Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0020473 (hyperlipidemia)
15,891 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Experimental glomerulosclerosis is associated with hyperlipidaemia and the deposition of lipid in glomeruli. Glomerulosclerosis is typically preceded by glomerular hypertrophy. To investigate a possible pathogenic role of lipids in glomerulosclerosis, glomerular structure and cellular composition were studied in rats fed either a control diet or one supplemented with 4% cholesterol and 1% cholic acid for 21 weeks following unilateral nephrectomy. On the cholesterol diet there were significant increases in glomerular cross-sectional area (13.11 +/- 0.39 x 10(3) vs. 11.13 +/- 0.44 x 10(3) mu 2, p less than 0.01) and mesangial area (1.81 +/- 0.07 x 10(3) vs. 1.50 +/- 0.08 x 10(3) mu 2, p less than 0.02). These changes were significantly correlated with proteinuria, which was significantly greater on the cholesterol diet (mean area under curve for duration of diet = 3.11 +/- 0.38 vs. 1.42 +/- 0.35 g, p less than 0.02). There was a significant increase in glomerular leukocytes on the cholesterol diet (4.10 +/- 0.44 vs 2.86 +/- 0.25 OX-1 positive cells/10(4) mu 2, p less than 0.05). Mesangial foam cells, derived from macrophages, were associated with adhesions to Bowman's capsule. These results demonstrate that hyperlipidaemia exacerbates the development of glomerular hypertrophy and that this may be mediated by factors released during the phagocytosis of lipoprotein deposits by macrophages.
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PMID:Cholesterol feeding following unilateral nephrectomy in the rat leads to glomerular hypertrophy. 204 29

The obese Zucker rat develops hyperlipidemia, proteinuria and focal glomerulosclerosis without prior changes in renal hemodynamics. To study the effects of oral fatty acid intake on the development of renal injury in this model, rats were fed standard chow or chow supplemented with either 14% fish oil or 14% beef tallow after unilateral nephrectomy at the age of 10 weeks. At 32 weeks post-nephrectomy animals were sacrificed and renal tissue saved to assess histology and glomerular eicosanoid production. Fish-oil treated rats had lower mean plasma cholesterol levels and developed less proteinuria than control or tallow-fed animals although there was no difference in plasma creatinine or blood pressure. Histological analysis showed significantly fewer sclerosed glomeruli in the fish oil group (4.0 +/- 0.8% vs. control 19.4 +/- 4.1%, P less than 0.0005 and vs. beef tallow 10.8 +/- 1.9%, P less than 0.005). Glomeruli derived from rats on fish oil supplements produced smaller amounts of prostaglandin (PG)E2 and of the stable metabolites of PGI2 (6-oxo-PGF1 alpha), PGF2 (PGF2 alpha) and thromboxane (TX)A2 (TXB2) than those from tallow-fed animals. This study demonstrates that oral fatty acid intake may influence the development of glomerulosclerosis. The apparent beneficial effects of fish oil have not been fully defined, but may relate to favorable changes in plasma lipid concentration and renal eicosanoid production.
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PMID:Effects of dietary fatty acids in an animal model of focal glomerulosclerosis. 206 9

The precise pathogenesis of human diabetic kidney disease and the factors responsible for the susceptibility to it remain to be established. However, there is now evidence that renal disease clusters in families and that genetic factors are of central importance in determining liability. A predisposition to arterial hypertension has been suggested as playing a contributory role in the development of kidney disease. Genetically controlled hypertrophic processes may be implicated in the susceptibility to arterial wall damage and glomerular injury in diabetes. This suggestion derives from the observation that the fibroblasts of patients with diabetic nephropathy show a higher Na+/H+ antiport activity and a greater 3H-thymidine incorporation into DNA than fibroblasts of diabetic patients without nephropathy. The first sign of renal damage is the appearance of microalbuminuria and of a small elevation in arterial pressure, changes associated with significant mesangial expansion. Microalbuminuria is associated with abnormalities of lipoprotein profiles possibly as a consequence of insulin-resistance-induced hyperinsulinemia. It could be postulated that the environmental changes brought about by diabetes lead in susceptible individuals to increased systemic and intraglomerular pressure on the one hand and mesangial expansion on the other. These two processes would cause proteinuria and glomerulosclerosis. Lipid abnormalities would further aggravate the renal histological damage and, in combination with hypertension, contribute to the accelerated atherosclerosis typical of patients with diabetic kidney disease. A vicious circle would thus be triggered of reduction in renal function, more hypertension, more proteinuria, more glomerular obsolence, more hyperlipidemia and eventually end-stage renal failure or premature cardiovascular death.
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PMID:Mechanisms of diabetic renal and cardiovascular disease. 207 90

