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Query: UMLS:C0022672 (acute tubular necrosis)
2,175 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

The occurrence of rhabdomyolysis and acute renal failure associated with cytomegaloviral infection is rare. A 27-year-old housewife was admitted to our hospital with complaints of thirst, muscle weakness, abdominal pain and oliguria. There was no past history of diabetes, drinking, fever or drug habituation and a negative family history. Laboratory tests revealed myoglobinuria, hyper-pancreatic type amylaseuria, hyperglycemia, azotemia and highly increased creatine phosphokinase in the plasma. She was treated with hemodialysis and insulin therapy. Serological studies showed a 4-fold increase in cytomegalovirus antibody titers 4 weeks after admission. Muscle biopsy specimens showed hyaline degeneration and infiltration of T cell lymphocytes in the muscle. Renal biopsy specimens showed acute tubular necrosis and some myoglobin casts. No cytomegalovirus antigen was found in renal specimens by immunofluorescence study. From these results, it was determined that a systemic cytomegalovirus infection triggered pancreatitis which caused diabetic ketoacidosis, rhabdomyolysis and acute renal failure.
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PMID:Cytomegalovirus infection associated with acute pancreatitis, rhabdomyolysis and renal failure. 131 48

Acute renal failure (ARF) is a serious complication in clients who have undergone bone marrow transplantation (BMT). The majority of cases develop as a result of intrarenal damage. Renal ischemia or nephrotoxic drugs, free hemoglobin, and free myoglobin contribute to acute tubular necrosis (ATN), which is the most likely cause of ARF in BMT clients. Nursing care of hospitalized BMT clients is directed toward the prevention of ARF by identifying clients who are at risk, the early diagnosis of renal impairment, and the administration of comprehensive treatment. Nurses play a vital role in the early diagnosis of renal impairment by assessing the client's fluid status, serum and urine electrolyte levels, and daily weights. The nursing role in managing clients with ARF includes preventing drug nephrotoxicity, maintaining fluid and electrolyte balance, preventing infection, and providing emotional support.
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PMID:Acute renal failure in bone marrow transplantation. 143 67

There have been recent reports of rhabdomyolysis associated with cocaine abuse. The pathologic findings from these cases have not been described. Pathologic abnormalities in two fatalities with cocaine-associated rhabdomyolysis, including one with hyperpyrexia, acute renal failure, and disseminated intravascular coagulation, are discussed in detail. Skeletal muscle in both cases showed necrosis without evidence of vasculitis, polarizable foreign crystals, or other specific lesions. The individual with renal failure showed acute tubular necrosis with granular myoglobin casts in tubules. The mechanism of cocaine-associated rhabdomyolysis is unclear, but potentially includes ischemia due to vasoconstriction, direct toxicity, hyperpyrexia, and increased muscle activity from agitation or seizure. Adulterants may also play a role. In unexplained cases of rhabdomyolysis, toxicologic evidence of cocaine should be sought. In those cases of rhabdomyolysis associated with acute renal failure, the presence of cocaine in blood may be prolonged because of impaired renal clearance.
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PMID:Rhabdomyolysis associated with cocaine abuse. 174 98

In the past, hemlock poisoning was only known for its neurotoxic effects; quite recently non-neurological features, consisting of rhabdomyolysis and acute renal failure, have been also described. Here we report our experience with these clinical findings, which we frequently observe in accidental hemlock poisoning. Between 1972 and 1990 we studied 18 patients: 17 of them were poisoned by conline (an alkaloid of Conium maculatim) in Apulia (Italy), and one by cicutoxin (the active principle of water hemlock) in New Mexico (USA). In the non-rapidly-fatal cases we tested myoglobinuria, serum muscle enzymes, and renal function. In the patients with acute renal failure we performed microscopical examination of kidney specimens; immunohistochemistry was carried out to identify myoglobin and actin in tubules. Coniine was detected in urine, serum, or tissues. Neurological features were present in all of our cases: coniine had a curare-like effect on the neuromuscular junction, whereas cicutoxin was convulsant on the central nervous system. In addition rhabdomyolysis was noted in the 17 subjects poisoned by coniine. Acute renal failure was observed in five patients; it was confirmed by histological evidence of tubular necrosis with intratubular deposition of myoglobin and actin released by rhabdomyolysis. Our cases seem to be the first with histopathologically proven acute tubular necrosis in coniine intoxication. In conclusion, in hemlock poisoning neurotoxic manifestations may be accompanied by rhabdomyolysis and acute tubular necrosis; increased awareness of these clinical features is recommended in order to improve the diagnostic and therapeutic procedure.
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PMID:Clinical spectrum of accidental hemlock poisoning: neurotoxic manifestations, rhabdomyolysis and acute tubular necrosis. 179 93

Rhabdomyolysis-induced acute renal failure is rare in a child. In this paper, we describe a young girl with this condition who unfortunately succumbed to adult respiratory distress syndrome. Renal biopsy confirmed the presence of tubular myoglobin casts and acute tubular necrosis but no cause for the rhabdomyolysis could be documented.
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PMID:Rhabdomyolysis-induced acute renal failure in a child: a case report. 225 94

