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)

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