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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 July 1998 to July 1999, 45 cases of acute renal failure were treated at Bir Hospital, Kathmandu. Out of which 24 were male and 21 were female. Age ranged from 11 months to 84 years with mean age being 35 years and 9 cases were below 10 years. Four cases with pre-renal azotaemia and twenty five cases of
acute tubular necrosis
(
ATN
) accounted for 64% of all cases. These were due to gastroenteritis 10, sepsis 6, post surgical 1, trauma 1 and obstretical complications 5. Multiple hornet stings were responsible for acute renal failure in 3 cases, acute urate nephropathy in 1 case and miscellaneous causes in 2 cases. Glomerulonephritis / vasculitis accounted for 17.7%, acute interstitial nephritis 4.4%, haemotytic uraemic syndrome (HUS) 6.6%, and post renal azotaemia in 6.6% of all cases. Mean serum creatinine was 8 mg/dl, mean blood urea 190 mg/dl. Eight cases were treated only conservatively, eighteen received haemodialysis, fourteen received peritoneal dialysis, three received both and two refused for dialysis. Average duration of hospital stay was 13.6 days. Out of the forty-five cases twenty-nine recovered normal renal function, ten expired, two recovered partially, two progressed to
chronic renal failure
and two left against medical advice. Overall mortality was 22.2%. Common causes of acute renal failure in our setting were gastroenteritis (22%) and sepsis (20%). HUS was exclusively seen in children following bacillary dysentery. Multiple hornet stings is an important cause of acute renal failure in our country.
...
PMID:Acute renal failure in a tertiary care center in Nepal. 1655 67
Renal dysfunction and injury secondary to medications are common, and can present as subtle injury and/or overt renal failure. Some drugs perturb renal perfusion and induce loss of filtration capacity. Others directly injure vascular, tubular, glomerular and interstitial cells, such that specific loss of renal function leads to clinical findings, including microangiopathy, Fanconi syndrome,
acute tubular necrosis
, acute interstitial nephritis, nephrotic syndrome, obstruction, nephrogenic diabetes insipidus, electrolyte abnormalities and
chronic renal failure
. Understanding the mechanisms involved, and recognizing the clinical presentations of renal dysfunction arising from use of commonly prescribed medications, are important if injury is to be detected early and prevented. This article reviews the clinical features and basic processes underlying renal injury related to the use of common drugs.
...
PMID:Drug-associated renal dysfunction and injury. 1693 99
Acute renal failure is a known complication during hemolytic crisis in paroxysmal nocturnal hemoglobinuria (PNH). However,
chronic renal failure
is rare despite the well-known spectacular hemosiderosis of the kidneys due to chronic hemolysis. Here, we report about a 74-year-old man with PNH who developed acute on
chronic renal failure
after an episode of intercurrent urinary tract infection and subsequent hemolytic crisis. Mild chronic hemolysis, well-documented over the past decade, had long been considered the cause of a constantly declining glomerular filtration rate. Accordingly, magnetic resonance imaging during admission demonstrated marked siderosis of both kidneys, supporting the hypothesis that
chronic renal failure
(
CRF
) was likewise related to PNH. However, a renal biopsy revealed
acute tubular necrosis
and distinct renal siderosis, as expected. Additionally, tubulointerstitial injury and global glomerular sclerosis, best classified as arterionephrosclerosis, were present. In retrospect, these findings were explained by a 15-year history of hypertension and a 4-year medication with cyclosporine. Careful diagnostic workup including a renal biopsy is mandatory, given a misleadingly suggestive correlation between chronic hemolysis and
CRF
.
Chronic renal failure
in PNH is a diagnosis of exclusion, even if radiologic evidence of heavy siderosis draws off the physician's attention.
...
