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)

Many patients with chronic pancreatitis (CP), even in the absence of intrinsic renal disease, are found to have abnormal urine, with persistent proteinuria, cylindruria, microhematuria and leukocyturia. The kidneys of 12 necropsy cases with CP showed mild to moderate arterial and arteriolar nephrosclerosis and no other significant changes. Renal biopsies were performed in 10 patients with CP without evidence of systemic disease or intrinsic renal disease, but with persistent urinary abnormalities. By light microscopy, mild arterial and arteriolar nephrosclerosis was present in 5 instances. In 1 patient, evidence of the reparative phase of acute tubular necrosis was noted. In 5 biopsies, electron microscopy revealed minimal to mild increase in mesangial matrix. Mild thickening of the glomerular basement membrane (GBM) was found in three instances but there was no clear-cut evidence of diabetic glomerulosclerosis. The presence of subendothelial electron-lucent material in 3 cases suggests the possibility of previous subclinical episodes of intravascular coagulation. The most consistent finding was the presence of lipid material in the cytoplasm of glomerular and tubular cells. The renal lesions associated with CP are mild, nonspecific and nonprogressive. Various pathogenetic factors can be invoked to account for their presence and for the urinary abnormalities found in patients with CP.
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PMID:Renal lesions in chronic pancreatitis. 74 Jan 5

The reversibility of the nematocide 1,2-dibromo-3-chloropropane (DBCP)-induced renal injury was studied in adult male F344 rats. After a single dose of 200 mg DBCP/kg body weight, rats were sacrificed at 1, 3, 6, 9, 14, 28, and 196 days. Twenty-four hours after DBCP treatment, the animals showed signs of acute renal insufficiency, which, based on serum chemistry and urinalysis results, was reversed by the 14th day. Morphologic findings consisted of severe acute tubular necrosis, which was localized to the juxtamedullary cortex. The lesion was recognizable at 24 hrs and fully developed at 3 days post-exposure. The proximal convoluted tubuli were primarily affected, but there were also spotty necroses in distal convoluted tubuli and loops of Henle. Beginning regeneration was evident at 3 days post-exposure. Multiple mitoses, some of them abnormal, were seen. Four weeks after treatment some mitotic activity was still present, but the regeneration of the tubular epithelium was largely completed. There were several dilated, distorted tubuli lined with abnormal epithelial cells with large, hyperchromatic nuclei. Interstitial fibrosis was mild and there was no interstitial inflammation. Twenty-eight weeks post-exposure the nuclear atypia persisted in the tubular epithelium. Glomerular findings were minimal and consisted of focal hyperplasia of the epithelial cells of the parietal layer of Bowman's capsule and shrinking of the glomerular tufts at 4 weeks post-exposure. At 28 weeks post exposure only rare foci of glomerulosclerosis were seen. Epithelial cells of the renal pelvis showed minimal nuclear and cytoplasmic swelling 24 hrs after DBCP exposure. Urothelial atypia was not present. The results indicate that a single dose of DBCP is capable of producing nuclear atypia that persists in the renal tubuli beyond the regenerative phase. Follow-up of patients that have been chronically exposed to DBCP with periodic examination of urinary cytology is suggested.
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PMID:1,2-Dibromo-3-chloropropane (DBCP)-induced nuclear atypia in rat kidney. 273 9

Thirteen patients developed a renal disease after using heroin alone or in combination with other drugs, for a period of 3 to 12 years. Eleven were IV drug addicts, 2 were sniffers. Six patients had acute tubular necrosis, due to rhabdomyolysis in 5 and to prolonged gentamicin therapy for bacterial endocarditis in 1. Five patients manifested a nephrotic syndrome, and renal biopsy showed various types of glomerulonephritis (GN) without glomerular sclerosis. The two last patients had hypertension with intrarenal vascular lesions and HBsAg was present in their serum. Chronic hemodialysis and/or renal transplantation were required in 2 cases with GN; all other patients recovered normal serum creatinine. There was no specific pathologic picture of heroin abuse in this series.
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PMID:[Renal disease associated with heroin abuse]. 321 43

Nephrotic syndrome was the commonest clinical presentation among 2827 consecutive adult Indian patients from whom adequate kidney biopsies were obtained for suspected renal disease. In 83 per cent of cases the nephrotic syndrome was due to minimal change disease, focal segmental glomerulosclerosis, mesangiocapillary glomerulonephritis, membranous usually secondary to tuberculosis or leprosy, was present in only 34 patients. Acute nephritis, the next most frequent clinical presentation, was due to diffuse endocapillary proliferative, crescentic or mesangial proliferative glomerulonephritis in 88 per cent of cases, almost half of whom had elevated serum streptococcal antibody titres. Eosinophilia showed a highly significant association with diffuse endocapillary proliferative and mesangiocapillary glomerulonephritis. Idiopathic IgA nephropathy was present in only 10, and antiglomerular basement membrane antibody disease in only one, of the 238 patients whose biopsies were studied by immunofluorescence. Complications of pregnancy accounted for 70 per cent of cases of cortical necrosis. Acute gastroenteritis, septicaemia, abortions, snake bite and allopathic and indigenous medicines were important causes of acute tubular necrosis.
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PMID:Renal disease in adult Indians: a clinicopathological study of 2,827 patients. 344 84

