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

From 1976 to 1987 on our Nephrological Unit, 57 patients with IgA nephropathy (IgAN) proven by renal biopsies were found. Three of those presented with acute tubular necrosis (ATN) and glomerulitis, without extrarenal predisposing cause in two; and showed, as prominent manifestation, a severe acute renal failure syndrome (ARFS), needing dialytic treatment. All three had hematuria, which was macroscopic in two and microscopic in one. Thus the prevalence of the association of glomerulitis and ATN was about 5.2%. There was complete recovery of renal functions in all three patients, but the usual symptomatology of IgAN. Two patients presented polymorphonuclear neutrophils infiltration of glomerular capillaries and in one of them, electron-dense deposits on the epithelial side of glomerular basement membrane ("humps") were observed, as well as those identified in the mesangial area. The glomerular polymorphonuclear neutrophils infiltration and endothelial cells proliferation (cases 1 and 3), the presence of "humps" (case 1), high antistreptolysin O (ASO) titers (cases 1 and 2), and low serum complement levels (case 1), suggest the possibility that antigens able to cause postinfectious glomerulonephritis (streptococcal or not) could induce in some individuals, by another immunopathogenetic route, mixed histopathological and clinical features of IgAN and postinfectious glomerulonephritis.
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PMID:IgA nephropathy: acute renal failure, acute tubular necrosis, and features of postinfectious acute glomerulonephritis. 146 4

An adolescent male presented with hematuria and flank pain. Transient focal renal parenchymal defects were demonstrated by ultrasonography, radionuclide scintigraphy and computed tomography. Renal biopsy revealed IgA nephropathy with acute tubular necrosis. This peculiar radiographic pattern has not, to our knowledge, been previously described in IgA nephropathy and may relate to tubule cell damage by red blood cell casts or patchy renal ischemia.
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PMID:Unusual radiographic presentation of IgA nephropathy. 221 97

Nephrotic syndrome was the commonest clinical presentation among 2827 consecutive adult Indian patients from whom adequate kidney biopsies were obtained for suspected renal disease. In 83 per cent of cases the nephrotic syndrome was due to minimal change disease, focal segmental glomerulosclerosis, mesangiocapillary glomerulonephritis, membranous usually secondary to tuberculosis or leprosy, was present in only 34 patients. Acute nephritis, the next most frequent clinical presentation, was due to diffuse endocapillary proliferative, crescentic or mesangial proliferative glomerulonephritis in 88 per cent of cases, almost half of whom had elevated serum streptococcal antibody titres. Eosinophilia showed a highly significant association with diffuse endocapillary proliferative and mesangiocapillary glomerulonephritis. Idiopathic IgA nephropathy was present in only 10, and antiglomerular basement membrane antibody disease in only one, of the 238 patients whose biopsies were studied by immunofluorescence. Complications of pregnancy accounted for 70 per cent of cases of cortical necrosis. Acute gastroenteritis, septicaemia, abortions, snake bite and allopathic and indigenous medicines were important causes of acute tubular necrosis.
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PMID:Renal disease in adult Indians: a clinicopathological study of 2,827 patients. 344 84

Familiarity with renal issues that can challenge the care of patients with human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) should expedite diagnosis and therapeutic interventions. Among the most common problems are electrolyte and acid-base imbalances from many opportunistic infections or their treatments, including hyponatremia, hyperkalemia, hypokalemia, and hypo- and hypercalcemia. Acid-base disturbances, simple or mixed, can be due to underlying sepsis, opportunistic infections, or the therapy thereof. A recent report of seven patients with HIV with type B lactic acidosis failed to identify a satisfactory etiology. Elevations in creatinine or diminishing urine output should alert the physician to the possibilities of prerenal azotemia or acute tubular necrosis, which can result from progression of prerenal azotemia or can occur secondary to administered nephrotoxins, such as certain antibiotics and radiocontrast agents. Agents associated with nephrotoxicity include aminoglycosides, antifungal, antiviral, and radiocontrast agents, and nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory pain medications. Although prerenal azotemia and acute tubular necrosis are the most frequent causes of acute renal failure, the differential diagnosis should include acute interstitial nephritis, obstructive nephropathy, and glomerulopathies such as hemolytic uremic syndrome, thrombotic thrombocytopenia purpura, the newly described IgA nephropathy, and, in certain populations, HIV nephropathy.
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PMID:The spectrum of kidney diseases in patients with human immunodeficiency virus infection. 792 95

