Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0018801 (heart failure)
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Measurements of total body potassium (T.B.K.) were made by whole-body counting in four groups of patients receiving oral frusemide for one year. Patients in group 1 had essential hypertension and normal renal function and received 40 mg frusemide daily without potassium supplements. Patients in group 2 were similar but received oral potassium supplements for the first four months of treatment. Patients in group 3 had hypertension associated with renal disease and received 120 mg frusemide daily without potassium supplements. Patients in group 4 also had hypertension and renal impairment and in addition to 120 mg frusemide daily they received oral potassium supplements for four months. No evidence of depletion of T.B.K. was found in any of the groups after continuous treatment with frusemide for one year. It is questioned whether potassium supplementation in long term diuretic therapy with frusemide is necessary unless there is evidence of pre-existing potassium depletion or of some other factor such as cardiac failure, cirrhosis of the liver, or the nephrotic syndrome.
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PMID:Total body potassium in long-term frusemide therapy: is potassium supplementation necessary? 421 34

On the assumption that increased urinary lysozyme concentration (;lysozymuria') indicates tubular proteinuria and therefore impaired tubular function, urinary lysozyme has been estimated in acute disorders where transient disturbances of renal function might be expected, in cases diagnosed clinically as extrarenal uraemia, and in a few examples of acute renal disease. Reversible lysozymuria occurred with hypokalaemia, postoperative ;collapse', electrolyte depletion, severe extrarenal infection, acute pyelonephritis, the nephrotic syndrome, after a few apparently uncomplicated surgical operations, and very transiently after ventricular fibrillation abolished by DC shock. There was no lysozymuria with severe uraemic heart failure, aspirin and paracetamol poisoning, or severe jaundice, nor in two cases of acute glomerulonephritis. Although lysozymuria may occasionally be useful in the clinical diagnosis of acutely disordered renal function, the results suggest that its value is limited; on the other hand, they have provided information on renal pathophysiology in acute disease.
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PMID:Lysozymuria and acute disorders of renal function. 470 97

The biochemistry laboratory records of a 400-bed general hospital serving a population of about 120,000 showed that during the three-year period 1966-8 inclusive 487 patients had at some stage during their admission a blood urea of 100 mg/100 ml or more. Ninety per cent. were aged 50 or over, 79% were 60 or over, and 52% were 70 or over.The case notes of all patients with renal failure admitted during 1966 and 1967 were examined together with those of patients under 60 admitted during 1968. Three observers agreed about the most likely cause of the renal failure in 90% of patients whose case notes were available, or 74% of the total. The raised blood urea was thought to be due to "prerenal" factors in 60% of the patients, to acute tubular necrosis in 80%, to obstructive uropathy in 12%, and to "intrinsic" renal disease in 20%. Renal failure precipitated by such factors as cardiac failure, chest infections, cerebrovascular accidents, and shock was particularly common in old people.The hospital survey and replies to a questionnaire sent to all general practitioners in the area suggest that in the three-year period 14 patients may have been suitable for treatment by maintenance haemodialysis or renal transplantation. This represents a rate of about 39 per million per year under the age of 60 and 28 per million per year under 50.
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PMID:Incidence of uraemia and requirements for maintenance haemodialysis. 521 79

The Hypertension Detection and Follow-up Program (HDFP) first demonstrated that treatment of patients with mild hypertension (90 to 104 mm Hg diastolic) could reduce morbidity and mortality in coronary heart disease (CHD). Previous studies had already shown the beneficial effect of blood pressure reduction on renal disease, heart failure, and cerebrovascular disease. When uncontrolled, mild hypertension in the patient with renal disease will lead to further deterioration of renal function. To prevent this and other complications (such as atherosclerosis) of hypertension, whether primary or secondary, one should place these patients on antihypertensive therapy. However, standard stepped-care therapy with diuretic drugs and beta-blocking agents is now under reevaluation in view of the potential adverse effect of these agents on serum lipids and renal function. Beta-blocking drugs, furthermore, tend to increase peripheral resistance, a hemodynamic effect opposite to that desired in these patients. Other drugs, acting centrally or peripherally on the nervous system, also have some undesirable features in addition to troublesome side effects. Prazosin, a vasodilator and effective antihypertensive agent with a different mechanism of action, has no adverse action on lipids and renal function, lowers peripheral resistance, and does not cause many of the side effects that limit use of the other drugs. It therefore appears to be a good choice for initial therapy in mild to moderate hypertension with associated renal insufficiency.
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PMID:Treating the patient with mild hypertension and renal insufficiency. 613 5

One hundred fourteen patients with ruptured cerebral aneurysms were reviewed in regard to the incidence and etiological factors of preoperative disturbances of water and electrolyte metabolism. Patients with inadequate salt intake, evidence of renal disease, cardiac failure or excessive diuretic therapy were excluded. Twenty-five (21.9%) patients developed water and electrolyte disturbances. Hyponatremia (less than 130 mEq/l) occurred in 18 (15.8%) of 114 patients. The majority of those patients with hyponatremia showed laboratory findings and/or clinical features suggesting the syndrome of inappropriate secretion of antidiuretic hormone (SIADH). The mean interval between the last subarachnoid hemorrhage (SAH) and the development of hyponatremia was 13.5 days (range 6 to 26 days). No patients developed hypernatremia (more than 155 mEq/l). Preoperative diabetes insipidus (DI) occurred in 7 (6.1%) of 114 patients. The mean interval between the last SAH and the onset of DI was 26.5 days (range 15 to 35 days). When compared with the onset of hyponatremia following SAH, the development of DI was significantly delayed. The present study showed that the following five types of patients significantly related to the development of preoperative water and electrolyte disturbances after SAH due to cerebral aneurysms. The patients with ruptured aneurysms of anterior communicating, anterior cerebral artery or internal carotid artery. The patients in grade III, IV according to Hunt & Hess. The patients with high density in the basal subarachnoid space on the CT scan. The patients with a small hematoma in the region of the basal frontal interhemispheric fissure in cases with aneurysms of the anterior communicating or anterior cerebral artery.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:[Etiology of water and electrolyte metabolism imbalance following the rupture of cerebral aneurysms--with special reference to preoperative condition]. 646 63