Similarities between atherosclerosis and glomerulosclerosis suggest that hyperlipidaemia may contribute to glomerular injury. Dietary supplementation with 4% cholesterol + 1% cholic acid was administered to rats 4 weeks after 1 1/3 nephrectomy and continued for 7 weeks. There was a significant increase in serum cholesterol (peak = 11.52 +/- 1.09 mmol l-1 vs. 4.73 +/- 0.31 on control diet, P less than 0.001) and triglyceride concentrations (peak = 2.31 +/- 0.27 mmol l-1 vs. 1.41 +/- 0.29, P less than 0.05) and a marked increase in beta-migrating lipoproteins. The severity of hypercholesterolaemia was significantly correlated with proteinuria (control diet: r = 0.600, cholesterol diet: r = 0.672, P less than 0.0001) as was hypertriglyceridaemia (control diet: r = 0.544, cholesterol diet: r = 0.678, P less than 0.0001). The percentage of glomeruli containing lipid deposits was increased from 21% to 60% (P less than 0.05). The kidney total cholesterol content was increased from 29.2 +/- 0.8 to 47.7 +/- 3.3 mumols g-1 dry weight (P less than 0.0001), with esterified cholesterol increasing from 7.5 +/- 0.4% to 14.5 +/- 2.1% of total (P less than 0.01). Serum cholesterol concentration was significantly correlated with both glomerular lipid deposition (rs = 0.7195, P less than 0.0001) and tissue total cholesterol content (rs = 0.6053, P less than 0.001). Lipid vacuolation was prominent in the paramesangium and within mesangial cells. Despite these changes hypertension, uraemia, proteinuria and glomerulosclerosis were not significantly increased on the cholesterol diet. Cholesterol deposition in the glomeruli occurs secondary to hyperlipidaemia in rats following subtotal nephrectomy but over 7 weeks no exacerbation of glomerulosclerosis is detectable.
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PMID:The role of lipids in the pathogenesis of glomerulosclerosis in the rat following subtotal nephrectomy. 210 41

Chronic diseases of the kidney are characterized by progression once a certain portion of renal function is lost. End-stage kidneys, the result of progressive chronic renal disease, are characterized by sclerosis, tubulointerstitial scarring, and collapse of glomerular capillary tufts. The mechanisms and risk factors responsible for the progression of renal disease have been studied intensively in the past decade, and it now appears that multiple nonimmunologic factors are responsible. These factors include systemic hypertension, hyperlipidemia, proteinuria, excessive intake of protein, and adaptive changes in nephron function as a consequence of nephron loss. The latter adaptations, increased intraglomerular pressure, increased excretion of ammonia, "hypermetabolism," decreased afferent arteriolar tone, and renal hypertrophy, may also be responsible for the progression of renal disease. A complete understanding of the factors responsible for the progression of renal disease should permit rational development of appropriate therapeutic interventions.
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PMID:Progression of chronic renal disease. 213 99

