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)

We report a 66-year-old man with minimal change nephrotic syndrome (MCNS) that was associated with reversible acute renal failure (ARF) caused by acute tubular necrosis (ATN). He had a subacute onset of proteinuria and progressive azotemia. Hemodialysis (HD) was required to improved azotemia. Renal biopsy revealed minor glomerular abnormalities associated with ATN. While continuing HD, steroid therapy was started, which subsequently allowed the patient to be weaned from HD and relieved from NS. In this patient, histological examination and clinical course suggested that ATN was probably induced by hypovolemia due to MCNS.
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PMID:Acute renal failure associated with minimal change nephrotic syndrome in an elderly adult. 930 42

We report a unique case of tubular polyclonal immunoglobulin G (IgG) deposition disease (PIDD) superimposed on diabetic nephropathy in an 84-year-old man presenting with subacute renal failure and proteinuria. The deposits were located exclusively between the tubular epithelial cells and the tubular basement membranes (TBMs) and stained intensely with antisera to IgG heavy chain and both kappa and lambda light chains. Electron microscopy revealed large predominantly extracellular electron-dense deposits with a distinctive curvilinear substructure. The associated light microscopic findings of tubular simplification with features of acute tubular necrosis implicate this tubulopathy as the cause of the acute renal failure. This appears to represent a unique entity that does not fit into any previously described category of renal tubular immune complex or immunoglobulin deposition disease.
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PMID:Polyclonal immunoglobulin G deposition disease: a unique entity. 970 22

HIV-associated nephropathy is manifested by heavy proteinuria and renal insufficiency and characterized pathologically by the collapsing variant of focal and segmental glomerulosclerosis with acute tubular necrosis and mild interstitial inflammation. Untreated, it may result in end-stage renal disease in as little as 4 months. It may present in patients with any manifestation of HIV infection, and affects predominantly black individuals. Insights into pathogenesis have come from a transgenic mouse model, renal cell cultures, and from study of human biopsy material. Although the pathogenesis is not completely understood, current considerations revolve around the role of HIV or protein in renal epithelium and the effects of cytokines, including transforming growth factor-beta and basic fibroblast growth factor, on renal structures. Therapy with zidovudine, corticosteroids, or angiotensin-converting enzyme inhibitors has met with modest success; to date, protease inhibitors have not been assessed.
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PMID:Distinguished Scientists Lecture Series. HIV-associated nephropathy. 1051 88

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.
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PMID:Renal involvement in multiple myeloma: a 10-year study. 1090 Nov 84

One week after the diagnosis of meningococcal meningitis, an 8-year-old boy presented with acute renal failure and hypocomplementemia. A renal biopsy showed "postinfectious glomerulonephritis" and acute tubular necrosis. Hematuria, proteinuria, and low complement levels persisted, and 2 years later a follow-up renal biopsy revealed dense deposit disease. The apparent progression of postinfectious glomerulonephritis to dense deposit disease as observed in this patient has not been previously described.
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PMID:Apparent progression of acute glomerulonephritis to dense deposit disease. 1101 68

Human immunodeficiency virus-associated nephropathy (HIVAN) is a clinicopathological entity characterised by proteinuria, rapidly developing azotemia and histologically by collapsig variant of focal and segmental glomerulosclerosis with acute tubular necrosis and mild interstitial inflammation. Untreated, it may result in end stage renal disease (ESRD) in as little as four months. The incidence of HIVAN continues to increase and is the single most common cause of chronic renal disease in HIV-1 seropositive patients. It affects predominantly black individuals. Exact pathogenesis is still not clear but a great deal of progress has been made in the recent past by studies on transgenic mouse model, renal cell cultures and from study of human biopsy material. Current considerations revolve around the role of HIV or protein in renal epithelium and the effects of cytokines, including transforming growth factor-beta and basic fibroblast growth factor on renal structures. Different modalities of treatment with corticosteroids, zidovudine or angiotensin converting enzyme inhibitors have been tried with modest success.
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PMID:Human immunodeficiency virus-associated nephropathy. 1183 70

Nephrotic syndrome (NS) is frequent in renal transplant recipients and may be related to a large variety of glomerular lesions. In some of these cases, the transplant biopsy showed no significant glomerular changes and the NS was reversible, but the primary renal disease was not minimal change disease (MCD), suggesting that MCD may develop de novo in renal transplant setting. Knowledge of this entity, however, is limited. Among 67 cases of post-transplant NS encountered in a 12-yr period, five were found to be associated with de novo MCD. A critical review of the literature revealed nine additional cases of de novo MCD. The data from these 14 cases show that patients with de novo MCD had a large variety of primary renal diseases but MCD or focal segmental glomerulosclerosis was not among them. Eight of the 14 transplanted kidneys (60%) were from living related donors, suggesting this as a risk factor. Nephrotic range proteinuria (3-76 g/d) developed immediately or shortly after transplantation (within 4 months for all reported cases, except for one at 24 months). The serum creatinine when NS was first diagnosed was normal or mildly elevated, but acute renal failure occurred in three patients. On biopsy, the glomeruli were normal or, more frequently, displayed mild, focal segmental mesangial sclerosis, hypercellularity, deposition of IgM/C3, or accumulation of mononuclear inflammatory cells in some glomerular capillaries. The tubulointerstitial compartment was normal in cases with normal renal function; displayed mild acute and/or chronic rejection that correlated with a mildly elevated serum creatinine; or showed acute changes including acute rejection, acute tubular necrosis, or acute cyclosporin A toxicity, which accounted for both acute renal failure at presentation and its subsequent reversibility. Under various treatments, including increased steroids, angiotensin converting enzyme inhibitors, calcium channel blockers and angiotensin receptor blockers, sustained remission of NS was achieved in 13 cases, within a year (0.5-12 months) in 10 and later (24, 34 and 98 months, respectively) in three. In the remaining case, the patient died of septic shock 2 months after transplantation. After remission of the NS, the grafts functioned well without or with minimal proteinuria for several years. De novo MCD has characteristic clinical and pathologic features. It represents an important but hitherto underemphasized cause of post-transplant NS, which is potentially reversible and does not adversely affect the renal transplants.
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PMID:De novo minimal change disease associated with reversible post-transplant nephrotic syndrome. A report of five cases and review of literature. 1222 32

