Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
Pivot Concepts:   Target Concepts:
Query: UMLS:C0022672 (acute tubular necrosis)
2,175 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

We experienced a case of a 44 year old man who had ingested potassium bromate solution for suicide attempt. Soon after the ingestion, nausea, vomiting, abdominal pain and diarrhea developed in him. Several hours later, he began to complain of auditory disturbance and, in addition, anuric acute renal failure occurred. Direct hemoperfusion and hemodialysis was performed on the patient for the treatment purpose. Five weeks later, he was released from hemodialysis procedure. Gradually, on the other hand, progressing anemia was observed until 90th hospital day, which slowly improved thereafter. Further, pruritus, lower leg pain, headache, tinnitus and loss of sense of taste, etc. were observed in the clinical course. Renal biopsy was performed on the 119th hospital day and the specimen showed the regenerative stage of acute tubular necrosis. In our case, acute renal failure was reversible and, many other clinical manifestations were observed. However slight anemia and irreversible severe auditory disturbance remained unimproved.
...
PMID:[A case of acute potassium bromate intoxication]. 222 63

Serum erythropoietin (EPO) concentrations were markedly depressed relative to the degree of anaemia in 10 patients with acute tubular necrosis, and remained low long after restoration of excretory renal function as estimated by glomerular filtration rate. Evidence is presented that the low serum EPO level is due to defective synthesis and not to increased catabolism. It is suggested that the predominantly are generatory anaemia found in prolonged cases of acute tubular necrosis, and the slow restoration of red cell mass during recovery, are due to the deficient synthesis of EPO. A positive erythropoietic response in a therapeutic trial with recombinant human erythropoietin (rhEPO) appears to support this hypothesis.
...
PMID:Erythropoietin deficiency in acute tubular necrosis. 235 24

Three patients are reported who presented with severe oliguric renal failure due to retroperitoneal fibrosis and obstructive uropathy in whom spontaneous diuresis and recovery of renal function took place, a course resembling acute tubular necrosis. There were, however, several clinical and laboratory findings that provided clues to the presence of obstructive uropathy. Two of the three patients had low back or abdominal pain. All three patients presented with anemia and significant hyperkalemic, hyperchloremic metabolic acidosis with only a small increase in anion gap and two of the patients had an inappropriately high urine pH. Neither tubular cell casts nor pigmented granular casts were identified in the urine in any of the patients. In all three patients the urine output increased from oliguric levels to 1400 - 2000 ml/day within 1 day associated with rapidly improving renal function. This report demonstrates and reinforces the need to rule out obstruction in all patients with renal failure of unknown etiology and adds retroperitoneal fibrosis to the list of diseases associated with renal failure and spontaneous recovery.
...
PMID:Retroperitoneal fibrosis presenting as spontaneously reversible renal failure. 712 23

Urinalysis and urine chemistries are most helpful in determining whether acute renal failure is due to a prerenal, renal, or postrenal cause. A plain film of the abdomen should be obtained, with ultrasound or computed tomography also being done if obstruction is suspected. When prerenal and postrenal causes have been excluded, the cause should be considered to be acute tubular necrosis, which progresses through initiating, oliguric (or sometimes nonoliguric), diuretic, and recovery phases. Acute tubular necrosis can produce a variety of clinical consequences affecting the entire body, including hyperkalemia, acidosis, hypocalcemia, anemia, and infection, as well as various cardiovascular, neurologic, and gastrointestinal problems.
...
PMID:Acute renal failure. 1. Classification, evaluation, and clinical consequences. 714 80

A 9-year-old castrated male domestic shorthair cat with dysuria, anorexia, vomiting, and lethargy was admitted to the veterinary teaching hospital. A large, firm mass was palpable in the ventral cervical region. Hypercalcemia, azotemia, and nonregenerative anemia were evident on serum biochemical analysis and CBC, and multiple uroliths were detected by abdominal radiography. At necropsy, light microscopy of the ventral cervical mass revealed a parathyroid adenocarcinoma. Light microscopy of sections of the kidneys revealed multifocal, chronic, lymphocytic/plasmacytic, tubulointerstitial nephritis, as well as moderate multifocal acute tubular necrosis. On quantitative analysis, the uroliths were composed of calcium oxalate. Determination of serum calcium concentration is indicated in cats with calcium oxalate urolithiasis to aid in detection of primary hyperparathyroidism.
...
PMID:Calcium oxalate urolithiasis in a cat with a functional parathyroid adenocarcinoma. 775 34