The role of specific risk factors in the development of diabetic nephropathy was examined among noninsulin-dependent diabetic subjects attending the Diabetes Clinic of Christian Medical College Hospital, Vellore during 1986-87. Seventy-three subjects with normal protein excretion (less than 150 mg/24 hr) were compared with 66 microproteinuric (150-500 mg/24 hr) and 61 macroproteinuric subjects (greater than 500 mg/24 hr). The risk factors included family history of diabetes, tobacco use, dietary habits and metabolic control; the latter was assessed from an average of 5 clinic blood sugar determinations done annually per patient. Patients who had developed proteinuria were characterized as mostly men, with increased tobacco consumption and early onset of proteinuria in relation to duration of diabetes. The mean blood sugar value was significantly high in both the proteinuric groups compared to the group with no proteinuria (p less than 0.01). There was a striking increase in the prevalence of ischemic heart disease, hypertension and retinopathy in the macroproteinuric group compared to the other two groups (p less than 0.01). It is concluded that the risk of developing nephropathy was significantly higher in men, in smokers and in those with poor metabolic control (mean postprandial blood sugar more than 200 mg/dL). Furthermore, it was clearly evident from our study that the diabetic subjects with nephropathy had a higher incidence of hypertension, retinopathy, hyperlipidemia and ischemic heart diseases.
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PMID:Nephropathy in noninsulin-dependent diabetes mellitus: comparative study with normoproteinuric and microproteinuric subjects. 214 34

Normotensive rats of the Milan strain (MNS) spontaneously develop focal glomerulosclerosis. In order to explore the contribution of glomerular thromboxane (TX) A2 synthesis to the development of the disease, we have characterized the time course of renal functional and biochemical changes, and their modification by long-term treatment with a TX-synthase inhibitor. Oral administration (150 mg.kg-1 from 1 to 14 months of age) of FCE 22178 suppressed enhanced glomerular TXB2 production at all experimental times (mean inhibition 80%) and proteinuria (varying between 27.1 and 73.0%) while preserving renal blood flow and glomerular filtration rate. These effects of TX-synthase inhibition were seen in the absence of any statistically significant changes in systemic blood pressure. Moreover, FCE 22178 had no antihypertensive effects in hypertensive rats of the Milan strain (MHS) nor in spontaneously hypertensive rats (SHR). Treatment also prevented the age-related hypoalbuminemia and hyperlipidemia observed in control MNS and significantly (P less than 0.01) reduced glomerular histologic damage, as demonstrated by light microscopy studies and measurement of sclerotic area. We conclude that: 1) MNS rats provide an animal model of long-lasting proteinuria characterized by an age-related increase in glomerular TXB2 production paralleled by progressive loss of renal structural integrity and function and by a secondary dyslipidemia; 2) pharmacological inhibition of glomerular TX-synthase attenuates the structural as well as the functional expression of kidney disease, without a primary effect on systemic blood pressure. These data are suggestive of an important modulating role of TXA2 in the progression of MNS renal disease.
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PMID:Role of enhanced glomerular synthesis of thromboxane A2 in progressive kidney disease. 223 87

The pathophysiology of the nephrotic syndrome (NS), characterized by protenuria, edema, sodium retention and hyperlipidemia, is not clear. We studied the role of some systemic factors on sodium retention in an experimental model of NS. NS was induced in rats by a single subcutaneous injection of puromycin aminonucleoside (PA) (15 mg/100 g); control animals received vehicle. All rats were kept in metabolic cages for 24 days (3 days before and 21 days after PA-injection). Urine was collected daily. Blood samples were obtained every day until day 10, and then every other day up to the end of the study. The rats showed the following alterations after PA injection: a) a rise in serum angiotensin converting enzyme activity (ACEA) and plasma aldosterone (PAldo) at day 1; b) a rise in urinary aldosterone (UAaldoV), azotemia and sodium retention at day 2; c) massive proteinuria (UProt) and decrease in plasma angiotensinogen concentration (PAC) at day 4; d) increases in plasma renin activity (PRA), plasma renin concentration (PRC) and serum creatinine as well as hypoproteinemia, hypercholesterolemia, hypertriglyceridemia, ascitis and edema at day 5; e) increase in urine volume at day 6. PAldo became normal at day 7; urine sodium (UNaV), PRA and PRC at day 8; UAldoV at day 9; serum urea and ACEA at day 10; urinary volume at day 11; PAC, serum total protein and creatinine at day 12. The edema disappeared at day 11. UProt, hypercholesterolemia and hypertriglyceridemia persisted, though they decreased substantially by the end of the study (day 21). Light microscopy studies revealed normal glomerular morphology, but electron microscopy showed fusion of podocytes before proteinuria. These data suggest that: a) sodium retention was not a consequence of proteinuria or hypoproteinemia; b) sodium retention seems non-related to renin secretion, but may be partially mediated by a fall in glomerular filtration rate or by an increased tubular resabsorption secondary to other factors; c) the increase in PAldo, UAldoV and ACEA are non-related to renin secretion: all occurred before PRA rose; d) water retention, increase in PRA and PRC, hypercholesterolemia and hypertriglyceridemia are secondary to the hypoproteinemia.
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PMID:Pathophysiology of experimental nephrotic syndrome induced by puromycin aminonucleoside in rats. I. The role of proteinuria, hypoproteinemia, and renin-angiotensin-aldosterone system on sodium retention. 223 72