Macroscopic haematuria is common in IgA nephropathy, but its significance and influence on prognosis remains uncertain. We compared the clinical and pathological features of 11 adult patients with primary IgA nephropathy who had had a renal biopsy during or shortly after a bleeding episode. Six patients developed transient acute renal failure (ARF) (group 1) and five did not (group 2). Patients of group 1 had a higher percentage of tubular red-blood-cell (RBC) casts (P < 0.05) and of glomerular crescents (P < 0.001). However, crescents were focal and involved less than 50% of glomeruli. Acute tubular necrosis was only present in patients of group 1, and ARF was attributed to the acute tubular changes rather than to the glomerular lesions. Despite a prolonged duration of ARF (mean: 38 days), further outcome did not differ in patients of both groups. We suggest that acute tubular damage and/or tubular obstruction by RBC casts should be considered in any patient who develops ARF soon after a haematuric episode.
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PMID:Acute reversible renal failure with macroscopic haematuria in IgA nephropathy. 838 83

Renal biopsies of 43 patients who developed renal complications after treatment with antibiotics were studied. The treatment with antibiotics in these cases was used for many different reasons such as: bronchitis, bronchopneumonia, cystitis, tonsillitis, sepsis, peritonitis, gangrene of the foot and tuberculosis. The renal function of these patients, before the treatment with antibiotics was normal. The biopsies were studied by light, electron and immunofluorescence microscopy. In 43 cases treated with antibiotics renal changes were shown. Three types of morphologic changes were found: acute tubular necrosis (ATN) (13 cases), acute tubulo-interstitial diseases (ATID) (21 cases), focal glomerulonephritis with crescents (FGN) (9 cases). The renal pathologic changes were most commonly seen in patients treated with 2 groups of antibiotics: aminoglycosides (21 cases) and antibiotics of the penicillin group (15 cases). The most characteristic feature of aminoglycosides is their direct toxic effect leading to ATN. Antibiotics of the penicillin type more commonly caused an allergic reaction leading to ATID (secondary to cellular mechanisms) or FGN (secondary to a predominantly humoral mechanism). Renal changes in the use of other antibiotics were much less manifest and were usually due to a hypersensitivity reaction. Cephalosporins, if used in combination with other antibiotics can increase their nephrotoxicity.
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PMID:Antibiotic associated nephropathy. 870 64

Renal complications of HIV infection are clinically and morphologically diverse. These may affect the glomerular, tubulointerstitial, and vascular compartments. Tubulointerstitial injury predominates in most autopsy-based studies, whereas glomerular disease is most frequently identified in biopsy-based studies. The most common glomerular lesion is HIV-associated focal segmental glomerulosclerosis and related mesangiopathies (collectively termed HIV-associated nephropathy). Increasingly, a variety of immune complex-mediated glomerular diseases such as membranoproliferative glomerulonephritis, IgA nephropathy and lupus-like nephritis, as well as hemolytic uremic syndrome/thrombotic thrombocytopenic purpura have been reported. The spectrum of tubulointerstitial lesions includes acute tubular necrosis, interstitial nephritis, diffuse infiltrative lymphocytosis syndrome, renal infection, and neoplasms including lymphoma and Kaposi's sarcoma. The pathological features of these conditions are reviewed with emphasis on clinical-pathological correlations and pathogenesis.
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PMID:Renal pathology of human immunodeficiency virus infection. 969 53

Immunoglobulin A (IgA) nephropathy, the most common cause of glomerulonephritis worldwide, is usually idiopathic in origin and renal limited. Secondary IgA nephropathy has been associated with systemic disease, including such gastrointestinal tract disturbances as celiac sprue and inflammatory bowel disease. We describe gross hematuria and reversible acute renal failure from IgA nephropathy in a patient with cephalosporin-induced Clostridium difficile colitis. In addition to mesangial IgA and C3 deposition, renal histological examination showed glomerular bleeding, intratubular red blood cell casts, and acute tubular necrosis. To the best of our knowledge, this is the first report of an association between IgA nephropathy and C difficile colitis.
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PMID:Association of IgA nephropathy with Clostridium difficile colitis. 1051 70

