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Query: UMLS:C0020538 (
hypertension
)
170,190
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Schistosomiasis mansoni has been well documented as one of the causes of infectious
glomerulopathy
, with mesangiocapillary glomerulonephritis being the most frequent lesion observed in this condition. Twenty-one patients with hepatosplenic schistosomiasis mansoni and biopsy-documented mesangiocapillary glomerulonephritis (MCGN) were studied and compared with 19 patients with the idiopathic form of MCGN. Nephrotic syndrome was the most frequent clinical presentation in both groups. At the time of diagnosis nine patients with hepatosplenomegaly (4 with associated arterial
hypertension
) and 12 (8 with arterial
hypertension
) among the patients with idiopathic MCGN had renal insufficiency. At the end of the follow-up period 16 patients with hepatosplenic schistosomiasis and MCGN (75.2 months) and 15 with the idiopathic form (52.1 months) had renal failure. Also, when compared at 48 months of follow-up, no difference in renal function could be detected in both groups. No benefits related to anti-parasitic treatment in the schistosomiasis group and immunosuppression therapy in either group could be documented. The progression of the renal disease, as assessed by the reciprocal of serum creatinine versus time, and the survival curve, were not different between the two groups. It is concluded that MCGN in patients with the hepatosplenic form of schistosomiasis mansoni is a progressive disease not influenced by anti-parasitic or immunosuppressive therapy, and presents a clinical course similar to that of the idiopathic form.
...
PMID:Schistosoma mansoni-induced mesangiocapillary glomerulonephritis: influence of therapy. 250 87
A histopathological and immunofluorescence (IMF) study of the choroid plexus was performed in 8 cases of hepatosplenic schistosomiasis mansoni and in 20 cases which had resulted in death with no evidence of liver or brain involvement by schistosomiasis or other disease process, and in which renal disease and arterial
hypertension
were also excluded (control group). IgA, IgG, IgM, C3, and C1q were investigated. Positive IMF in the choroid plexus was found in 75% of the schistosomiasis group. IgA and IgG were the immunoglobulins (Ig) most frequently found. C3 was also commonplace. Histologic examination of the choroid plexus showed changes in 87.5% of the schistosomiasis group. The most frequently found change was characterized by focal, linear, occasionally nodular, subepithelial deposition of a homogeneous, acidophilic, and PAS positive substance, apparently in relation to the epithelial basement membrane, with thickening of this structure. In the control group, the IMF in the choroid plexus was negative in all cases, and only 2 cases (10%) presented histopathological changes of the choroid plexus with a pattern similar to that of the schistosomiasis group. The demonstration of the deposition of Ig and fractions of the complement system, and of histological changes in the choroid plexus in a liver disease which is known to exhibit circulating immune complexes and
glomerulopathy
with deposition of Ig and fractions of the complement system suggests an etiopathogenetic relationship between both findings.
...
PMID:Histopathological and immunofluorescence study of the choroid plexus in hepatosplenic schistosomiasis mansoni. 251 May 26
Primary mesangial proliferative glomerulonephritis without IgA deposition (non-IgA MsPGN) is one of the most common types of glomerular disease in China. In an attempt to investigate its clinical and pathological features, we reviewed 77 such cases from 380 patients with primary glomerulonephritis taken renal biopsies during 1980-1987. Prodromal upper respiratory tract infection occurred in 31 cases (40%). In immunofluorescence microscopy, prominent IgG granular deposits in mesangium were observed in 45 cases (58%). These features are quite different from those in western countries, indicating it might have different pathogenetic processes. According to the severity of mesangial lesions, the 77 cases were divided into 3 groups: mild (55 cases), moderate (14) and severe (8). In the patients with mild mesangial lesion and massive proteinuria, the therapeutic response to prednisone was similar to that in adult minimal change disease. In the moderate and severe groups, there was a significantly higher incidence of superimposed tubulo-interstitial lesions associated with
hypertension
, persistent renal insufficiency and a poor response to prednisone. This work showed non-IgA MsPGN covered about 20% of our primary
glomerulopathy
, which may be related to a higher incidence of infection. It was suggested that minimal change nephrotic syndrome, inspite of the variety of immunoglobulin mesangium deposits, could be treated as a single disease entity, and light microscopy is most important in offering prognostic information.
...