Transforming growth factor (TGF)-beta1 is important in fibrogenesis and has been involved in the pathogenesis of chronic allograft nephropathy (CAN). The angiotensinogen (AGT) gene encodes the only glycoprotein known to be a precursor of the vasopressor angiotensin II. Angiotensin II is also a growth factor and a profibrogenic cytokine. It mediates the induction of TGF-beta1. We studied the relationship among the intragraft expression of AGT, TGF-beta1, and CAN in stable renal transplant patients (RTP). We used a competitive quantitative reverse transcriptase-polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR)-ELISA assay to identify intragraft amounts of AGT expression in RTP and correlated it with TGF-beta1 mRNA expression. We studied and performed kidney biopsies on 12 RTP with long-functioning grafts and 6 RTP in the immediate posttransplantation period (7 days) who had acute tubular necrosis as control. Histology was based on Banff working classification criteria. Total RNA was isolated from biopsy specimens. For RT-PCR-ELISA, we created heterologous RNA competitors that coamplified with the same primers as AGT and TGF-beta1. Six of 12 long RTP had proteinuria >1000 mg/24 hr and 6 had proteinuria <1000 mg/24 hr. The differences between Banff grades (P =0.03), AGT, and TGF-beta1 levels by RT-PCR-ELISA were statistically significant between both groups (106.2+/-60.7 vs. 34.1+/-11.9 pg/microg total RNA [P =0.01] and 5954+/-5612 vs. 436+/-517 transcripts/microg total RNA [P =0.01], respectively). The control group showed AGT levels of 25+/-12.2 pg/microg total RNA and TGF-beta1 levels of 228+/-111 transcripts/microg total RNA, significant only for the higher proteinuria group (P=0.01 and P=0.04, respectively). There was a correlation between AGT and TGF-beta1 in both groups (r=0.96, P=0.001). We showed a relationship between mRNA expression of AGT and TGF-beta1 in kidney transplant patients with different grades of CAN and proteinuria.
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PMID:Intragraft messenger RNA expression of angiotensinogen: relationship with transforming growth factor beta-1 and chronic allograft nephropathy in kidney transplant patients. 1235 92

A 15-year-old boy developed nephrotic syndrome and acute renal failure 4 years after allogenic bone marrow transplantation (BMT) for lymphoid crisis of chronic myelocytic leukemia. On admission, he presented with clinical features of chronic GVHD including transient exacerbation of cholestatic liver injury. Renal biopsy showed diffuse proliferative glomerulonephritis with cellular crescents. The patient was treated with methylprednisolone pulse therapy (1 g/day, for 3 days) followed by oral prednisolone. Renal function gradually improved but nephrotic state was persistent. A second renal biopsy showed improvement of acute tubular necrosis and endocapillary proliferation and transformation of crescents into a fibrous form. After tapering of oral prednisolone, cyclophosphamide was started, which resulted in a gradual improvement of proteinuria. Several cases of nephrotic syndrome occurring after BMT have already been reported, but most cases had membranous nephropathy. In our case, renal biopsy revealed diffuse proliferative glomerulonephritis with findings of active cellular immunity, and aggressive treatment resulted in attenuation of these findings. Moreover, chronic GVHD-related liver injury was noted at the time of this episode. Our findings suggest that chronic GVHD may be complicated with diffuse proliferative glomerulonephritis through unknown cellular immune mechanism.
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PMID:Diffuse proliferative glomerulonephritis after bone marrow transplantation. 1235 94

Recurrence of focal segmental glomerulosclerosis (FSGS) in an allograft is a challenging clinical situation because it frequently results in graft loss. We report our experience with early use of plasmapheresis in recurrent FSGS. Of the 18 (33%) children with biopsy-proven FSGS (in their native kidneys) transplanted at our institution, 6 had recurrence (elevated urine protein/creatinine ratios) post transplant and were treated with plasmapheresis. Patients who received treatment within 1 day of the recurrence (4/6) went into remission after 5-13 plasmapheresis treatments, within 5-27 days of starting treatment. Patients who did not respond to plasmapheresis (2/6) were treated 7 and 17 days after onset of proteinuria; 1 of these had acute tubular necrosis and acute rejection leading to graft loss and the other developed acute rejections, ongoing proteinuria, and subsequent graft loss. All 4 patients who went into remission have maintained good graft function, 22-53 months post transplant. In our experience early institution of plasmapheresis for recurrent post-transplant proteinuria in FSGS is effective.
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PMID:Early use of plasmapheresis for recurrent post-transplant FSGS. 1283 97


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