In most normal subjects, the fractional excretion of sodium is usually less than 1 percent but may be raised with an increase in salt intake. In acutely azotemic patients, a low fractional excretion of sodium usually indicates a prerenal process that is responsive to volume repletion. However, such a low fractional excretion of sodium also can be seen with azotemia due to hepatic or cardiac failure, as well as acute glomerulonephritis, pigment nephropathy, contrast nephrotoxicity, polyuric renal failure associated with burns, acute obstruction, renal transplant rejection, and occasionally non-oliguric acute renal failure, none of which is a volume-responsive process. A fractional excretion greater than 1 percent in acutely azotemic patients usually indicates intrinsic renal injury, but is consistent with volume depletion in patients receiving diuretics or in some patients with chronic renal insufficiency. Similarly, a low quotient in acute renal parenchymal injury is usually interpreted to indicate widespread tubular integrity, but is consistent with several different pathophysiologic processes. The fractional excretion of sodium must be interpreted in light of the specific clinical setting and other laboratory data to be useful in patient management.
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PMID:Interpreting the fractional excretion of sodium. 648 45

From March, 1976 to June, 1983, 22 patients (10 males, 12 females) treated by maintenance hemodialysis were autopsied in our department. Primary diseases of the autopsied cases were chronic glomerulonephritis (12 cases), diabetes mellitus (three cases), hydronephrosis (three cases), systematic lupus erythematosus (two cases), myeloma kidney (one case) and atherosclerosing nephropathy (one case). Direct causes of death in maintenance hemodialysis patients were bleeding (six cases), uremia (three cases), infection (three cases), carcinoma (four cases), heart failure (two cases), myocardial infarction (one case), brain ischemia (one case), cardiac tamponade (one case) and unknown (one case).
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PMID:Autopsy findings in maintenance hemodialysis patients. 653 69

Echocardiographic assessment of cardiac function was made on 24 children with chronic renal failure of varying etiology and severity. In 20 patients without evidence of cardiac failure, parameters of left ventricular performance as represented by PEP/LVET and mean velocity of circumferential fiber shortening were within normal limits in the majority of patients. In addition, ejection fraction and shortening fraction were, in most children, within the 95% confidence limits for their age. In 4 patients who presented with congestive heart failure, marked left ventricular dilatation was noted in association with decreased shortening and ejection fractions and depressed mean velocity of circumferential fiber shortening. Also the PEP/LVET in these patients suggested the presence of a uremic cardiomyopathic condition. These studies, in addition to our own studies on children who have undergone fistula construction, hemodialysis, and transplantation, suggest that cardiac performance, in the majority of pediatric patients with end-stage renal disease, is well maintained and that the major factor involved in reducing exercise tolerance is the presence of uremic anemia. Only a minority of patients may develop severe uremic heart disease.
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PMID:Echocardiographic assessment of cardiac function in children with chronic renal failure. 658 80

In this retrospective multicentric study, we report on early deaths (ie, those that occurred during the first month of treatment) in a total of 943 newly diagnosed ALL pediatric patients registered from 1976 to 1981 at 21 centers of the AIL- AIEOP . Objectives of this study were as follows: (1) to verify the incidence and the cause of early death in a wide population of children with ALL and (2) to elucidate factors associated with early death and therefore to identify "high-risk" groups of patients. Out of the 943 ALL patients, 39 (4.1%) early deaths were registered. Main causes were infection, 20 patients (51.3%); hemorrhage, 11 patients (28.3%); uric acid nephropathy, 2 patients (5.1%); cardiac failure, 3 patients (7.6%); syndrome of inappropriate antidiuretic hormone secretion, 1 patient. Two patients died during the first week of unknown cause. Thirteen factors measured at diagnosis and possibly influencing the early death rate were analyzed. Using the chi-square test, only three of these factors (age, mediastinum status, surface markers) appear to have any significant influence on the early death rate. We also tried to determine how therapy influences this process by analyzing variations in the early death rate, other factors being equal. Significant differences in the early death rates were encountered in AIEOP protocols using different induction regimens.
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PMID:Early deaths in acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL): results of the Italian Pediatric Cooperative Group for Therapy of Acute Leukemia (AIL-AIEOP). 658 79

On the basis of their own experience and data from the literature, the authors warn against the simultaneous administration of diuretic agents and non-steroidal antiinflammatory drugs. Apart from the drastic reduction in the natriuretic effects of some diuretics, this association may lead to acute non-oliguric renal failure in patients with one of the following predisposing factors: volemic depletion, effective circulating volume (cardiac insufficiency, liver cirrhosis), preexisting nephropathy (lupus erythematosus, chronic renal failure), or borderline renal function (geriatric patients, diabetics).
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PMID:[Non-steroid anti-inflammatory agents, diuretics and kidney function: a warning]. 662 43


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