Hyperlipidemia is common in patients with glomerular proteinuria. It may contribute to atherosclerotic complications and accelerate glomerular damage. Early trials of the fibric acid derivative clofibrate led to a myositis syndrome causing many nephrologists to abandon attempts at treatment of nephrotic hyperlipidemia. Recent trials with lipid-lowering medications have been successful without major side effects. The bile acid sequestrants colestipol and cholestyramine bind bile acids in the gut and deplete the hepatic cholesterol pool, thus inducing LDL hepatocyte receptors. Recent studies showed a reduction of total cholesterol of 8-20% and LDL cholesterol of 19-31% without significant changes in HDL cholesterol. Probucol has reduced total cholesterol 23-30% and LDL cholesterol 23-25% in nephrotic patients. Although HDL cholesterol was reduced, the LDL/HDL ratio remains favorably changed. The fibric acid derivative gemfibrozil inhibits adipose lipolysis and enhances lipoprotein lipase activity thus decreasing LDL synthesis and increasing its removal. It caused a large decrease in triglycerides with a 13-15% decrease in total and LDL cholesterol in a recent trial. HDL cholesterol increased 18%. The HMG-CoA reductase inhibitors inhibit the rate-limiting step in cholesterol biosynthesis hence inducing an increase in LDL receptors on hepatocytes. Trials have shown decreases of 18-36% in total cholesterol and 18-47% in LDL cholesterol, while HDL cholesterol was either increased or unchanged. The use of lipid-lowering agents of several classes has been effective in ameliorating the progression of glomerular damage in a number of different models of glomerulosclerosis. Nevertheless, so far in humans lipid lowering drugs have not been established to have an effect on either the degree of proteinuria or the progression of glomerulosclerosis.
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PMID:Lipid-lowering agents in proteinuric diseases. 225 70

Proteinuria is characteristic of many glomerular conditions, and often exceeds 2-3 g/24 h. There are several possible routes by which such profuse proteinuria might contribute to progression of the underlying pathology, whatever its type. First, proteinuria leads to a transit of protein through glomerular structures, including the glomerular capillary basement membrane, the mesangium and the epithelial cells, and to increased traffic of protein through the proximal tubules by pinocytosis of filtered protein. This traffic may be toxic to the cells concerned, and there is some evidence from 'overload' proteinuria induced in animals that this is so. Second, proteinuria leads to secondary hyperlipidemia with raised lipoproteins: mesangial cells have receptors for lipoproteins and in vitro, they are damaged by high concentrations, and there is evidence that hyperlipidemia leads to glomerulosclerosis. Third, proteinuria leads to hyperaggregability of platelets through alterations in plasma proteins, principally a fall in concentration of serum albumin and a rise in that of the von Willebrand factor, and possibly to increases in humoral coagulation cascades as well through losses of regulator proteins such as antithrombin III. There is evidence that anticoagulation and antiplatelet drugs will inhibit glomerulosclerosis in animals. Whether all or any of these mechanisms operate in human disease is not known; however, prognosis correlates well with duration and intensity of proteinuria in almost all proteinuric states and with the appearance and persistence of proteinuria in hematuric conditions. Therapies designed to reduce proteinuria per se may have a role in the treatment of glomerulopathies.
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PMID:Proteinuria and progression in human glomerular diseases. 225 80


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