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Query: UMLS:C0022672 (
acute tubular necrosis
)
2,175
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Fifty-three children, ages one day to 15 years, were treated with hemodialysis for acute renal failure between 1968 and 1977. Twenty-three had
acute tubular necrosis
. Nine had ATN associated with catastrophic medical illnesses; all died. Fourteen had ATN following major surgical procedures; ten died. Thirty had
ARF
due to primary nephrologic disorders; 27 survived. Thus it was not the
ARF
per se but the underlying and concomitant disorders which had the major influences on survival. As prognostic indications of survival in patients with postoperative ATN cannot be clearly defined, these patients almost always deserve aggressive management, including dialysis therapy. Patients with ATN associated with severe medical illness often have fatal underlying conditions which cannot be influenced by presently available technologies.
...
PMID:Acute renal failure in infants and children: outcome of 53 patients requiring hemodialysis treatment. 71 76
Five episodes of acute renal failure due to rifampicin (R-ARF) were observed in four patients and the clinical and histological data were compared with the records of 52 episodes reported in the literature. The bulk of data supports the assumption that the by far most frequent renal injury responsible for R-
ARF
is
acute tubular necrosis
produced by a vasomotor mechanism. Nevertheless a few data, above all immunohistological findings, suggest the local presence of allergic process. It may be, that the development of an immunological renal lesion is prevented or blunted by the consequences of vasomotor effects.
...
PMID:Acute renal failure due to rifampicin (R-ARF). 93 13
Ultrasonotomograms of 22 kidneys were obtained in 11 patients with renal-acute renal failure (renal-ARF). The underlying diseases of renal-
ARF
were
acute tubular necrosis
in 8 patients and acute on-set chronic glomerulonephritis in 3 patients. They were treated by hemodialysis in 10 patients and intermittent peritoneal dialysis in 1 patient. Ultrasonic measurement of the size of kidneys revealed that the thickness (anterior-posterior diameter) and the ratio of thickness to length (T/L) were greater in patients with
ARF
than in those with chronic renal failure and normal renal function. The patients with a low value of T/L (under 0.60) had a significantly greater urine volume than those with high a value of T/L (0.60 or more). The sonographic features of renal-
ARF
kidneys were marked increase in parenchymal echogenicity and appearance of hypoechoic swollen renal pyramids with sharpness of the corticomedullary border. In the course of
ARF
, these sonographic changes gradually disappeared when the patients had recovered from
ARF
. However, the prognosis was poor in patients with severer sonographic findings. We believe that repeated ultrasonic examination of the kidneys in patients with renal-
ARF
is useful for not only differential diagnosis of post-renal urinary obstruction but evaluating the course of
ARF
.
...
PMID:[Ultrasonographic study on kidneys in patients with acute renal failure]. 177 Jun 95
Patients with
ARF
and haematological malignancy (excluding myeloma), presenting to a single unit over 10 years were analyzed to see if patients likely to benefit from intensive renal supportive therapy could be identified. 31 episodes of
ARF
were identified in 29 patients (mean age 51 +/- 2.9 yr): 19 were associated with acute leukaemia (13 AML, 6 ALL); 10 with lymphoma.
Acute tubular necrosis
(
ATN
) was identified as the cause of
ARF
in 26 cases, with sepsis (96%) and exposure to nephrotoxic drugs (88%), especially aminoglycosides, being the commonest precipitating factors. Toxic levels of the latter were commonly documented. Patient survival was 45%. Requirement for mechanical ventilation resulted in a universally fatal outcome; age greater than 55 yr and the presence of CNS symptoms or signs were also significantly associated with a poor outcome. Non-
ATN
causes (urate nephropathy or obstruction) carried a better prognosis. However, only 4 patients (14%) lived for more than 6 months following
ARF
. Thus, although a subgroup of patients more likely to benefit from treatment can be identified, the overall prognosis is poor and limited by that of the underlying disease. The potential benefit of avoiding nephrotoxic drugs, especially aminoglycosides, in these patients is highlighted by this study.
...
PMID:Acute renal failure associated with haematological malignancies: a review of 10 years experience. 188 80
We studied the clinical and pathological data for 334 patients age 65 or more who underwent renal biopsy for acute renal failure (
ARF
, n = 55), subacute renal failure (SRF, n = 72), chronic renal failure (CRF, n = 57), proteinuria (n = 137), and hematuria (n = 13). Tissue diagnoses were glomerulopathy (n = 252, 75.4%), acute tubular lesions (n = 18), interstitial nephritis (n = 23), vascular diseases (n = 36, including 14 with cholesterol emboli), and five miscellaneous diagnoses. Of the 55 patients with
ARF
, 23 had a glomerular lesion, 15 had
acute tubular necrosis
, and 8 had acute interstitial nephritis. Of 72 patients with SRF, 49 had a glomerulopathy, 12 had a vascular disorder, and six had acute interstitial nephritis. Hence, patients with
ARF
or SRF exhibited a high potential for reversible lesions. Only 11.3% of patients with CRF had potentially reversible causes. The most common causes of proteinuria were membranous glomerulopathy (34.3%), minimal change disease (14.6%), focal segmental sclerosis (11.7%), and amyloidosis (8.8%). Of the 25 patients with advanced nephrosclerosis, 24 had renal failure, 20 were hypertensive, and 13 had cholesterol emboli. Of 33 patients with diabetes mellitus, 66.7% were found to have lesions not related to diabetes. We conclude that renal biopsy is most useful in older patients with
ARF
or SRF because of potentially reversible renal disease. Old age alone is not a contraindication to performing a renal biopsy.