Acute renal failure is divided into its classic parts: prerenal azotemia, postrenal azotemia (obstruction), and renal azotemia (including acute tubular necrosis). The division of acute tubular necrosis into the ischemic and toxic varieties is supplemented by an analysis of toxic varieties into those caused by antibiotics, radiologic contrast agents, chemotherapeutic-immunosuppressive agents, heavy metals, organic solvents, etc. Acute tubular necrosis caused by hemoglobin and myoglobin is described in detail. The importance of urinalysis and the urinary indices in distinguishing prerenal azotemia from acute tubular necrosis is stressed. Finally, current prognosis and treatment are reviewed.
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PMID:Acute renal failure. 333 29

Rhabdomyolysis leading to acute renal failure necessitating hemodialysis is described in three chronic alcoholics. In each case an acute medical or surgical event, but not alcoholic intoxication, was implicated. Renal biopsies demonstrated acute tubular necrosis with intraluminal deposits consisting of Tamm-Horsfall protein and myoglobin. After recovery all three patients were demonstrated to have proximal muscle weakness with similar electromyographic abnormalities but nerve-conduction was impaired in only two. Muscle biopsies showed mixed, but predominantly type II fiber atrophy and reduced muscle phosphorylase levels. In the one patient tested the lactate response to forearm muscle ischemia was abnormal. It is postulated that chronic alcoholics may be predisposed to rhabdomyolysis and acute renal failure following acute medical and surgical stress as well as acute alcohol abuse. The muscle damage in these patients may be due to impaired intra cellular glycogen metabolism.
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PMID:Rhabdomyolysis and acute renal failure in chronic alcoholics with myopathy, unrelated to acute alcohol ingestion. 673 97

We report the clinical and histological findings in patients with acute renal failure caused by the ingestion of wildfowl who had eaten hemlock buds. Neurotoxic effects were accompanied by rhabdomyolysis, myoglobinuria, and acute tubular necrosis. Histological studies showed diffuse degeneration of the tubular epithelium. Immunohistological studies demonstrated the presence of myoglobin and actin in renal tubular cells.
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PMID:Acute renal failure due to tubular necrosis caused by wildfowl-mediated hemlock poisoning. 829 Jul 14

A new laboratory animal model for studying the pathologic mechanisms of myoglobinuria in mice after envenomation with Pseudechis australis snake venom or its myotoxin has been established. The experimental mice (Swiss albino) had myoglobinuria 60 min after administration of the venom, as indicated by red or dark-brown urine. Light microscopic studies revealed myonecrosis of the locally injected soleus muscle 30 min after exposure to the myotoxin, followed by regeneration in 7 to 10 days. Electron microscopic studies of the soleus muscle revealed fragmentation and dissolution of the Z disk, followed by degeneration of the sarcomere. Light microscopy of the kidneys revealed numerous pigmented casts filling the lumen of the tubules; some tubules had features of acute tubular necrosis. Immunohistochemical localization of myoglobin by the immunoperoxidase method confirmed myoglobin casts in the renal tubules. Electron microscopy of the kidneys also revealed intratubular casts composed of markedly electron-dense material filling the lumen. These results indicate that rhabdomyolysis caused by the venom or toxin is followed by myoglobinuria, with renal manifestations in the form of myoglobin cast nephropathy and tubulopathy. This mouse model of experimental snake venom-induced myoglobinuria is an ideal model for investigating the entire sequence of myoglobinuria and related cast nephropathy.
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PMID:Establishment of an animal model for myoglobinuria by use of a myotoxin from Pseudechis australis (king brown snake) venom in mice. 887 89

Human victims of multiple bee or wasp stings have been reported and develop severe clinical signs and symptoms. Acute renal failure (ARF), usually due to acute tubular necrosis (ATN) was a frequent complication. The pathogenetic mechanisms of ATN occurring in these accidents are still unclear. In the present study, female Wistar rats weighing 150-200 g were injected intravenously with Africanized bee venom at a dose of 0.4 microL/100 g body weight, and the kidney was observed under light and transmission electron microscopy and in immunohistochemical studies. The animals were divided into two groups: an Early group studied 3 to 8 hours after inoculation, and a Late group studied 24 to 30 hours after inoculation. The animals showed ATN mainly in the cortex and outer medulla with cast formation. After 24 hours, frequent mitotic figures were found in the tubular epithelium. Immunohistochemical studies revealed the presence of myoglobin and muscle actin in the tubular casts. Under electron microscopy, proximal tubule segments showed increasing intracytoplasmic vacuoles and attenuation of the brush border and of the basolateral infolding. This segment and the thick ascending limb of Henle's loop showed hydropic degeneration. Dead cells with apoptosis or necrosis due to cellular disintegration resulted in tubular basement membrane denudation. In the Late group, figures of intracytoplasmic myelin could be observed, some of them containing mitochondrial fragments. These changes are likely to be due to interactive effects of venom components, mainly mellitin and enzymes such as phospholipases, both acting on biological membranes. The ATN found was probably due to multiple causes, mainly a direct action of the venom on tubular cells, myoglobinuria, and perhaps ischemic mechanisms.
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PMID:Acute renal failure in experimental envenomation with Africanized bee venom. 950 59


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