Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0020639 (hypoproteinemia)
1,134 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

The benefits of parenteral feeding need no longer be emphasised. However, qualitative and quantitative food supplements raise a certain number of difficulties which should be better known. Infection is the most frequent complication. It may be avoided by strict aseptic precautions throughout parenteral feeding. Hypoglycemia is a major risk owing to the possible consequence. Hyperglycemia and its consequence of osmotic polyuria is more frequent and should be controlled to avoid loss of water and salt. Complications due to the use of lipid emulsions are exceptional when soya oil is used. Hypophosphoremia should be corrected by increasing phosphate intake. Hypocalcemia is common; it is often associated with hypoproteinemia and sometime a low calcium intake, vitamin D deficiency or a sudden increase in phosphate intake. Vitamin deficiencies, hypomagnesemia, and oligo-element deficiencies should be correcty by appropriate supplements.
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PMID:[Parenteral feeding. Prevention of complications in adults during exclusive mid-term parenteral feeding]. 19 99

Clinico-pathological studies were made on rats with polycystic kidney disease (PCK), a congenital renal disorder transmitted as an autosomal recessive trait and characterised by facial and skeletal anomalies, with the results summarised as follows: 1) Affected animals had a poor weight gain and slightly increased urinary excretion of low molecular weight protein from 2 months after birth, and developed polyuria and hypocalciuria 5 months postnatally. They had elevation of serum urea nitrogen, increased urinary excretion of urea nitrogen and hypoproteinemia 8 months postnatally though without showing elevated serum creatinine and died around 10 months of life. 2) Kidneys of chin rats appear granular in surface, enlarge little by little while preserving the entire kidney morphology; a small cyst is formed in the renal medulla 2 months postnatally, then enlarges gradually to encroach upon the cortex and grows to involve all cortical layers by 8 months of life. This cyst was revealed by lectin staining to be derived from the collecting ducts and was assumed to correspond, both morphologically and clinically, to the infantile or juvenile form of PCK in humans. Pathogenetic factors of the characteristic facies and skeletal abnormalities were also investigated.
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PMID:[A study of an autosomal recessive polycystic kidney disease with facial and skeletal abnormalities in rat]. 208 54