Nephrotoxicity of sodium arsenate was evaluated in dogs to determine the pathophysiologic basis for renal lesions caused by this heavy metal. Examination of biopsy specimens indicated that the low dose of the As salt (0.73 mg/kg of body weight) produced histologic changes consisting of mild degeneration and vacuolation of renal tubular epithelium. Vacuolation involved mainly the ascending thick portion of the nephron. Clinical pathologic changes were not demonstrable at this dosage level according to glomerular filtration rate (creatinine clearance), fractional reabsorption of sodium, potassium, and chloride; plasma osmolar and free water clearance; and urinalysis. The medium dose (7.33 mg/kg) resulted in alterations determined by urinalysis, but did not markedly affect other clinical pathologic measurements. Histopathologic changes were equal to or greater than those seen with the low dose. Tubular necrosis was observed in the cortical portion of the nephron and the ascending thick limb. The high dose (14.66 mg/kg) consistently produced marked changes in all parameters evaluated. Clinical pathologic alterations were compatible with acute tubular necrosis involving all segments of the nephron. Histologically, moderate glomerular sclerosis and severe tubular necrosis were observed. During recovery from the high dose of As, a gradual compensatory healing process was observed that was evident in all clinical pathologic parameters and was confirmed from sequential renal biopsy specimens.
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PMID:Nephrotoxicity of sodium arsenate in dogs. 668 17

To determine the nature and frequency of renal disorders in AIDS we reviewed the records of thirty-two patients hospitalized over a twenty-two month period. Group I, including all patients with AIDS who demonstrated proteinuria and/or renal insufficiency, numbered thirteen patients, in ten of whom renal tissue was available. Renal abnormalities included proteinuria in twelve patients, which exceeded two grams per day in seven. The glomerular histologic lesions included focal glomerulosclerosis, diffuse mesangial hypercellularity, diffuse proliferative glomerulonephritis, and membranoproliferative glomerulonephritis. The nonglomerular histologic lesions included acute tubular necrosis, nephrocalcinosis, focal interstitial nephritis, and one case each of intrarenal cryptococcal infection and renal cell carcinoma. Nine of these thirteen patients developed renal insufficiency, and four of them required dialysis. Their mortality by the end of the study period was eleven of thirteen patients (85 percent), significantly worse in the short term than AIDS patients without renal problems. The patients in Group I were compared to the nineteen AIDS patients without renal abnormalities in Group II. The Group I patients had a higher incidence of oral and esophageal candidiasis, other fungal infections, and infections with Mycobacterium avium-intracellulare. They also had a higher incidence of exposure to aminoglycoside antibiotics and amphotericin B, and experienced more clinical shock than their Group II counterparts. It is concluded that patients with AIDS may demonstrate renal abnormalities on the basis of immune, hemodynamic, infectious, and neoplastic derangements.
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PMID:Renal disease in patients with AIDS: a clinicopathologic study. 673 86

The alpha-smooth muscle (alpha-SM) actin isoform is expressed normally by vascular SM cells and by stromal fibroblastic cells in pathological conditions leading to fibrosis. In order to investigate the relation between kidney fibrosis and alpha-SM actin expression, we studied 51 renal biopsies from 45 patients: 30 with various forms of glomerulonephritis; 1 with acute tubular necrosis; 1 with acute interstitial nephritis, and 13 renal transplant recipients. The presence of alpha-SM actin was examined by using anti-alpha SM-1, a mouse monoclonal antibody (IgG2 alpha) specific for alpha-SM actin. alpha-SM actin scores were estimated semiquantitatively, as were glomerulosclerosis and interstitial fibrosis. In acute tubular necrosis and in well-functioning grafts, alpha-SM actin expression was limited to vascular SM cells. In glomerular diseases, alpha-SM actin expression was upregulated in mesangial area in 25 of 36 biopsies, and even more frequently in the periglomerular and peritubular interstitium (34 of 36 cases, chi 2 = 7.6, P < 0.01). Whereas glomerular alpha-SM actin expression seemed to decrease as glomerulosclerosis progressed, there was a positive correlation between interstitial alpha-SM actin scores and the degree of interstitial fibrosis. Similarly, interstitial alpha-SM actin expression was found in acutely or chronically rejected kidneys, but not in well-functioning grafts. We conclude that upregulation of alpha-SM actin in the glomerulus indicates mesangial cell activation and is not always correlated with the degree of glomerulosclerosis. In contrast, interstitial upregulation of alpha-SM actin which indicates myofibroblast activation is correlated with the degree of interstitial fibrosis.
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PMID:Relationship between alpha-smooth muscle actin expression and fibrotic changes in human kidney. 886 27