Although malaria has been largely eradicated from temperate countries, it is on the increase in the tropics. Infection with Plasmodium falciparum affects a vast number of people and kills over a million annually. Severe malaria is a multisystem disease affecting particularly the central nervous system (causing coma and convulsions), the kidneys (resulting in acute tubular necrosis), and the liver (contributing to lactic acidosis and hypoglycaemia). Acute pulmonary oedema (acute respiratory distress syndrome) may occur in adults particularly in association with renal impairment. In children these symptoms are rare, whereas hypoglycaemia, lactic acidosis and severe anaemia are more common. Malaria should be suspected in any febrile patient living in or returning from the tropics, and a blood smear examined. Chloroquine has been the mainstay of antimalarial treatment for the past 40 years, but resistance in P. falciparum is now widespread throughout the tropics and has recently been recognised in P. vivax from Oceania. Sulfadoxine-pyrimethamine resistance is also common. Fortunately, quinine, and the newly introduced compounds, halofantrine and mefloquine, can be relied upon nearly everywhere. The most rapidly acting and effective of all antimalarial drugs, artemisinin and its derivatives, have come from China. They offer a genuine prospect of reducing mortality from malaria in the tropics.
...
PMID:Clinical malaria in the tropics. 833 22

We present a 72-year-old man who had episodes of severe, acute renal failure during severe attacks of diarrhea caused by Vibrio cholerae. Patterns of acute tubular necrosis and tubulointerstitial nephritis developed following hypotension and decrease in renal blood flow, causing secondary renal ischemia. There was severe dehydration with profound hypovolemia and infection. The clinical picture included fever, weakness, arthralgia, pedal edema, mild bilateral pleural effusions, anemia, leukocytosis, azotemia with a maximum of 330 mg/dl of urea, creatine to a maximum of 9.8 mg/dl, hypoproteinemia, severe metabolic acidosis, marked increase in lactate dehydrogenase (LDH) and creatine phosphokinase (CPK), microscopic hematuria, sterile leukocyturia, normoglycemic glucosuria and phosphaturia with diminished tubular reabsorption of phosphorus. A short oliguric phase was followed by a polyuric phase lasting about 10 days, and glomerular and tubular function became normal after about 3 weeks. Treatment was by intensive infusions of fluids, electrolytes, sodium bicarbonate, salt-free albumin and antibiotics. To the best of our knowledge, this renal complication of cholera has not yet been described in Israel.
...
PMID:[Acute renal failure as a complication of cholera]. 868 55

Prophylactic hemodialysis has been employed in the treatment of 15 patients with acute renal failure due to acute tubular necrosis (12), bilateral renal cortical necrosis (two), and poststreptococcal glomerulonephritis (one). Dialyses, usually lasting six hours each, were begun before clinical evidence of uremia developed in each patient and/or before the nonprotein nitrogen reached 200 mg.%, and were repeated daily or often enough to maintain the nonprotein nitrogen below 150 mg.%. The hypothesis underlying this technic postulates (1) that wasting, sepsis and impaired wound healing in these patients may reflect tissue injury by the same dialyzable toxic agents which produce the uremic symptoms that are readily reversible by dialysis, and (2) that repeated dialyses should therefore prevent both clinical uremia and the later, often lethal sequelae. The results contrast dramatically with our own past experience in treating patients with acute renal failure with a carefully executed medical regimen together with hemodialysis on conventional indications. Except in one instance of crush injury with progressive intracerebral damage, and one brief occasion in another individual, these patients experienced a stable, convalescent clinical course, remained free of uremic symptoms or chemical imbalances, ate at least three meals daily which were unrestricted in amount and composition, and were ambulatory between dialyses unless confined to bed by associated disease. Wounds healed well. Infection either did not occur, or subsided after appropriate therapy. Fluid restriction was liberalized by means of ultrafiltration with dialysis. Regional heparinization of only the extracorporeal circuit eliminated actual or impending bleeding as a contraindication to dialysis. Chronic vessel cannulation made the frequent dialyses possible, but may have provided the route for repeated, transient bacterial contamination of the blood stream in the first hour of many dialyses. Marked anemia, despite reticulocytosis, moderate to mild weight loss and some mental deficit persisted in spite of the general clinical improvement and well-being. Three patients with tubular necrosis died after seven, 11 and 26 days of oliguria; both patients with bilateral renal cortical necrosis also succumbed, on the seventy-third and ninety-second days of renal failure, and after 29 and 40 dialyses, respectively. At autopsy, evidence of sepsis was conspicuously absent. The remaining 10 patients survived. Thus some, but not all, clinical manifestations of acute renal failure appear to be favorably influenced by prophylactic dialysis treatment. Our initial experience in this group of 15 patients does not of course prove that freedom from complications and a significantly better outlook for survival can be assured to patients with acute renal failure by these methods. However, it seems to offer a reasonable hope of this possibility which we cannot attach to management by medical measures alone, or by dialysis on conventional indications. If this hope is realized in greatly extended, subsequent series, then it seems inevitable that some form of prophylactic dialysis, or some equally effective alternative, should be adopted in treating the majority of patients with acute renal failure.
...
PMID:Prophylactic hemodialysis in the treatment of acute renal failure. Annals of Internal Medicine, 53:992-1016, 1960. 984 96

