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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 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.
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PMID:[A case of acute potassium bromate intoxication]. 222 63

A case of acute renal failure associated with captopril administration is reported. A woman, age 57, with a two-year history of hypertension presented with a generalized maculopapular rash preceded by pruritus after three weeks of captopril therapy. Her serum creatinine level on admission was 11.0 mg/dl. Renal biopsy was compatible with acute tubular necrosis without evidence of interstitial nephritis. A skin biopsy did not show any evidence of vasculitis. Captopril was discontinued, and her renal failure reversed over the course of nine days. A year later, the patient has good blood pressure control with stable renal function. Captopril has been associated with renal failure in patients with preexisting renovascular hypertension, and with acute interstitial nephritis in one case. The presentation of this case was similar to the latter case, but the renal biopsy did not show any evidence of acute interstitial nephritis.
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PMID:Acute renal failure, skin rash, and eosinophilia associated with captopril therapy. 622 49

A 24-year-old woman with a history of penicillin allergy developed reversible acute renal failure after receiving cephalexin for 4 days. The patient experienced nausea, vomiting, diarrhea, pruritus, cough, and an elevated creatinine level of 2.2 mg/dl. The patient's creatinine level continued to rise, peaking at 5.3 mg/dl on hospital day 3. Nephrotoxic acute tubular necrosis was confirmed by electron microscopy. Within 1 month of discharge from the hospital, the patient's creatinine level decreased to 0.6 mg/dl. Although the renal injury most commonly associated with the cephalosporin class of antibiotics is allergic interstitial nephritis, currently available cephalosporins infrequently can cause direct tubular toxicity.
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PMID:Cephalexin-induced acute tubular necrosis. 1522 73