its stable metabolite 6-keto-PGF alpha. Blood samples from the right renal vein and inferior vena cava revealed a selective elevation of fibrinopeptide A in the right renal venous effluent. The presence of circulating platelet aggregates and elevated levels of fibrinopeptide A (a cleavage product of fibrin) suggests that platelet activation and fibrin deposition may play a role in the pathogenesis of this disorder. The inability of her serum to normally support the production of the potent antiplatelet and antithrombotic substance, PGI2, could represent a primary renovascular endothelial cell defect.
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PMID:Platelet activation and prostacyclin supporting capacity in the loin pain hematuria syndrome. 304 2

Loin pain-hematuria (LPH) syndrome is a poorly understood disorder in which the patients, mainly young women, experience unexplained severe chronic unilateral or bilateral flank pain associated with gross and/or microscopic hematuria. By contrast, thin glomerular basement membrane (GBM) disease is generally thought to be a benign disorder, affecting males and females equally, in which the major manifestation is asymptomatic microscopic hematuria. Herein we describe seven patients (6 females, 1 male) in whom thin GBM appeared to be the cause of the LPH syndrome. The gross hematuria in these patients could be attributed to thin GBM disease because the renal biopsy demonstrated red cells in renal tubules (indicating glomerular hematuria) and the only glomerular abnormality present with thin GBM. In addition, the other causes of gross hematuria were excluded by appropriate testing. The flank pain in these patients might also have been the result of their thin GBM disease. This is suggested by renal biopsy findings of multiple renal tubules filled with red cells, apparently occluding the tubules. We suggest that occlusion of a relatively small fraction of renal tubules could cause renal pain if back-leak of glomerular filtrate occurred that was of sufficient magnitude to expand renal parenchymal volume and stretch the renal capsule. Preliminary observations suggest that treatment with the angiotensin converting enzyme (ACE) inhibitor enalapril importantly reduces the frequency and severity of the episodes of gross hematuria and flank pain in most patients. ACE inhibition might decrease glomerular hemorrhage in patients with think GBM by decreasing glomerular hydrostatic pressure. We conclude that (1) Thin GBM disease can be the cause of gross hematuria, apparently as a result of rupture of thin GBM. (2) Rupture of thin GBM resulting in hemorrhage into renal tubules may be the cause of the flank pain and gross hematuria in some patients with the LPH syndrome.
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PMID:Loin pain-hematuria syndrome associated with thin glomerular basement membrane disease and hemorrhage into renal tubules. 877 Sep 64

Some patients with the loin pain/hematuria syndrome suffer incapacitating flank pain. No effective therapy has been reported. Uncertainty persists concerning the authenticity of the pain and the role of surgery in treatment. Forty-six patients with loin pain/hematuria syndrome and intractable pain were evaluated following treatment either by renal autotransplantation (30 patients, 10 bilaterally) or by renal denervation (20 patients, four bilaterally) over a 13-year period. All patients had concomitant renal nerve excision and ligation and capsulotomy. There were 37 (80%) women and nine men aged 18 to 61 years (mean age, 33 years). Excretion urography and angiography were normal in all patients. Nineteen of 25 (76%) patients in whom renal autotransplantation was successfully accomplished and who completed a follow-up questionnaire were free of pain, including eight of 10 with bilateral procedures. The follow-up periods ranged from 1 to 13 years (mean, 8.4 years). Six patients have been free of pain for 10 to 13 years. Of 18 patients treated with renal neurectomy who were available for follow-up examination, 12 (67%) developed recurrent renal pain, including four who had pain relief on the other side following previous renal autotransplantation. The follow-up period for these patients ranged from 6 to 9.9 years (mean, 8.0 years). Three of four patients with recurrent renal pain following neurectomy were treated successfully by renal autotransplantation. The loin pain/hematuria syndrome is a rare cause of incapacitation, predominantly of relatively young females. The pain of the syndrome is organic. Renal autotransplantation achieves pain relief in three quarters of patients, but the procedure is often (30%) required bilaterally and has significant complications. Renal neurectomy is followed by an excessive incidence of recurrent renal pain.
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PMID:Evaluation of the loin pain/hematuria syndrome treated by renal autotransplantation or radical renal neurectomy. 970 4

Acute renal infarction presents in a similar clinical picture to that of a renal stone. We report a 55-year-old Saudi female, known to have atrial fibrillation secondary to mitral stenosis due to rheumatic heart disease. She presented with a two day history of right flank pain that was treated initially as a renal stone. Further investigations confirmed her as a case of renal infarction. Renal infarction is under-diagnosed because the similarity of its presentation to renal stone. Renal infarction should be considered in the differential diagnosis of loin pain, particularly in a patient with atrial fibrillation.
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PMID:Acute renal infarction secondary to atrial fibrillation - mimicking renal stone picture. 1690 29