We describe here the broad spectrum of acute renal insufficiency occurring in the course of human immunoinsufficiency virus infection. In our renal unit in Tenon hospital, 90 human immunoinsufficiency virus-infected adult patients were admitted for acute renal insufficiency between June 1988 and December 1996. Sixty out of them had a pathological diagnosis. The remaining patients did not have renal biopsy because of obstructive renal failure (n = 2), bleeding risk (n = 11), or clinically evident hypovolemic and/or sepsis-related acute tubular necrosis (n = 17). Nine different causes of acute renal insufficiency were listed. Human immunoinsufficiency virus-associated nephropathy, the most specific human immunoinsufficiency virus-related renal disease, which was diagnosed in 14 patients, is characterized by focal and segmental glomerulosclerosis with an important hyperplasia and/or proliferation of podocytes and huge tubular distension. The rapid progression to end-stage renal failure was not a constant feature since 10/14 patients had a partial renal recovery. Hemolytic-uremic syndrome was the other major cause of acute renal failure in these patients (32 cases) and was found to be associated with active cytomegalovirus infection. Cytomegalovirus-infected cells were present in half of the renal biopsies performed in this group of patients. Furthermore, these patients had an increased plasma tissue-type plasminogen activator activity whereas its type 1 inhibitor was not significantly increased, as opposed to non human immunoinsufficiency virus-associated hemolytic-uremic syndrome. Half of the patients had a complete renal recovery. The other causes of acute renal insufficiency were 1) intratubular deposition of either drugs (Adiazine, Foscavir, Indinavir) in 13 patients, or monoclonal light chain in one patient with B cell-lymphoma; 2) lupus-like glomerulonephritis characterized in one case by a complete clinical remission after 6 month-treatment by antiproteases; 3) acute tubular necrosis. In this setting, rhabdomyolysis could reveal HIV infection. The heterogeneity of renal diseases could be explained by the variation of human immunoinsufficiency virus-associated infections along time and by the different drugs which permit a better survival. We can hypothesize that new HIV-associated diseases will occur with the long term use of antiproteases.
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PMID:[Human immunodeficiency virus and acute renal insufficiency]. 961 98

Two major groups of renal complications in human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) disease are a spectrum of disorders that result in potentially reversible acute renal failure, primarily acute tubular necrosis (ATN), and HIV-associated nephropathy (HIVAN), predominantly focal and segmental glomerulosclerosis (FSGS), leading to end-stage renal disease (ESRD). Fluid-electrolyte and acid-base derangements frequently encountered in acquired immune deficiency syndrome (AIDS) are major risk factors for the development of acute renal failure (ARF). HIVAN is an unusual form of poorly responsive glomerular disease characterized by nephrotic syndrome, FSGS, and a rapid fulminant progression to ESRD. ARF syndromes encountered in HIV patients are diverse in nature; many are similar to that in non-HIV subjects, whereas some are more common and unique. In general, HIV disease patients with ARF are younger and much sicker. Although ATN secondary to ischemic and toxic injuries is the commonest ARF syndrome, urinary obstruction is a rare cause of severe renal failure. In many AIDS patients afflicted with complicated infections and multi-organ failure, ATN is a terminal event, whereas in others treated aggressively, ARF is associated with good prognosis. In our large comparative study of severe ARF, recovery of renal function and mortality were determined by patient's general hemodynamic status, and not by the presence or absence of HIV infection. The prognosis of hemolytic uremic and thrombotic thrombocytopenic purpura syndromes often observed in HIV patients is much worse than in non-HIV patients. The syndrome of crystalluria-induced ARF is common, and protease inhibitor induced disease is confined to HIV patients.
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PMID:Acute renal failure syndromes in human immunodeficiency virus infection. 969 51

Renal complications of HIV infection are clinically and morphologically diverse. These may affect the glomerular, tubulointerstitial, and vascular compartments. Tubulointerstitial injury predominates in most autopsy-based studies, whereas glomerular disease is most frequently identified in biopsy-based studies. The most common glomerular lesion is HIV-associated focal segmental glomerulosclerosis and related mesangiopathies (collectively termed HIV-associated nephropathy). Increasingly, a variety of immune complex-mediated glomerular diseases such as membranoproliferative glomerulonephritis, IgA nephropathy and lupus-like nephritis, as well as hemolytic uremic syndrome/thrombotic thrombocytopenic purpura have been reported. The spectrum of tubulointerstitial lesions includes acute tubular necrosis, interstitial nephritis, diffuse infiltrative lymphocytosis syndrome, renal infection, and neoplasms including lymphoma and Kaposi's sarcoma. The pathological features of these conditions are reviewed with emphasis on clinical-pathological correlations and pathogenesis.
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PMID:Renal pathology of human immunodeficiency virus infection. 969 53


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