Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
Pivot Concepts:   Target Concepts:
Query: UMLS:C0019163 (hepatitis B)
38,309 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

A descriptive cross-sectional study was conducted on the prevalence and histologic characteristics of renal lesions found in the autopsies of 85 patients with HIV infection: also, a retrospective analysis of clinico-biological characteristics in 56 of these patients in order to establish the factors associated with the histological findings. A total of 85 autopsies were made from 1985 to 1993; 50 autopsies (58.8%) showed renal changes: 23 (27%) infections, 13 (15.2%) acute tubular necrosis (ATN), 6 (7%) tumors, 5 (5.8%) intersticial nephritis (IN), 5 (5.8%) nephrocalcinosis (NC), 10 (11.7%) others. In an additional study: group IIc (n = 37, study group with nephropathy) had a higher incidence in the hepatitis B surface marker (HBsAg) than in group Ic (n = 19, control group, without nephropathy) (0 vs 10, p < 0.05). The presence of disseminated mycobacteriosis in the autopsy was significantly higher in the group with nephropathy than in the group without nephropathy (11 vs 1, p < 0.05). No consistent data were observed between the clinical diagnosis of nephropathy and autopsic findings. In summary, a high incidence of nephropathy was found in the autopsies of HIV infected patients, although it was not previously suspected. Renal lesions in autopsies of HIV infected patients had a tubular-intersticial predominance over glomerular lesions. The use of potentially nephrotoxic drugs, the presence of HBsAG, and some opportunist infections apparently influenced on the development of renal lesions among these patients.
...
PMID:[Spectrum of the renal pathology in HIV infection: description of 85 autopsies and clinico-pathologic correlation]. 896 17

The aim of this analysis was to observe the pathologic changes in the kidney in 23 children dying of cirrhosis, including five children with renal failure. Besides these pathologic changes, glomerular cellularity and arteriolar wall thickness of these patients were compared with 18 age matched autopsy controls dying of nonhepatic and nonrenal causes. Histologic examination of the kidneys in these cirrhotic children showed significant tubular changes in five patients, diffuse glomerulosclerosis in five, only one child had membranous glomerulopathy or glomerulonephritis and one cirrhotic with serum hepatitis B surface antigen positivity had polyarteritis nodosa. No statistically significant changes were observed in the glomerular cellularity and the arteriolar wall thickness in these cirrhotic children as compared to the controls. However, medial proliferation and hyaline arteriolosclerosis were observed in four cirrhotic children. Tubular bile casts and nephrocalcinosis were the sole lesions causing renal failure in two cases. A combination of glomerulosclerosis, cast formation and arteriolosclerosis was seen in the remaining three patients. Thus the kidney showed a spectrum of pathology in pediatric cirrhosis. The tubular lesions causing renal failure represent acute treatable lesions whereas glomerulosclerosis and arteriosclerosis stand for a more chronic and less reversible renal damage.
...
PMID:The renal pathology in children dying with hepatic cirrhosis. 1259 62