...
PMID:Renal biopsy in patients 65 years of age or older. An analysis of the results of 334 biopsies. 235 29
High-dose intravenous urography (IVU) was performed 62 times in 59 patients with acute (
ARF
) and chronic (CRF) renal failure. The major diagnostic categories were chronic glomerulonephritis, malignant hypertension,
acute tubular necrosis
(
ATN
), and acute glomerulonephritis. The cause of the renal failure, whether CRF or
ARF
, oliguric or nonoliguric, could not be reliably determined by either the evolving pattern or density of nephrogram, or the size of the kidneys. Although a persistent dense nephrogram favored the diagnosis of
ATN
, the major correlate was a decreasing density of nephrogram as the serum creatinine level increased (P less than 0.005).
...
PMID:Diagnostic role of intravenous urography in acute and chronic renal failure. 378 76
There are very limited data on overall epidemiology of
ARF
. It is crucial to know the incidence, etiology and clinical feature of
ARF
to promote prevention strategies and to implement adequate resources for the management of this entity. During a nine month period, a collaborative prospective protocol with 98 variables was developed to assess all
ARF
episodes encountered in the 13 tertiary-care hospitals in Madrid, Spain (covering 4.2 million people of over 14 years of age).
ARF
was considered when a sudden rise in serum creatinine concentration (SCr) to more than 177 mumol/liter was found in patients with normal renal function, or when the sudden rise (50% or more) was observed in patients with previous mild-to-moderate chronic renal failure (SCr < 264 mumol/liter). Of the 748 cases of
ARF
studied, 665 episodes presented in inhabitants from the Madrid area. This gives an overall incidence of
ARF
of 209 cases per million population (p.m.p.; 95% CJ 195 to 223). The incidence of
acute tubular necrosis
(
ATN
) was 88 cases p.m.p. (95% CI 79 to 97), prerenal
ARF
46 p.m.p (95% CI 40 to 52), acute-onset chronic
ARF
29 p.m.p. (95% CI 24 to 34), and obstructive
ARF
23 p.m.p. (95% CI 19 to 27). The mean age was 63 +/- 17 years. The most frequent causes of
ARF
were
ATN
(45%), prerenal (21%), acute-onset chronic renal failure (12.7%) and obstructive
ARF
(10%). Renal function was normal at admission in 48% of patients who later developed
ARF
. Mortality (45%) was much higher than that of the other patients admitted (5.4%, P < 0.001). This real outcome correlated extremely well with the expected outcome calculated through out the severity index of
ARF
(SI) 0.433 +/- 0.246 (mean +/- SD). In 187 cases, mortality was attributed to underlying disease, thus corrected mortality due to
ARF
was 26.7%. Dialysis was required in 36% of patients, and was associated with a significantly higher SI of
ARF
(0.57 +/- 0.23 vs. 0.35 +/- 0.19, P < 0.001) and mortality (65.9 vs. 33.2%, P < 0.001). Mortality in patients hemodialyzed with biocompatible synthetic membranes (N = 50) was similar to that observed with cellulosic ones (N = 84; 66% vs. 59.5%, NS). Mortality was higher in patients with coma, assisted respiration, hypotension, jaundice (all P < 0.001) and oliguria (P < 0.02). This study gives, for the first time, the incidence of all forms of
ARF
in a developed country.
ARF
is iatrogenically induced at a high rate by modern medicine. Prevention strategies, particularly in the perioperative period, are needed to decrease its impact.
...
