Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0021051 (immunodeficiency)
71,517 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Since the first report on the acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS) in 1981, organ involvement of AIDS has increased. We discuss the effect of human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) infection, the causative agent of AIDS, on the field of nephrology. Hyponatremia, the commonest fluid and electrolyte abnormality, is caused by various pathophysiologic mechanisms, including adrenal insufficiency. The renal parenchymal complications are diverse, but a new entity, HIV-associated nephropathy, is becoming recognized because of its characteristic clinical and pathologic features, including the fact that it causes irreversible renal failure. HIV infection in patients with end-stage renal failure, both before and after initiation of maintenance dialysis, is a significant problem. The present methods of preventing spread of virus in dialysis units seem successful. Few patients who are infected with HIV or who have AIDS have had renal transplantation, although unsuspected viral infection of cadaveric organs remains a concern.
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PMID:Human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) infection and the kidney. 240 74

Monoclonal and oligoclonal banding has been observed in electrophoretograms of serum, cerebrospinal fluid, and urinary protein from patients infected with the human immunodeficiency virus (HIV). This is the first report of kappa oligoclonal banding in the protein electrophoretograms for urine but not for serum of two patients with the acquired immune deficiency syndrome (AIDS). Both patients had proteinuria, but only one had the nephrotic syndrome and renal failure. Serum oligoclonal banding in HIV-infected patients occurs much more frequently than in age-matched controls and may be detected before AIDS or lymphadenopathy syndrome evolves. The use of oligoclonal banding as a marker for HIV infection is currently under investigation. Urine as well as serum samples should be included in this research.
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PMID:Oligoclonal banding detected by urinary protein electrophoresis and immunofixation in two patients with the acquired immune deficiency syndrome and proteinuria. 250 72

Of 155 children with the acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS) whom we evaluated during a 6 1/2-year period, 12 were found to have proteinuria. Histologic studies of tissue from these 12 patients revealed a wide spectrum of renal disease: focal glomerulosclerosis in 5, mesangial hyperplasia in 5, segmental necrotizing glomerulonephritis in 1, and minimal change disease in 1. In addition, 6 had tubulointerstitial infiltrates, and 10 had glomerular dense deposits. All 10 renal specimens studied by electron microscopy contained endothelial tubuloreticular inclusions. The mean age (+/- SD) of the five patients with focal glomerulosclerosis when this condition was identified was 27 +/- 19 months. All five had severe renal failure within a year and died of other causes during the following year. The mean age of the five patients with mesangial hyperplasia was 38 +/- 31 months. Although none of them went on to have renal failure, four died within 8 +/- 7 months. Ten of the 12 patients with proteinuria died during the study period. Of the two surviving, one had mesangial hyperplasia and the other had minimal change disease. We conclude that children who acquire human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) infection during the perinatal period may have renal disease, most often focal glomerulosclerosis, as is the case in adults, or mesangial hyperplasia. Although 5 of the 12 children we studied had renal failure during the study period, none died of it. Further studies are needed to determine the correlations between clinical and pathological features and the pathophysiology of AIDS nephropathy in children.
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PMID:Renal disease in children with the acquired immunodeficiency syndrome. 277 Jul 91

A nephrology consultation was called on 100 adult patients of 1,635 (6.1%) patients with human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) infection seen between 1982 and 1987 at the University of Miami/Jackson Memorial Medical Center. Renal disease was observed in all groups of patients with a risk factor for HIV infection with a lesser incidence, however, among homosexuals. Intravenous drug (IVD) use and possibly race appear to be important factors in the development of renal complications. Renal disease was the dominant clinical feature in eight asymptomatic HIV carriers and in 34 patients with AIDS-related complex (ARC) who had not developed the opportunistic infections and/or malignancies associated with acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS). Ninety-one percent of consultations were requested for evaluation of proteinuria and/or renal failure. Nephrotic range proteinuria, in excess of 3 g/24 h, was present in 52 patients, and was less prevalent in homosexuals than in other groups at risk. Renal failure (serum creatinine greater than or equal to 5 mg/dL), initially present in 32 patients, eventually developed in 69 and improved in only 18 of them. A renal biopsy, obtained for work-up of nephrotic syndrome (22 patients) or renal insufficiency (3 patients), uncovered a picture of focal and segmental glomerulosclerosis in all 25 instances. Overall, 76 patients are dead, seven are lost to follow-up, and 17 are alive, of whom eight (four HIV carriers, two patients with ARC, and two with AIDS) are on maintenance hemodialysis with a mean survival time of 217 days.
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PMID:The clinical spectrum of renal disease associated with human immunodeficiency virus. 304

