Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0018801 (heart failure)
72,216 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

From 1960 through 1972, 236 cases of amyloidosis with histologic proof were found. The amyloidosis was primary (without evidence of preceding or coexisting disease) in 132 cases (group 1) and associated with multiple myeloma in 61 (group 2). Secondary amyloidosis appeared in 19 cases (associated with rheumatoid arthritis or osteomyelitis in two-thirds of them). There were 22 patients with amyloid localized to a single organ (bladder, lung, skin, or larynx in more than half of them). Two patients had familial amyloidosis. In group 1 and group 2, the most common presenting symptoms were fatigue, weight loss, edema, dyspnea, light-headedness or syncope, and paresthesias. Symptoms of the carpal-tunnel syndrome were frequent. The liver was palpable in almost 50% of the series, but splenomegaly was an initial finding in less than 10%. Macroglossia was recorded in 26% of group 2 and in 12% of group 1. Enlargement of submandibular structures was noted in about 10% of cases; and purpura, particularly around the eyes, was a significant feature. Substantial numbers of the patients had carpal-tunnel syndrome, nephrotic syndrome, congestive heart failure, sprue, peripheral neuropathy, or orthostatic hypotension. Approximately 50% of patients had renal insufficiency at the time of diagnosis. Proteinuria was found in more than 90%. A monoclonal protein was found in the serum of 49% of group 1 and in 74% of group 2. Monoclonal proteins were found in the urine of 35% and 81%, respectively. Only 12% of patients in group 1 had no monoclonal protein when both serum and urine were analyzed, and all patients of group 2 had a monoclonal protein in the serum or urine when both were analyzed. Lambda light chains were more common than kappa. None of the patients in group 1 had more than 15% plasma cells in the marrow, whereas more than half of group 2 had more than 15% plasma cells. Roentgenograms showed no evidence of skeletal disease in 94% of group 1, but 50% of group 2 had skeletal abnormalities. Rectal biopsy was positive for amyloid in 84% of cases. Kidney, liver, and carpal-tunnel biopsies were positive in 90% or more. Follow-up of all 193 patients in groups 1 and 2 revealed that 80% of group 1 and 97% of group 2 had died. The median survival was 14.7 months in group 1 and 4 months in group 2. Cardiac failure was the most common cause of death, accounting for 30% of the fatalities. We also reclassified all cases by the method of Isobe and Osserman (105), which is based on clinical patterns: pattern I--principal involvement of tongue, heart, gastrointestinal tract, muscle, nerves, skin, and carpal ligaments; pattern II--principal involvement of liver, spleen, kidneys, and adrenals; and mixed pattern I and II. This analysis failed to reveal predictive value in the clinical pattern classification, and did not discern the survival differences between primary amyloidosis (group 1) and amyloidosis with myeloma (group 2). Consequently, for the present we prefer the classification used in this study.
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PMID:Amyloidosis: review of 236 cases. 115 71

Patients with congenital cyanotic heart disease may develop a glomerulopathy with proteinuria and impaired renal function. In order to investigate this problem we conducted a study on 27 patients with uncorrected cyanotic heart disease who were between 1 day and 25 years old. As a consequence of hypoxaemia haematocrit was elevated to 57%. Proteinuria was above 150 mg/day/1.73 m2 body surface in 12 patients. Only one of 9 children under 10 years of age had pathological proteinuria presenting as isolated albuminuria. Seven out of 10 patients between 11 and 20 years had an elevated proteinuria with a glomerular pattern. Creatinine clearance was normal in these patients. All four patients above 20 years of age had a considerable glomerular proteinuria with a mean excretion of 5.7 g/24 h/1.73 m2 body surface. These patients suffered additionally from chronic cardiac failure and creatinine clearance was below the normal range. There was a clear relationship between pathological proteinuria and age of the patients and thus duration of hypoxaemia. Patients with pathological proteinuria had a significant higher erythrocyte count (7.3 +/- 1.3 vs 5.6 +/- 1.4 10(12)/l p less than 0.01) and a lower mean corpuscular haemoglobin. In summary, children with persistent congenital cyanotic heart disease have substantial risk of developing a glomerulopathy if the cyanosis remains unchanged for more than ten years.
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PMID:Renal involvement in patients with congenital cyanotic heart disease. 178 94