PMID:A blue kidney--chronic renal failure as a consequence of siderosis in paroxysmal nocturnal hemoglobinuria? 1699 44
Hematopoietic cell transplantation-associated renal injury may be related to a combination of factors including chemotherapy, radiation, infection, immunosuppressive agents, ischemia, and graft-versus-host disease. Renal biopsy specimens from hematopoietic cell transplant recipients at two institutions (Stanford University Medical Center and Oregon Health & Science University) were reviewed in correlation with clinical data. Fifteen cases were identified (post hematopoietic cell transplant time 0.7-14.5 years), including six with autologous hematopoietic cell transplant. Indications for renal biopsy included proteinuria (n=13; nephrotic range in 8), increased serum creatinine (n=10), or both (n=6). Many patients had multiple pathologic findings on renal biopsy. Membranous glomerulonephritis was the most common diagnosis (n=7), including two patients with autologous hematopoietic cell transplant and five with evidence of chronic graft-versus-host disease elsewhere. Four membranous glomerulonephritis patients achieved sustained remission with rituximab therapy. Other glomerular pathology included focal segmental glomerulosclerosis (n=1) and minimal change disease (n=1). Evidence of thrombotic microangiopathy was common (in isolation or combined with other pathology), as was
acute tubular necrosis
and tubulointerstitial nephritis. Of 14 patients with follow-up (2-64 months, mean 19 months), 6 had chronic renal insufficiency (serum creatinine >1.5 mg/dl), 2 had
end stage renal disease
, and 6 had essentially normal renal function. Our retrospective study shows that renal dysfunction in hematopoietic cell transplant recipients is often multifactorial, and biopsy may reveal treatable causes. Membranous glomerulonephritis is seen in autologous and allogeneic hematopoietic cell transplant recipients, and may respond to anti-B-cell therapy, which has implications regarding pathogenesis and relationship to graft-versus-host disease.
...
PMID:Renal pathology in hematopoietic cell transplantation recipients. 1822 56
Insulinlike growth factor I (IGF-I), IGF-I receptors, and IGF-binding proteins are expressed in different segments of the nephron in a relationship that suggests autocrine, paracrine, and endocrine modes of action. IGF-I contributes to compensatory nephron growth in a variety of experimental renal diseases with loss in functioning nephron number, and to tissue repair after ischemic
acute tubular necrosis
. IGF-I causes arteriolar dilatation in the kidney and increases the glomerular filtration rate in experimental animals, in normal subjects, as well as in patients with
chronic renal failure
, and this effect of the peptide is probably mediated by nitric oxide. IGF-I raises proximal tubular phosphate reabsorption and may increase sodium absorption in distal tubules. In the nephrotic syndrome, IGF-I- and IGF-binding protein complexes are excreted in urine and IGFBP-3 protease activity is increased, causing complex abnormalities in the IGF-system.
...
PMID:Insulinlike growth factor I and the kidney. 1840 31
Renal transplantation has emerged as the most cost-effective and patient-supportive way to treat
chronic renal failure
, with excellent graft survival rates thanks to improved surgical techniques and rejection management. Its success has placed a heavy burden on imaging, especially ultrasound, which is used in the selection of live donors and in monitoring each stage of the postoperative care of the recipient. Ultrasound is particularly useful for detecting vascular complications such as early occlusions and arterial stenosis. It can detect and monitor perinephric complications and transplant hydronephrosis, all clinically significant complications that affect management. Ultrasound can detect many of the late acquired diseases, especially intercurrent tumors that require surgery. It is the best method to guide interventions such as aspiration of collections and insertion of nephrostomy drains. It can also detect postbiopsy arteriovenous shunts and the end-stage kidney of chronic rejection. These, however, are of no great clinical significance, and the findings rarely affect clinical decisions. Ultrasound fails to discriminate between the important causes of early graft dysfunction, especially
acute tubular necrosis
, rejection, and drug toxicity: these important distinctions still rely on biopsy. There is hope that some of the newer ultrasound methods, especially the functional data from microbubble contrast agent dynamics, might supply useful information for their detection and differentiation.
...
PMID:Renal transplants: what ultrasound can and cannot do. 1852 43
Current clinical requirements mandate the existence of a renal diuretic protocol, which is fast and easy, applicable in all ages and for all indications, convenient for both the patient and the technologist, and provides diagnostic as well as prognostic information. Seventeen years ago a 25-minute protocol, after oral hydration, with no bladder catheterization, and simultaneous injection of mercapto-acetyl-triglycine (MAG(3)) and furosemide (MAG(3)-F(0)), was initiated. It initially was used for the evaluation of drainage and emerged as a protocol to also evaluate the renal parenchyma. Results of this protocol have been published individually, per clinical application. MAG(3)-F(0) was instrumental in the evaluation and prognosis of congenital disorders. For obstruction, in the newborn, an increasing renogram mandates intervention, whereas a downsloping one predicts spontaneous resolution. In children or adults, preoperatively or postoperatively, when the cortex was visualized and drained normally, there was no obstruction, even if urine was retained within a dilated collecting system or an extrarenal pelvis. For diseases of the renal parenchyma, the protocol enabled the diagnosis of acute pyelonephritis (APN) revealing the "regional parenchymal dysfunction," diagnostic of APN. Diffuse parenchymal diseases were characterized by increased residual cortical activity (RCA), and their progression was manifested as a deterioration of RCA.