PMID:Non-IgA mesangial proliferative glomerulonephritis. Clinical and pathological analysis of 77 cases. 251 67
Approximately 5.8 million people in the United States have been diagnosed by a physician as being diabetic, and an additional 4 to 5 million people have undiagnosed diabetes. Although the incidence of diabetes appears to be declining from a peak of 300 per 100,000 population in 1973, to 230 per 100,000 in 1981, its prevalence continues to rise, due to a 19 percent decline since 1970 in deaths caused by diabetes. In 1982, 34, 583 deaths were attributed to diabetes, resulting in diabetes being ranked as the seventh leading underlying cause of death. Medical and surgical complications of diabetes due to macro- and microvascular disease result in 5,800 new cases of blindness, 4,500 perinatal deaths, 40,000 lower extremity amputations and 3,000 deaths due to diabetic coma (ketotic and hyperosmolar) and at least 4,000 new cases of end-stage renal disease. Hyperglycemia is a major if not sole determinant of diabetic
glomerulopathy
. The exact mechanism underlying diabetic vasculopathy is under intensive study. Experiments in the induced-diabetic rat and dog suggest that small vessel injury may--under defined circumstances--be associated with the polyol (sorbitol) pathway of glucose metabolism, myoinositol deficiency, capillary
hypertension
, plasma hyperviscosity, stiff erythrocytes, elevated circulating thromboxane, and platelet-derived growth factor(s). As yet, no single hypothesis fits these seemingly disparate pieces together into a unified formulation of the genesis of diabetic complications. Clinical experience sustains the contention that a functioning kidney transplant proffers the uremic diabetic younger than age 60 a higher probability for survival with good rehabilitation than does either peritoneal dialysis or maintenance hemodialysis. Diabetics treated by kidney transplantation require more than the routine preoperative and postoperative attention afforded to nondiabetic ESRD patients. During initial nephrologic evaluation, concurrent extrarenal vascular disease--especially ophthalmic, cardiovascular, cerebrovascular and in the extremities, often demands immediate attention. Inventory of co-morbid risk factors pre-transplant facilitates their management post-transplant, thereby improving chances for rehabilitation. Consultations with an ophthalmologist and podiatrist familiar with management of the uremic diabetic should be obtained prior to transplant surgery. When performed as a component of pre-transplant evaluation, coronary angiography permits identification and correction, in many patients, of potentially fatal coronary artery disease.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
...
PMID:Renal failure in diabetes: a substantive problem in provision of health care. 267 7
The mutual relationship between elevated blood pressure and structural changes in the kidney is still an area with more open questions than clear answers. Indirect evidence is available concerning one aspect: When
hypertension
is present it has a significant impact on the further progression of the structural changes. This evidence is available only in terms of the effect of antihypertensive treatment on the preservation of renal function. Since it has been shown that the demise in renal function in long-term diabetics is closely related to the development of advanced diabetic
glomerulopathy
, it seems likely that normalization of the blood pressure leads to a slowing of this development. Structural studies to elucidate these interactions are, however, not available. An intriguing question is whether the relationship is interactive also in the other direction. Focusing on the alterations within the glomeruli, the fact is that the
glomerulopathy
develops over several years before it come to the stage when clinical signs appear. Thus, diabetics with "incipient nephropathy" clearly demonstrate basement membrane (BM) accumulation, showing as increased BM-thickness and increase in mesangial matrix volume. Since this is the most likely point of time for
hypertension
to develop the necessary condition obtains, that the development of
hypertension
might be triggered by structural abnormalities in the kidney. The mechanisms of action at this point of time remain speculative. The relationship between structural parameters characterizing diabetic
glomerulopathy
and the blood pressure level was studied in a series of 14 IDDM patients, representing a span of renal functional impairment. Mean blood pressure in the group was 117 mmHg, with a range from 87-122 mmHg.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Morphology of diabetic glomerulopathy and relationship to hypertension. 269 44
A total of 411 children, aged from 0.3 to 18 years, suffering from glomerular diseases, were studied by renal biopsy between 1976 and 1985. The clinical presentation included nephrotic syndrome (79% of cases), renal failure (43%), and arterial
hypertension
(38%). In all, 177 cases presented with primary nephrotic syndrome; all had complicated courses and most were either corticosteroid-dependent or -resistant. Only 26.6% had minimal change disease on renal biopsy; 56.5% had focal-segmental sclerosis; and immunofluorescent deposits were observed in half of the group. Acute poststreptococcal (36 cases), mesangiocapillary (80 cases), and lupus (34 cases) glomerulonephritis occurred frequently; IgA
glomerulopathy
(10 cases) and haemolytic uraemic syndrome (6 cases) were uncommon. Glomerular crescents were observed in 71 cases. These observations illustrate the types of glomerular diseases seen in Iranian children.
...