Oral inhibitors of angiotensin converting enzyme (ACE) now have an established place in the treatment of hypertension and heart failure. Captopril, the first of these agents, was initially used in high doses and was associated with adverse effects including proteinuria, skin rash and taste disturbance. We report 11 patients who developed side effects during captopril therapy (proteinuria two, rash four, taste disturbance four and taste disturbance with rash one) who were subsequently treated with enalapril, a second generation angiotensin converting enzyme inhibitor. Proteinuria did not recur in either patient, skin rash resolved in all five cases and taste disturbance resolved in four of five during enalapril therapy. We conclude that the side effects of proteinuria, skin rash and taste disturbance are consequences of captopril idiosyncrasy rather than inhibition of the angiotensin converting enzyme. The reported incidence of these side effects with the current recommended dosage of captopril is low.
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PMID:Lack of cross sensitivity between captopril and enalapril. 284 55

In a representative sample of 624 people, 65-84 years of age, from six regions of Croatia, Yugoslavia, proteinuria was investigated on the basis of certain medical characteristics. Established proteinuria was seen in 30.8% of females and 27.4% of males. Proteinuria was found to be significantly more common in people with urinary tract infections. Arterial hypertension with heart failure was more often seen in patients with than in patients without proteinuria, but the difference was not statistically significant.
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PMID:Proteinuria in the elderly. 684 May 59

Our previous studies supported the hypothesis that prolonged administration of caffeine to animals with high-renin hypertension causes progressive deterioration of renal function. However, thus far this hypothesis has been tested with only a few animal models of hypertension. The aim of this study was to test this hypothesis further by investigating the effects of long-term caffeine consumption on renal function in adult spontaneously hypertensive heart failure (SHHF/Mcc-fa(cp)) rats, another model of high-renin hypertension. Lean, male, 9-month-old SHHF/Mcc-fa(cp) rats were randomized to receive either normal drinking water (control group) or drinking water containing 0.1% caffeine (caffeine group) for 20 weeks. No changes in body weight, food and fluid intake, urine volume, and sodium and potassium excretion were found in conscious SHHF/Mcc-fa(cp) rats after 10 or 20 weeks of caffeine treatment. However, caffeine treatment accelerated the time-related decline in renal function and augmented urinary protein excretion. Ten weeks into the protocol, creatinine clearance was 3.6+/-0.4 and 5.7+/-0.9 L/kg/day in the caffeine group and control group, respectively (p<0.02), whereas 20 weeks into the study, creatinine clearance was similarly diminished in both groups. Proteinuria was greater in the caffeine group compared with the control group at both 10 (928+/-131 vs. 439+/-21 mg/kg/day, respectively; p<0.02) and 20 weeks (1,202+/-196 vs. 603+/-30 mg/kg/day, respectively; p<0.01) into the protocol. After 20 weeks, all animals were anesthetized and instrumented. Caffeine treatment for 20 weeks had no effects on blood pressure, heart rate, or vascular resistance in four examined vascular beds (abdominal aorta and renal, carotid, and mesenteric arteries). No changes in renal hemodynamics and electrolyte excretion were found, whereas significantly lower glomerular filtration rate (GFR; inulin clearance) and creatinine clearance (p<0.05) were observed in caffeine-treated animals. These data support our hypothesis that prolonged consumption of caffeine has adverse effects on renal function, in high-renin hypertension.
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PMID:Effects of long-term caffeine consumption on renal function in spontaneously hypertensive heart failure prone rats. 1006 69

Type 2 diabetes is the most common cause of end-stage renal disease in the United States, and type 2 diabetes has been shown to be a myocardial infarction equivalent in regard to risk of death from a cardiovascular event. Proteinuria is a surrogate marker for renal disease progression, and although data favor both the angiotensin converting enzyme (ACE) inhibitors and angiotensin receptor blockers (ARBs) in reducing proteinuria, data for renal outcomes, such as time to dialysis, only exist for the ARBs, which clearly increase the duration to dialysis. Conversely, ACE inhibitors have overwhelming data that show substantial risk reduction from cardiovascular events and death in people with type 2 diabetes. Similar data on cardiovascular risk reduction are not yet available with ARBs, although two trials of renal disease progression did have cardiovascular endpoints as secondary outcomes. There were no significant differences between the ARB and control group except for first hospitalization with heart failure, where losartan reduced the risk by 32%, but there was a trend, albeit not significant, toward reduction of myocardial infarction. The first information regarding ARB effects on cardiovascular events as primary outcomes will come from the Losartan Intervention for Endpoint (LIFE) Reduction in Hypertension study. Therefore, as of this writing, all patients with type 2 diabetes and no evidence of nephropathy, ie, proteinuria and an elevated creatinine > 1.5 mg/dL, should be placed on an ACE inhibitor for cardiovascular risk reduction. If nephropathy is present, the evidence would support an ARB for therapy in concert with a b-blocker for cardiovascular risk reduction and renoprotection.
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PMID:Angiotensin converting enzyme inhibitors or angiotensin receptor blockers in nephropathy from type 2 diabetes. 1200 99