In three women on chronic haemodialysis because of end-stage renal disease who were 40, 59, and 73 years of age respectively, spontaneous renal bleeding was diagnosed. The first two patients presented with acute flank pain and signs of sudden blood loss, the third one had chronic abdominal pain and anaemia. A CT scan demonstrated perirenal bleeding in all three patients and expansion into the retroperitoneal space in the first and third patient. In the latter two patients, acquired renal cysts had been visible during earlier abdominal ultrasound. None of the patients had severe hypertension, but all of them had received medication enhancing bleeding tendency, such as nadroparin, which was administered during haemodialysis. The first and the last patient were treated conservatively and survived. The second patient was haemodynamically unstable and underwent embolisation to stop the bleeding. She died in hospital after fifteen days due to the complications of a cardiac arrest. Abdominal CT or ultrasound is the technique of choice to evaluate patients with end-stage renal disease with loin pain or bleeding. Most of the time, conservative treatment suffices.
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PMID:[Spontaneous renal bleeding in haemodialysis patients]. 1875 14

The purpose of our trial was to evaluate whether stents could be eliminated after uncomplicated ureteroscopic lithotripsy for ureteral stones and the indications of ureteral stent placement. A total of 228 patients underwent uncomplicated ureteroscopic intracorporeal lithotripsy. After the procedures, patients without marked ureteral edema, polypoid change or stent placement were treated as a control group. The other patients were randomized to two groups. Patients were followed on the first postoperative day, 6 and 12 weeks, postoperatively. In stented cases the stent was removed after 1 week. Outcome measures included visual analog scale assessment, postoperative analgesic requirements, complications and the stone-free rate. On the first postoperative day the symptoms of flank pain, dysuria and frequency were significantly greater in the stented group (P < 0.0001). The overall perioperative complication rate, including fever, pyuria, flank and loin pain, was 3.3% (3/90) in group 1, 16.9% (12/71) in group 2, and 41.8% (28/67) in group 3. We believe that in selected patients undergoing ureteroscopy for ureteral stone, stents can be safely omitted. Patients without stents have significantly less stent-related symptoms and are not at higher risk of complications with smooth ureteral mucosa. When there is ureteral edema or polypoid change with pyuria, ureteral stents should be indwelled to avoid severe postoperative complications.
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PMID:Indications of stented uncomplicated ureteroscopic lithotripsy: a prospective randomized controlled study. 1918 76

The clinical presentation of acute onset of nausea, vomiting, and flank pain in combination with acute elevation of blood pressure should raise high suspicion of renal infarction. However, because of its nonspecific presentation, diagnosis may be delayed. We report the case of a 63-year-old man who presented with a 2-day history of right flank pain that was treated initially as a renal stone. He had a background history of atrial fibrillation. Further investigations confirmed this as a case of renal infarction. Renal infarction is underdiagnosed because of the similarity of its presentation to other renal pathology. Renal infarction should be considered in the differential diagnosis of loin pain, particularly in a patient with atrial fibrillation.
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PMID:Considerations in the diagnosis and therapy for acute loin pain. 1937 55

Kidney cancers account for 2-3% of all adult malignancies in the UK. Men are predominantly affected by renal cancer with an average age at diagnosis of 64 years. Renal (or clear) cell carcinoma (RCC) accounts for 90% of kidney cancers. Early diagnosis improves survival with five-year survival rates for renal cancer of 70-94% for localised tumours in the UK. RCC should be suspected in the presence of localising symptoms such as flank pain, a loin mass or haematuria; constitutional upset including weight loss, pyrexia and/or night sweats; or with unexplained laboratory tests. Smoking, obesity and hypertension are the most important and most common risk factors. Environmental exposure to asbestos, cadmium and trichloroethylene are less common risk factors. Patients on chronic dialysis and renal transplant recipients are at increased risk of RCC in their native kidneys. If kidney cancer is suspected on history, physical examination or initial screening tests then a red flag ultrasound examination of the renal tracts should be requested. Dipstick urinalysis is of great value as asymptomatic haematuria may be the only abnormal test in the presence of non-specific symptoms such as weight loss or loin pain. Visible or non-visible haematuria, in the absence of proteinuria, suggests an underlying structural abnormality is present in the kidneys, ureters or bladder. Surgical removal of RCCs, where feasible, may result in cure in up to 40-60% of cases. Individuals too frail for major surgery may benefit from thermal ablation and cryotherapy. Agents that target the VEGF and mTOR pathways are considered first line in the treatment of metastatic RCC. Sunitinib, recommended by NICE, is administered orally and acts by inhibiting the VEGF receptor.
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PMID:Early diagnosis improves survival in kidney cancer. 2249 3


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