PMID:Glomerular diseases in children. "The Iranian experience". 270 71
The clinical course of mesangial
glomerulopathy
with IgM deposits (IgM-nephropathy) was studied in 54 patients. The initial manifestations of the disease were nephrotic syndrome in 18, proteinuria in 21, proteinuria together with hematuria in 4 and isolated hematuria in 11 patients. The nephrotic syndrome was steroid-responsive in 60% of cases and of these 80% were steroid-dependent. During a 5-year postbiopsy follow-up 3 patients went into terminal uremia and in 6 more patients a milder renal insufficiency was observed. Three patients were rebiopsied and in 2 of these the second biopsy specimen disclosed typical focal and segmental glomerulosclerosis. Hematuria was a favorable sign, as no patient with hematuria showed progressive impairment of renal function. The prevalence of
hypertension
in the whole material was 37%. At close of follow-up 35% of all patients were in clinical remission. It is suggested that IgM-nephropathy associated with abundant proteinuria or the nephrotic syndrome represents a distinct disorder from that associated with hematuria. While the nephrotic type often manifested itself with a morphologic change and a tendency to develop renal insufficiency, the hematuric type showed female predominance, a high tendency to spontaneous clinical remission and a favorable clinical course.
...
PMID:Clinical follow-up of 54 patients with IgM-nephropathy. 274 91
Many of the adverse reactions produced by penicillamine and other compounds with an active sulfhydryl group form a distinctive pattern when viewed as a class. Alterations in taste perception, mucocutaneous lesions, proteinuria due to immune-complex membranous
glomerulopathy
, and pemphigus are adverse reactions that have been encountered with all of the compounds discussed herein. Hematologic reactions such as neutropenia and thrombocytopenia occur rarely and with variable frequency. The angiotension converting enzyme inhibitor captopril has an active sulfhydryl group. When it was first given in high doses to patients with severe
hypertension
, adverse effects similar in pattern to those just outlined were reported. With reduced doses and more careful patient selection, the more serious reactions are no longer found, but disturbances of taste perception, rash, and oral mucosal ulcers are still encountered.
...
PMID:Adverse effects profile of sulfhydryl compounds in man. 293 93
The renal glomeruli are vulnerable to injury by a number of drugs and other toxic agents. These agents may lead to damage by one of two basic mechanisms: direct, dose-related toxic injury; indirect, immunologically mediated injury, largely dose-independent. Proteinuria is the simplest and most important functional indicator of glomerular injury. It occurs almost immediately in direct toxic injury, but there is a latent period of weeks to months with immunologically mediated processes. Of the two mechanisms, the second is by far the more common in clinical settings. The best studied experimental agent causing direct toxic injury is the aminonucleoside of puromycin. Clinically, perhaps the most important agent is Cyclosporine A. Although this agent is usually thought of primarily as a tubular toxin, it is capable of giving rise to a microangiopathic glomerular lesion similar to that in the hemolytic uremic syndrome. The classic model for immunologic glomerular lesion is Heymann nephritis, which produces a membranous
glomerulopathy
. Clinically, most drug mediated glomerulopathies also take the form of a membranous nephropathy, usually with a frank nephrotic syndrome. Among the more common offenders are penicillamine, gold salts used in rheumatoid arthritis, and captopril used in
hypertension
. The other common type of drug-related
glomerulopathy
occurs as part of a lupus-like syndrome induced by a variety of drugs, including hydralazine, procainamide, and penicillamine. All of these give rise to a variety of antibodies, most prominently antinuclear antibodies, and in the more severe cases there may be lupus-like glomerular lesions as well.
...
PMID:Drug-associated glomerulopathies. 294 Jun 67
To study the relationship between retinal and renal microangiopathy, the albumin excretion rate (AER) was measured by radioimmunoassay in 111 insulin-dependent diabetics and compared to their stages of retinopathy, as assessed by ophthalmoscopic examination and fluorescein angiography. The prevalence of pathological AER differed from that of diabetic retinopathy. The stage of retinopathy was related to the duration of diabetes (r = 0.59; P = 0.001), which was not the case for AER (r = 0.06; ns). Half of patients with proliferative retinopathy (11/22) had a normal AER, while 12% of those without retinopathy had a pathological AER (microalbuminuria). No relationship was found between glycaemic control and AER. The highest prevalence of
hypertension
was found in patients with macroalbuminuria (greater than 500 mg/24 h) and/or severe retinopathy. The mean AER was higher in hypertensive diabetics than in non-hypertensive diabetics (P less than 0.005). These results suggest that the risk of retinopathy is dissociated from the risk of
glomerulopathy
in diabetics, and that
hypertension
associates with diabetes mellitus in a greater risk of pathological AER.
...
PMID:[Relation between urinary albumin excretion and retinopathy in insulin-dependent diabetics]. 294 9
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