Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0020500 (hyperoxaluria)
912 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Of the 4,776 first grafts recorded in the pediatric European Dialysis and Transplant Association (EDTA) registry, 2,113 were reported to have failed and 5.6% of graft failures were related to a recurrence of primary renal disease. Nephrotic syndrome with focal and segmental glomerulosclerosis was the main renal disease prone to recur because recurrence represented 20% of the causes of graft failure in these patients; an even higher proportion was reported in a single-center experience in Europe. Other glomerulonephropathies, such as membranoproliferative glomerulonephritis and Berger's disease, were also reported to be the cause of graft failure by means of recurrence in a proportion similar to focal and segmental glomerulosclerosis. The usual recurrence of primary oxaluria was the cause of close to 50% of graft failure in this disease. Finally, hemolytic uremic syndrome recurred rarely with the graft in the EDTA registry, which is the opposite of what was reported in the United States.
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PMID:Recurrence of primary renal disease on kidney graft: a European pediatric experience. 149 84

Recurrent disease does not lead to the loss of large numbers of allografted kidneys, but it is a source of serious concern in recipients with type I hyperoxaluria and focal segmental glomerulosclerosis. In patients with a number of other causes of renal failure, it may affect the use of living related donors. Recent topics for debate include the failure of cyclosporine to modify the incidence of recurrent disease, the realization that IgA nephropathy may in the long term lead to graft destruction, the fact that membranous nephropathy may recur in a quarter of the cases, and the knowledge that a nephrotic syndrome may reappear after transplantation for the Finnish congenital nephrotic syndrome.
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PMID:Recurrent renal disease after renal transplantation. 788 83

Calcium-oxalate crystal deposition in kidney transplant biopsy specimen led us to investigate the impact of calcineurin inhibitor treatment on urinary excretion of lithogenic and stone inhibitory substances in 53 children after successful kidney transplantation (KTx) receiving cyclosporine A (CsA) or tacrolimus. We compared the values obtained with those of 12 patients with recurrent nephrotic syndrome under CsA and of 6 patients with Rasmussen encephalitis (RE) under tacrolimus therapy. Renal ultrasound examinations were repeatedly performed. Hypocitraturia was found in 69% of patients, with KTx patients having a significantly lower urinary citrate excretion than those receiving calcineurin inhibitors for other reasons. Secondly, we found hyperoxaluria in 35% of patients, again especially in those after KTx. No significant difference in urinary substances was seen comparing CsA with tacrolimus treatment. Urolithiasis was found in one and calcium-oxalate crystal deposition in biopsy specimen of three KTx patients. Calcineurin inhibitor treatment can lead to significant hypocitraturia, especially in patients after KTx receiving the highest dose of medication. Hyperoxaluria is primarily the result of a removal of significant body oxalate stores, deposited during dialysis, but may not be suspected as a specific side effect of calcineurin inhibitor therapy. Both findings can increase the risk for urolithiasis or nephrocalcinosis.
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PMID:Hypocitraturia as a risk factor for nephrocalcinosis after kidney transplantation. 1578

The one-anastomosis laparoscopic gastric bypass (OAGB) has been proven to provide good weight loss, comorbidity improvement, and quality of life with follow-up longer than five years. Although capable of improving many obesity-related diseases, OAGB is associated with post-operative medical complications mainly related to the induced malabsorption. A 52-year-old man affected by nephrotic syndrome due to a focal segmental glomerulosclerosis underwent OAGB uneventfully. At three months post-surgery, the patient had lost 40kg, reaching a BMI of 32. The patient was admitted to the nephrology unit for acute kidney injury with only mild improvement in renal function (SCr 9 mg/dl); proteinuria was still elevated (4g/24h), with microhaematuria. A renal biopsy was performed: oxalate deposits were demonstrated inside tubules, associated with acute and chronic tubular and interstitial damage and glomerulosclerosis (21/33 glomeruli). Urinary oxalate levels were found to be elevated (72mg/24h, range 13-40), providing the diagnosis of acute kidney injury due to hyperoxaluria, potentially associated to OAGB. No recovery in renal function was observed and the patient remained dialysis dependent. Early and rapid excessive weight loss in patients affected by chronic kidney insufficiency could be associated with the worsening of renal function. Increased calcium oxalate levels associated with OAGB-related malabsorption could be a key factor in kidney injury.
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PMID:Case Report: Acute kidney failure leading to permanent haemodialysis due to hyperoxaluria following one-anastomosis gastric bypass-related rapid weight loss. 3252 60

The one-anastomosis gastric bypass (OAGB) has been proven to provide good weight loss, comorbidity improvement, and quality of life with follow-up longer than five years. Although capable of improving many obesity-related diseases, OAGB is associated with post-operative medical complications mainly related to the induced malabsorption. A 52-year-old man affected by nephrotic syndrome due to a focal segmental glomerulosclerosis underwent OAGB uneventfully. At three months post-surgery, the patient had lost 40kg, reaching a BMI of 32. The patient was admitted to the nephrology unit for acute kidney injury with only mild improvement in renal function (SCr 9 mg/dl); proteinuria was still elevated (4g/24h), with microhaematuria. A renal biopsy was performed: oxalate deposits were demonstrated inside tubules, associated with acute and chronic tubular and interstitial damage and glomerulosclerosis (21/33 glomeruli). Urinary oxalate levels were found to be elevated (72mg/24h, range 13-40), providing the diagnosis of acute kidney injury due to hyperoxaluria, potentially associated to OAGB. No recovery in renal function was observed and the patient remained dialysis dependent. Early and rapid excessive weight loss in patients affected by chronic kidney insufficiency could be associated with the worsening of renal function. Increased calcium oxalate levels associated with OAGB-related malabsorption could be a key factor in kidney injury.
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PMID:Case Report: Acute kidney failure leading to permanent haemodialysis due to hyperoxaluria following one-anastomosis gastric bypass-related rapid weight loss. 0