PMID:Epidemiology of acute renal failure: a prospective, multicenter, community-based study. Madrid Acute Renal Failure Study Group. 887 55
Previous experimental and human data suggests a detrimental effect on the course of acute renal failure related to exposure of blood to artificial dialysis membranes of poor biocompatibility. We performed a 2.5-year prospective randomized trial to compare the clinical course of acute renal failure (post-operative ischemic
acute tubular necrosis
, ATN) in patients receiving a cadaveric renal transplant requiring supportive hemodialysis in the immediate post-transplant setting. Patients were randomized to either a cuprophane or polymethylmethacrylate (PMMA) conventional hollow fiber dialyzer. All patients received a standard immunosuppressive regimen which included induction therapy with either horse anti-thymocyte gamma globulin (ATGAM) or the murine anti-CD3 monoclonal antibody (OKT3). Of 53 patients randomized, 17 were excluded (2 for intervening biopsy-proven rejection prior to recovery from ATN, 10 for primary graft nonfunction and 5 for other reasons), leaving 36 evaluable cases of uncomplicated ATN, 18 in each group. There was no difference by age, race, gender, cause of ESRD, immunosuppressive regimen, cold or warm ischemia time, use of pre-transplant dialysis, percent oliguria or the incidence of intra-dialytic hypotension between the 2 groups. There was no difference in the mean time to recovery from ATN posttransplant (8.9 days in the cuprophane group vs 9.5 days in the PMMA group, p = NS) or in the average number of hemodialysis treatments required (3.6 in both groups, p = NS). There was also no difference in long term allograft outcome in terms of the nadir serum creatinine, the number of episodes of subsequent acute rejection or in the development of chronic rejection. An intent-to-treat analysis of all 53 originally randomized patients similarly yielded no significant differences. A subsequent, non-randomized study using a membrane of intermediate biocompatibility (Hemophan) also showed no difference in recovery time from ATN. Bioincompatible membranes do not seem to have a significant clinical impact on the course of recovery of this form of acute renal failure. The striking benefits of biocompatibility in the course of
ARF
seen in other human trials may relate more to the non-renal systemic toxic effects of bioincompatibility.
...
PMID:Biocompatible dialysis membranes and acute renal failure: a study in post-operative acute tubular necrosis in cadaveric renal transplant recipients. 898 57
The incidence of
ARF
in pediatric population varies according to the definition of the syndrome. If the diagnosis is based on a decrease of glomerular filtration rate (GFR), possibly accompanied by a decrease of urinary output and the sudden change of renal function indexes, then the number of patients which can be considered affected by
ARF
in hospital practice is high, as it comprises all the cases with functional impairment of renal function. The availability of tables with normal values of serum creatinine for different gender and age and the knowledge of the minimal urine output compatible with the normality allows a precise diagnosis of
ARF
. The differential diagnosis of
ARF
must take into account prerenal, renal and postrenal causes. Prerenal and renal
ARF
may be sometimes difficult to differentiate. Indexes such as sodium fractional excretion, utilizing urinary to plasma ratios of sodium and creatinine, can be helpful: values less than 1 indicate prerenal
ARF
, more than 2 renal
ARF
. The management of
ARF
is dependent on the causes of
ARF
. Prerenal
ARF
is normally treated by measures of volume expansion and/or removal of the underlying cause. Renal
ARF
requires an accurate control of water and electrolyte balance and of nutritional status and the prevention or treatment of numerous complications, which may worsen the course of the syndrome. Indications to dialysis must be evaluated every day and an assessment of nutritional status performed. All the factors which may cause hypercatabolism, such as infections, hemorrhage, low calorie intake, must be recognized and treated. This approach allows a better control of serum urea, potassium, phosphate and acidosis. Nutrition must be implemented and an adequate protein and calorie intake must be obtained, through spontaneous oral route and, whenever required, enteral and parenteral nutrition. In conclusion, patients with mild-degree, mostly of prerenal origin,
ARF
represent a common finding in hospital practice. Identification and prompt treatment of the underlying cause is the best prevention of
acute tubular necrosis
. Patients with
ARF
of renal origin require, in particular, daily nutritional assessment and dietary treatment to delay the onset of dialysis.
...
PMID:[Management of acute renal failure in hospital practice]. 928 Sep 5
Melatonin, the pineal hormone with antioxidative properties was administered to rats with glycerol-induced myoglobinuric acute renal failure (Gly-ARF). This model is characterized by
acute tubular necrosis
mediated by heme-iron oxidative stress. Rats received melatonin (20 mg/kg) concomitant and 3 h after glycerol injection. Gly-
ARF
rats showed at 24 h a 78% reduction in glomerular filtration rate, whereas this decrement was significantly reduced to 35% in the melatonin treated Gly-
ARF
rats. Tubular function evaluated by tubular reabsorption of sodium and lithium was also preserved in melatonin treated rats. The histologic analysis revealed extensive cortical tubular necrosis that was significantly reduced by melatonin treatment. The renal concentration of malondialdehyde (MDA) was increased 6 h after glycerol injection in Gly-
ARF
and this elevation was prevented when melatonin was administered. Renal concentration of reduced glutathione (GSH) was decreased at 6 h in Gly-
ARF
and melatonin did not reverse this decrease. It was concluded that melatonin administration attenuated the renal injury in the glycerol model of acute renal failure and reduced kidney oxidative stress through a GSH-independent mechanism.
...
PMID:Effects of melatonin administration to rats with glycerol-induced acute renal failure. 1247 96
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