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)

We report the clinical and pathologic findings of 2 siblings affected with congenital nephrotic syndrome (CNS). The parents were a nonconsanguineous Mexican couple. The first sibling was born at term and developed proteinuria, hypoproteinemia, edema and ascites by its second month of life; he died septic at 6 months of age. The second sibling was diagnosed with congenital nephrosis during the second trimester of pregnancy. Prenatal demonstration of reno-placentomegaly can help in making the presumptive diagnosis of CNS in patients with high maternal serum and amniotic fluid AFP, normal acetylcholinesterase and normal karyotype. The pathologic findings of the kidneys of these siblings demonstrate that tubular microcysts are not critical to the disease process and are only the manifestation of a progressive disease in which the primary renal defect probably resides in a lack of integrity of the glomerular epithelial cells serving as filter.
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PMID:Clinical and pathologic findings in 2 siblings with congenital nephrotic syndrome. 806 May 12

Exacerbating factors of tuberculosis were evaluated from the viewpoint of intractability of the disease including the effectiveness of chemotherapy by comparing patients with intractable tuberculosis and those with nonintractable tuberculosis. Of the patients aged 30 years or above admitted to our hospital for the initial episode of tuberculosis, 42 patients with intractable tuberculosis and 247 controls were compared. No difference was observed between the two groups in life-style factors such as smoking, drinking, and living alone or complications such as diabetes mellitus and cerebrospinal diseases. In the refractory group, a poor general condition with fever and body weight losses on admission, massive discharge of tubercle bacillus, and delayed diagnosis and treatment were frequently observed. Also, patients with a lymphocyte count of 500/mm3 or less such as those with anemia, hypoproteinemia/hypoalbuminemia, high LDH and CRP levels, and a low cholinesterase level were significantly more frequent, and resistant bacteria were detected more frequently in this group.
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PMID:[Factors for the onset of and the exacerbation of tuberculosis. 4. Clinical factors related to the onset and exacerbation of tuberculosis. b. Middle-aged and elderly patients]. 1056 36

Nephrotic syndrome (NS) remains a serious clinical setting characterized by marked proteinuria, hypoproteinemia and hypercholesterolemia, usually accompanied by the presence of oedemas. It could be presumed, that the newly discovered hormone leptin plays an important role in the complex metabolic processes occurring in patients with NS, in which apart from the changes in the hydratation, and the protein and lipid spectre profile changes, the alteration of the metabolism of glycides elicited by the treatment with corticosteroids (CS) is often observed. The aim of the study was to investigate the plasma levels of leptin and its plasma soluble receptor (sLe-R) before and after the treatment with CS and to evaluate their relationship with albuminemia and/or proteinuria. The study group consisted of 15 men and 15 women (mean age 49 +/- 13.7 years) with newly diagnosed NS, verified by renal biopsy, in which subsequently CS treatment was started. Before the treatment (period 1) and further one month (period 2) and six months (period 3) after the start of the treatment the following parameters were measured: body mass index (BMI), serum levels of creatinine, albumin, cholesterol, triglyceride, cholinesterase, proteinuria/24 hour and plasma levels of leptin and sLe-R. In comparison to the relatively high values of BMI in the period 1 a decrease of BMI towards the physiologic range was observed during the treatment periods. Statistically significant changes were also observed in proteinuria (decrease) and in serum cholesterol and albumin levels of whereas in other biochemical parameters, including plasma leptin and sLe-R levels, statistically significant changes were not found. A trend to negative correlation with borderline statistical significance could be observed between leptin and sLe-R. The results of our relatively unique study on leptin--dealing with long-term follow-up of the patients with NS suggest that regardless prominent metabolic alterations present in NS the plasma levels of leptin and sLe-R remain relatively stable, and that of regulation of leptin in this setting is probably complex and multifactorial.
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PMID:[Leptin in patients wit nephrotic syndrome]. 1522 34

One hundred and twenty-six cancer patients admitted consecutively to the Istituto Nazionale Tumori, Milan, were examined. Within 48 h of hospital admission and again after one week, each patient underwent a nutritional assessment including standard anthropometric and biochemical indices (weight loss, serum proteins, serum albumin, total iron binding capacity (TIBC), cholinesterase (CHE) and lymphocyte count). Calorie and protein intake were also calculated. Each patient was classified with respect to a threshold of normality for each variable (< 10% for weight loss, > 6 g/dL for serum proteins, 3.4 g/dL for serum albumin, >/= 250 mmg/dL for TIBC, >/= 1900 mU/dL for CHE, >/= 1500/nm for total lymphocytes count and 90% Recommended Dietary Allowances (RDA) for nutritional intake). The Mann-Whitney test was performed to assess the statistical significance of the variation between all the nutritional variables at admission and after 7 days of hospitalisation. The relative risk of developing malnutrition regarding a nutritional index after 7 days of hospitalisation was then calculated with reference to each nutritional variable at admission. The significance was tested by the chi square test. The analysis showed that patients who developed deterioration of a nutritional index during hospitalisation had, at admission, worse values of the variable which subsequently deteriorated. In particular, low levels of serum albumin and total iron binding capacity were the variables associated with the higher number of nutritional indices which deteriorated after 7 days of hospitalisation. These were followed by low values of cholinesterase, body weight, serum proteins and lymphocytes. No significant relationship was found between change of a nutritional variable and protein and calorie intake. The risk of developing relevant weight loss (relative risk (RR) = 3.52), hypoalbuminemia (RR = 2.38) and hypoproteinemia (RR = 2.6) during hospitalisation was significantly higher when CHE was below 1900 mU/mL at admission.
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PMID:Predictability of deterioration in marginally malnourished cancer patients during hospitalisation. 1683 90