Patients with terminal renal failure quite frequently receive blood transfusions on renal replacement therapy; therefore they are at increased risk of infection with human immunodeficiency virus (HIV). We investigated sera from 380 patients on haemodialysis or with a renal transplant for anti-HIV, using commercially available enzyme immunoassays (EIA). Persistent EIA-positive sera were additionally examined by Western blot and ELAVIA test, a commercially available indirect EIA. We found 20 patients (5.3%) with a persistently positive EIA screening test. None gave a positive result with confirmatory tests. Cross-reacting leucocyte antibodies seemed to be responsible for most of these false-positive anti-HIV tests; 12 of 20 EIA-positive sera were found positive for HLA antibodies. Sera from patients on haemodialysis or with a renal transplant, particularly when multiply transfused, have to be investigated carefully before infection with HIV is confirmed.
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PMID:Human immunodeficiency virus antibody screening in patients on renal replacement therapy: prevalence of false-positive results. 311 66

Cryptosporidiosis is increasingly recognized as a significant human pathogen. Previous reports have emphasized the benign, self-limited nature of the illness in the immunocompetent adult. In contrast, immunodeficient hosts have severe, frequently unremitting illness. We describe a case in which an individual, with no evidence of immunodeficiency and negative human immunodeficiency virus serologic findings, was admitted with a five-week history of severe diarrhea, marked weight loss, and renal failure probably as a consequence of cryptosporidiosis. The patient's renal function returned to normal with hydration, and his diarrhea resolved without specific therapy. At a six-month follow-up, the patient was in excellent health.
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PMID:Severe cryptosporidiosis in an immunocompetent host. 340 Nov 11

We report 50 immunocompromised patients with pulmonary infiltrates who underwent fibreoptic bronchoscopy, including bronchoalveolar lavage, on 56 occasions. The underlying diseases were mostly lymphoma, leukemia, other malignancies and renal failure. The commonest immunodeficiency factors were chemotherapy, steroids and neutropenia. A positive diagnosis could be made from analysis of the bronchoalveolar lavage on 59% (33/56) occasions. This was a comparable yield to transbronchial lung biopsy 57% (16/27), and superior to proximal airways wash 24% (13/55), or bronchial brushings 29% (10/34). Open lung biopsy added additional diagnostic information in three of the four cases in which it was performed. The most common final diagnoses were bacterial, viral or Pneumocystis carinii pneumonia and recurrent malignancy. We conclude that bronchoalveolar lavage is a safe procedure with a high diagnostic yield in the immunocompromised host with suspected opportunistic pneumonia.
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PMID:The role of bronchoalveolar lavage in the diagnosis of suspected opportunistic pneumonia. 350 11

An autopsy case of clostridial gas gangrene occurring in a 54-year-old man with colon adenocarcinoma, liver cirrhosis, and diabetes mellitus is reported. The patient died 4 days after the onset of symptoms with episodes of vomiting and abdominal pain. Gangrene of both hips and perineum, hemolysis, renal failure, and disseminated intravascular coagulation were the dominant clinical features. Clostridium septicum was isolated from the subcutaneous tissue fluid. Adenocarcinoma of the ascending colon with ulceration found at autopsy was supposed to be an entry of the organism. Histologically, lesions of subcutaneous tissue and muscles were characterized by the absence of inflammatory infiltrates in spite of extensive necrosis. A summary of 35 cases of gas gangrene hospitalized to the Osaka University Hospital for the past 16 years indicates that clostridial gas gangrene patients with underlying diseases such as malignant neoplasm, diabetes, liver cirrhosis or immunodeficiency have a relatively poor prognosis.
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PMID:A case of nontraumatic clostridial gas gangrene occurring in a patient with colon adenocarcinoma, liver cirrhosis, and diabetes mellitus. 373 9

The cell-mediated immunodeficiency secondary to renal failure is well established and is largely dependent on toxic or inhibitory serum factors. Our approach was to investigate the effect of so-called middle molecules (MM) on in vitro and in vivo immunological functions. A crude fraction of MM isolated from the serum or urines of uremic patients by chromatography on Sephadex G-25 fine was shown to markedly inhibit the lymphocyte proliferation induced in vitro by various phytomitogens or by allogeneic cells. A marked depression of the graft-versus-host reaction was demonstrated in vivo. When rats were continuously infused with MM, a significant delay of skin allograft rejection was obtained. From these results it is clear that the MM fraction contains a potent inhibitor of several T lymphocyte functions.
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PMID:Effect of middle molecules on immunological functions. 702 6

A retrospective review was conducted to evaluate the influence of risk factors for human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) infection on the outcome of patients with end-stage renal disease (ESRD). The records of all patients seen at Howard University Hospital between February 1984 and July 1994 with a diagnosis of HIV infection were reviewed. Two hundred seventy-eight patients had a diagnosis of renal failure; 38 of these patients developed end-stage renal failure requiring dialysis. Risk factors for HIV infection in these patients were intravenous drug abuse, homosexual behavior, bisexual preference, and blood transfusion. None of these factors consistently influenced the survival of HIV-infected patients with ESRD.
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PMID:End-stage renal disease in patients infected with human immunodeficiency virus: a retrospective review of 38 cases. 747 53


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