Renal involvement in 204 cases with multiple myeloma admitted over a 10-year period to this tertiary care center in north India was retrospectively examined. Renal involvement occurred in 55 cases (27%); the vast majority of whom (94.5%) had presented with renal failure and 7.3% had nephrotic syndrome. The diagnosis of multiple myeloma was made after admission in 51 of the 55 (92.7%) cases. Oliguria was seen in 23.6% and two-third patients required dialysis. Factors precipitating renal failure were identified in 53% and included dehydration (33%), hypercalcemia (24%), nephrotoxic drugs (16%), sepsis (9%), recent surgery (5%) and contrast media (2%), Severe anemia, hypercalcemia, Bence Jones proteinuria and skeletal abnormalities were more frequent in those with renal involvement. Patients with renal involvement were more likely to have a high tumor burden. The myeloma was of light chain type in 68% of those with renal involvement whereas IgG myeloma was commonest (57%) in those without evidence of renal disease. Renal histology was studied in 27 cases with myeloma cast nephropathy seen in over 60%. Tubulointerstitial nephritis was seen in 14% cases, 11% had amyloidosis, 7% had acute tubular necrosis and 3.6% each had nodular glomerulosclerosis and plasma cell infiltration. In 8 cases (14.6%), renal biopsy provided the first clue to the diagnosis of myeloma. Renal function improved in 33% cases. Only 22% of patients on dialysis survived over 6 months. Median survival in those with renal involvement was only 4 months. Development of unexplained renal failure in an elderly individual with normal sized kidneys, in association with disproportionate anemia even in the absence of skeletal lesions should alert the physician to the diagnosis of multiple myeloma.
...
PMID:Renal involvement in multiple myeloma: a 10-year study. 1090 Nov 84

Epidemic dropsy results from the consumption of edible oils adulterated with Argemone mexicana oil by unscrupulous traders. Twenty consecutive 'in-door' patients of dropsy were intensively studied during the recent Delhi epidemic. Samples of edible oil used by them, their urine and their serum samples tested positive for sanguinarine on thin layer chromatography. The illness starts as a gastro-enteric illness followed by oliguria and pedal oedema. The following are often observed: cutaneous erythema with blanching and tenderness on pressure; violacious pigmentation of the skin; shortness of breath with orthopnoea; right-sided heart failure with normal left ventricle (LV) functions; as well as severe anaemia and hypoalbuminaemia. Renal function tests showed: bland urinary sediments; decreased glomerular filtration rate (GFR); mild to moderate azotaemia; acute tubular necrosis; patchy pneumonitis; moderate hypoxia with respiratory alkalosis; and restrictive ventilatory defects on blood gas analysis; and spirometry suggestive of interstitial pulmonary oedema of non-cardiogenic origin. 99mTc colloid sulphur liver scans showed colloid shift. There was marked dilatation and proliferation of dermal capillaries in the absence of significant inflammation in the biopsy specimens. Toxic alkaloids of Argemone mexicana oil induce widespread capillary dilatation and permeability causing leakage of protein rich plasma into the interstitial tissues of various organs. A hypovolaemic state is thus induced producing renal hypoperfusion which may progress to acute tubular necrosis. Interstitial fluid in alveoli causes restrictive ventilatory dysfunction with hypertension and right-sided failure with well-preserved LV function. The hepatic venous congestion induces Kupffer's cell dysfunction, which results in colloid shift on a radionuclide liver scan.
...
PMID:Epidemic dropsy: observations on pathophysiology and clinical features during the Delhi epidemic of 1998. 1193 Dec 4


1 2 3 Next >>