Renin angiotensin system inhibitor therapy is seldom offered to individuals who have diabetes and advanced chronic kidney disease because of safety concerns. In this post hoc, secondary analysis of the Reduction of Endpoints in NIDDM with the Angiotensin II Antagonist Losartan (RENAAL) trial, angiotensin antagonism risk/benefit profile was assessed in 1513 individuals with type 2 diabetes and overt nephropathy. Incidence of ESRD, hospitalizations for heart failure, withdrawals for adverse events, and proteinuria during losartan or conventional treatment were compared within three tertiles of baseline serum creatinine concentration (highest, 2.1 to 3.6 mg/dl; middle, 1.6 to 2.0 mg/dl; lowest, 0.9 to 1.6 mg/dl). Losartan decreased the risk of ESRD by 24.6, 26.3, and 35.3% in highest, middle, and lowest tertiles, respectively. For every 100 patients with serum creatinine >2.0, 1.6 to 2.0, or <1.6 mg/dl, respectively, 4 yr of losartan therapy was estimated to save 18.9, 8.4, and 2.9 ESRD events and US$1,502,855, US$1,021,770, and US$528,591 costs for renal replacement therapy. Losartan also decreased the hospitalizations for heart failure by 50.2 and 45.1, in the highest and middle tertile, respectively. Withdrawals for adverse events other than heart failure were comparable between tertiles and treatment groups. Proteinuria decreased more on losartan than on placebo in all tertiles (highest, 24 versus -8%; middle, 16 versus -8%; lowest, 15 versus -10%). In proteinuric individuals with type 2 diabetes, losartan therapy reduced ESRD and hospitalizations for heart failure and was well tolerated at all levels of renal function. Angiotensin II antagonism is a suitable and well-tolerated treatment for individuals with type 2 diabetes even with GFR levels approaching renal replacement therapy.
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PMID:Continuum of renoprotection with losartan at all stages of type 2 diabetic nephropathy: a post hoc analysis of the RENAAL trial results. 1557 15

Blockade of the renin-angiotensin system has been established as a treatment for heart failure with hypertension and left ventricular hypertrophy, and for progressive kidney diseases. The present study was conducted to examine whether spironolactone, a mineralocorticoid receptor antagonist, alone or in combination with cilazapril, an angiotensin converting enzyme (ACE) inhibitor, ameliorates proteinuria and renal lesions in an immune-initiated progressive nephritis model. Wistar rats were uninephrectomized 7 days before injection of anti-Thy-1 monoclonal antibody 1-22-3 to induce progressive glomerulonephritis. The nephritic rats were untreated or treated with spironolactone (400 mg/kg body weight/day), cilazapril (1 mg/kg body weight/day), or both for 10 weeks. Proteinuria was increased in the untreated rats 1 week after nephritis induction and was maintained throughout the experiment. Compared with the untreated animals (212.9+/-49.2 mg/day), proteinuria was significantly reduced in the spironolactone-treated group (62.0+/-4.0 mg/day, p=0.0046) and the cilazapril-treated group (71.8+/-26.0 mg/day, p=0.0048) on day 70 after antibody injection. Further reduction of proteinuria (42.4+/-4.5 mg/day, p=0.0019 vs. the untreated group) and less renal cortex interstitial fibrotic change (fibrosis score: 142.0+/-18.4 vs. 80.3+/-18.5 in the untreated group, p=0.0123) were detected in the spironolactone plus cilazapril-treated group. Blood pressure did not differ among the three treatment groups. In conclusion, spironolactone ameliorates proteinuria to the same degree as cilazapril, and concomitant use of spironolactone and an ACE inhibitor further suppresses renal disease progression. These data suggest that concomitant treatment with spironolactone and an ACE inhibitor has beneficial effects on immune-initiated progressive kidney disease.
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PMID:Spironolactone in combination with cilazapril ameliorates proteinuria and renal interstitial fibrosis in rats with anti-Thy-1 irreversible nephritis. 1589 38