End-stage renal disease
was characterized by lack of accumulation and retention. Trauma and leaks were identified with specific patterns. In renovascular hypertension (RVH), an increase in RCA after angiotension-converting enzyme inhibitors is diagnostic of RVH and prognostic of the beneficial effect of angioplasty on hypertension. In renal colic, stratification was possible into (1) complete or severe obstruction requiring immediate intervention, (2) mild obstruction allowing waiting, (3) spontaneous decompression (stunned kidney), and (4) no recent obstruction. In transplants, it enabled differentiation of
acute tubular necrosis
, acute or chronic rejection and nephrotoxicity, and identified infarcts, RVH, leaks and obstruction. Finally, this method allows for a quick semiquantification of renal function. The clinical usefulness of the MAG(3)-F(0) protocol in most congenital or acquired renal problems is proven through long-term clinical experience and has resulted in a substantial utilization of the test at our Center.
...
PMID:A renal protocol for all ages and all indications: mercapto-acetyl-triglycine (MAG3) with simultaneous injection of furosemide (MAG3-F0): a 17-year experience. 1934 36
A simultaneous pancreas-kidney transplantation (SPKT) is the best treatment option for type I diabetic patients with advanced
chronic renal failure
. Infectious complications affect 7-50% of the patients receiving this procedure. We conducted a nested case-control study to assess the risk factors for surgical site infection (SSI) in patients receiving SPKT at our centre between 2000 and 2006. Of the 119 evaluated transplant recipients, 55 (46.2%) developed SSIs and the 30 day mortality was 11.8%. Gram-negative organisms were the predominant organisms isolated from SSIs. After multivariate logistic regression, the variables independently associated with SSI were:
acute tubular necrosis
, post-transplant fistula and graft rejection. This study demonstrated a high incidence of SSI in this patient cohort and variables related to the surgical procedure were closely associated with the development of SSI.
...
PMID:Incidence and risk factors for surgical site infection after simultaneous pancreas-kidney transplantation. 1959 36
Indoleamine 2,3-dioxygenase (IDO), an enzyme expressed in many cell types, catalyses degradation of tryptophan (Trp) to kynurenine (Kyn) and may exert immunosuppressive functions, mediated mainly by kynurenines. Therefore, increased Kyn concentrations would be expected to protect allografts from rejection. We conducted this study to examine whether Kyn has predictive value for kidney graft outcome.
End-stage renal disease
patients (n = 210) demonstrated an increased Kyn/Trp ratio compared with healthy controls (n = 30). Both Kyn and Trp levels were significantly higher in patients who subsequently developed acute rejection than in patients who did not (p < 0.001 and p < 0.001, respectively). Furthermore, pretransplantation Kyn and Trp plasma concentrations were significantly different in patients who went on to develop acute rejection (high values) or
acute tubular necrosis
(low values) (p = 0.007 and p = 0.021, respectively). After transplantation Kyn levels decreased. Approximately 3 days before biopsy-confirmed rejection, Kyn was significantly increased in patients with rejection compared with those without rejection (p < 0.001). Contrary to expectation, high Kyn plasma levels before transplantation were not predictive of low rejection risk. Although informative in overall terms, at the present stage, Kyn levels do not allow the concise risk differentiation of individual patients.
...
PMID:Increased pretransplantation plasma kynurenine levels do not protect from but predict acute kidney allograft rejection. 2073 69
The authors report a 57-year-old male patient who presented with diarrhea, darkened urine, jaundice and increased blood urea nitrogen and creatinine. Initially, his symptoms, which included hemolytic anemia, acute renal failure and low platelet count, seemed to be caused by renal injuries associated with thrombotic microangiopathy, hemolytic-uremic syndrome in particular. However, a renal biopsy indicated
acute tubular necrosis
and hemosiderin deposition. A CD55 and CD59 assay, Ham test and sugar-water hemolysis test confirmed the diagnosis of paroxysmal nocturnal hemoglobinuria. After fluid infusion, diuresis and urine alkalization, the patient gradually regained nearly normal renal function. This case illustrates that paroxysmal nocturnal hemoglobinuria may present with acute kidney injury when hemolysis, diarrhea and hemosiderin deposits in the renal tubular epithelial cells and renal tubules are present. Early diagnosis and treatment is crucial to prevent disease progression and irreversible
chronic renal failure
.
...
PMID:Reversible acute kidney injury caused by paroxysmal nocturnal hemoglobinuria. 2094 98
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