The present report addresses the status of the renal dopaminergic system activity in patients afflicted with different renal disorders and in the remnant kidney of uninephrectomized (UNX) rats, based on the urinary excretion of L-DOPA, dopamine and amine metabolites. In renal transplant recipients with good recovery of graft function (group 1, n=11), the daily urinary excretion of DOPAC, but not that of HVA, was found to increase progressively throughout the first 12 days post-transplantation from 698+/-57 nmol in the first day to 3498+/-414 nmol on day 9, and then remained constant until day 12. This resulted in a 6-fold increase in the urinary DOPAC/dopamine ratios. In renal transplant recipients with acute tubular necrosis (group 2, n=8), the urinary levels of dopamine, DOPAC and HVA were approximately 30% of those in group 1. In a group of 28 patients with chronic renal parenchymal disorders, the daily urinary excretion of L-DOPA, free dopamine and dopamine metabolites (DOPAC and HVA) correlated positively with the degree of deterioration of renal function (P<0.01). However, the U(Dopamine/(L)-DOPA) and U(DOPAC/Dopamine) ratios in patients with chronic renal insufficiency were found to be similar to those observed in patients with normal renal function. In 14 IgA nephropathy (IgA-N) patients with near normal renal function, the changes in 24 h mean blood pressure when going from 20 to 350 mmol/day sodium intake correlated negatively with the daily urinary excretion of dopamine (r(2)=0.597, P<0.01). The urinary excretion of L-DOPA and dopamine in IgA-N patients with salt-sensitive (SS) blood pressure was lower than in salt-resistant (SR) patients (P<0.05), irrespective of their daily sodium intake. However, the rise in urinary dopamine output during salt loading (from 20 to 350 mmol/day) was greater (P<0.05) in IgA-N SS patients (21.2+/-2.5% increase) than in SR patients (6.3+/-1.4% increase). Fifteen days after the surgery, uninephrectomy (UNX) in the rat was accompanied by an enhanced (P<0.05) urinary excretion of dopamine (36+/-3 vs 26+/-2), DOPAC (124+/-11 vs 69+/-6) and HVA (611+/-42 vs 354+/-7) (nmol/g kidney/kg body weight). This was accompanied by an increase in V(max) values for renal aromatic L-amino acid decarboxylase in the remnant kidney of UNX rats (P<0.05). Sch 23390, a D1 dopamine receptor antagonist, produced a marked reduction in the urinary excretion of sodium in UNX rats, whereas in sham-operated rats the decrease in urinary sodium did not attain a significant difference. It is concluded that the study of the renal dopaminergic system in patients afflicted with renal parenchymal disorders should address parameters other than free urinary dopamine, namely the urinary excretion of L-DOPA and dopamine metabolites (DOPAC and HVA). It is also suggested that in SS hypertension of chronic renal parenchymal diseases, renal dopamine produced in the residual tubular units may be enhanced during a sodium challenge, thus behaving appropriately as a compensatory natriuretic hormone.
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PMID:Renal dopaminergic mechanisms in renal parenchymal diseases and hypertension. 1136 22

We describe three patients with acute renal failure after the onset of gross haematuria. In all patients a presumptive diagnosis of rapidly progressive glomerulonephritis was made and immunosuppressive therapy initiated. A renal biopsy was performed in two patients, which showed evidence of IgA nephropathy. Extracapillary proliferation was seen in a few glomeruli. The most notable abnormality was acute tubular necrosis with intraluminal erythrocytes and cell debris. In the third patient, who was known to have longstanding glomerular haematuria, acute tubular necrosis was considered likely after review of the urinary sediment. Despite the fact that immunosuppressive therapy was stopped, renal function rapidly returned to normal in all these patients. We feel that our patients and additional literature data demonstrate that in patients with glomerular disease a reversible acute renal failure can occur that is caused by acute tubular necrosis mediated by haematuria. Recognition of this entity will prevent unnecessary long-term immunosuppressive therapy.
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PMID:Acute renal failure in patients with glomerular diseases: a consequence of tubular cell damage caused by haematuria? 1285 25


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