The renin-angiotensin-aldosterone system (RAAS) plays an important part in the pathogenesis of arterial hypertension and the complications it causes in organs (the heart, the circulatory system, the brain, the kidneys), heart failure and kidney diseases. Materials that block the most upstream point of the RAAS cascade (ACE inhibitors - ACEI, AT1,-receptor (AT1R) blockers, aldosterone receptor blockers) have greatly expanded our options in the treatment and primary and secondary prevention of cardiovascular and renal diseases. ACEI and AT1R blockers interrupt the normal feedback provided by the release of renin into the circulatory system from the kidneys. After they are applied the reactive increase in active circulating renin leads to increased creation of angiotensin I and angiotensin II and the subsequent return of aldosterone secretions to pre-treatment values ("escape" phenomenon). The possible negative effect of these intermediary products of an incomplete blockade of RAAS on organ complications lead to an effort to develop a material that could block the renin-angiotensin cascade at its first stage--i.e. a renin blocker. The first efforts with renin antibodies or peptide analogues of renin prosegments failed to satisify the basic requirements for long-term medication--effectiveness when used orally. In recent years the first non-peptidic, oral renin ihibitor providing sustained effects has been developed, aliskiren fumarate. Aliskiren reduces BP depending on the dose (50-300 mg/day) in monotherapy or in combination with hydrochlorothiazide. Aliskiren lowers plasma renin activity (PRA) and neutralises the activation of the RAAS triggered by hydrochlorothiazide. Ambulatory BP monitoring has shown that taking the medicine once a day has a 24-hour effect and its continued residence in the kidneys suggests renoprotective effects. The compound is in the third stage of clinical tests as a monotherapy or in combination for the treatment of hypertension. It has also been shown to have an influence on the regression of cardiac hypertrophy (Aliskiren in Left-Ventricular Hypertrophy trial - ALLAY), the treatment of heart failure (Aliskiren Observation of Heart Failure Treatment trial - ALOFT) and diabetic (Aliskiren in the Evaluation of Proteinuria in Diabetes trial - AVOID). In April 206, the FDA permitted the use of aliskiren in the USA for the treatment of high BP and it is currently undergoing testing in Europe. The renin inhibitor has minimal undesirable side effects, like AT1-receptor blockers. The slightly lower effectiveness ofaliskiren than AT1-receptor blockers in reducing BP is caused by the fact that it does not block bradykinins. It is recommended as a monotherapy for clinical use or in combination with other antihypertensive medicines for conditions with high levels of PRA including its rise after diuretics, ACEI and AT1-receptor blockers. Aliskiren could therefore be used primarily with young patients, Caucasians, persons with ACEI intolerance, and also in diseases where angiotensin II is involved in the pathogenesis and the secondary prevention of cardiovascular disease. It is also safe for persons with concurrent renal problems, because it is mainly removed by the liver without great interference with other materials. Like ACEI, the renin inhibitor has a vasodilatory effect which could potentially improve the elasticity of arteries. The medicine has the same limitations and contraindications as ACEI and AT1R blockers, such as pregnancy and bilateral renal artery stenosis. A definitive assessment of the benefit of this new class of medicines and its broad application in the treatment of cardiovascular and other diseases will require demonstration of its long-term effect on morbidity and mortality, as well as comparison with other RAAS blockers in long clinical studies, which represent research programmes lasting another 7 to 8 years.
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PMID:[Does the rennin inhibitor aliskiren offer promising novel opportunities in the treatment of cardiovascular diseases?]. 1757 67

Depending on the reduction in glomerular filtration rate (GFR) as a measure of renal insufficiency and depending on their age, patients with chronic kidney disease have a 1.5 to 1,000-fold higher cardiovascular risk. Renal insufficiency is inherently an independent risk factor for cardiovascular events, which is likewise the case for patients also presenting with hypertension or diabetes mellitus. When cardiac insufficiency or coronary heart disease is already manifest, the GFR is the most important predictive factor for the patients' further survival. Proteinuria or albuminuria as signs of kidney disease are also important markers and correlate with the cardiovascular risk in the range of both macro- and microalbuminuria. Endothelial dysfunction, oxidative stress, dyslipidemia, and increased atherosclerosis are being discussed as pathophysiological mechanisms of elevated cardiovascular risk.
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PMID:[Chronic kidney disease and the cardiovascular system]. 1830 69


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