Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
Pivot Concepts:   Target Concepts:
Query: UMLS:C0022672 (acute tubular necrosis)
2,175 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Three patients treated with intravenous immunoglobulin developed respiratory difficulty and decreased renal function. Previously reported adverse reactions to this class of drugs have included pulmonary toxicity but not, to the best of our knowledge, renal toxicity. Renal dysfunction was mild in one patient but severe in two patients, one of whom required temporary hemodialysis. In all three patients, renal function returned to the pretreatment level after stopping the drug. Urinalysis and urine sodium concentration at the onset of renal failure were consistent with pre renal azotemia although renal biopsy performed later in one patient showed acute tubular necrosis. The exact mechanism of toxicity is unknown, but the fact that all three cases occurred with a particular immunoglobulin preparation would suggest that a contaminant, possibly aggregated IgG might be responsible.
...
PMID:Pulmonary and renal toxicity of intravenous immunoglobulin. 158 64

Acute renal failure usually occurs during hospitalization, but may also be present on admission to the hospital. To define the causes and outcomes of community-acquired acute renal failure, we undertook a prospective study of patients admitted to the hospital with acute elevations in serum creatinine concentrations. Over a 17-month period, all admission serum creatinine determinations were screened for patients with values greater than 177 mumol/L (2 mg/dL). These values were compared with baseline creatinines to select patients with an acute elevation in serum creatinine occurring outside the hospital. One hundred patients were entered into the study, with an overall incidence of 1% of hospital admissions. Seventy percent of the patients had prerenal azotemia, 11% had intrinsic acute renal failure, 17% had obstruction, and 2% could not be classified. Mean peak serum creatinine (318 +/- 18 mumol/L [3.6 +/- 0.2 mg/dL]) and mortality (7%) was lowest in the group with prerenal azotemia. In this group, volume contraction due to vomiting, decreased fluid intake, diarrhea, fever, glucosuria, or diuretics was the most common underlying cause. The group with intrinsic acute renal failure had the most severe renal failure and the highest mortality (55%). Although ischemic acute tubular necrosis is the most common cause of hospital-acquired intrinsic acute renal failure, this etiology was seen in only one patient. Drug-induced nephrotoxicity and infection-related causes were the most common underlying etiologies of intrinsic acute renal failure. Obstructive renal failure had a mortality of 24% and was most commonly due to benign prostatic hypertrophy.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Community-acquired acute renal failure. 199 62

Ultrasonography (US) of the native kidneys is commonly requested for acute renal failure (ARF), although in most cases the examination results are negative. To detect changes in the Doppler waveform associated with ARF and determine whether Doppler US can provide significant diagnostic information not available with standard US, 91 patients with ARF were studied to determine a mean resistive index (RI) for each patient. Forty-six patients had acute tubular necrosis (ATN) with a mean RI +/- 1 standard deviation of .85 +/- .06, which was significantly higher than the mean RI of .67 +/- .09 in 30 patients with prerenal ARF (P less than .01). Fifteen patients had ARF due to non-ATN intrinsic renal disease (mean RI, .74 +/- .13). An elevated RI (greater than or equal to .75) occurred in 91% of patients with ATN versus only 20% of patients with prerenal azotemia. Patients with severe liver disease (hepatorenal syndrome) are a subset of those with prerenal ARF that accounted for most of the elevated RIs in this group. The study demonstrates that intrarenal Doppler US allows detection of changes associated with ARF far more often than standard US. More important, Doppler US may be helpful in distinguishing ATN from prerenal azotemia.
...
PMID:Acute renal failure: possible role of duplex Doppler US in distinction between acute prerenal failure and acute tubular necrosis. 201 84

Reported was an aged woman (80-year-old) of minimal change nephrotic syndrome which was complicated with reversible oliguric acute renal failure. The patient presented massive proteinuria, anasarca, and severe azotemia. She recovered conservatively from the acute renal failure and subsequently remitted from the nephrotic syndrome after the treatment which comprised albumin infusion, diuretics, adrenocorticosteroid hormones (including the pulse therapy), antiplatelet drug, and anticoagulants. The histopathologic findings of renal biopsy were compatible with minor glomerular abnormalities and acute tubular necrosis with many tubular casts. The previously reported cases older than 80-year-old which remitted from minimal change nephrotic syndrome complicated with reversible acute renal failure, were very rare. The present case was the second case among the literatures.
...
PMID:[An aged woman with minimal change nephrotic syndrome complicated with reversible acute renal failure]. 219 Nov 62

Drug-induced renal disease is a common problem. Drugs cause several renal syndromes, such as prerenal azotemia, fluid and electrolyte abnormalities, acute tubular necrosis, acute interstitial nephritis, and chronic interstitial nephritis. Acute renal failure due to acute tubular necrosis is the most common syndrome and is most frequently caused by aminoglycoside antibiotics, radiographic contrast agents, and amphotericin B. Avoidance of these drugs in volume-depleted or hypotensive patients with preexisting renal disease or in those receiving multiple nephrotoxic drugs is the most effective way to reduce nephrotoxicity. Acute interstitial nephritis is an immune process that is most commonly caused by penicillins, diuretics, allopurinol, nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs, cimetidine, and sulfonamides. Prompt recognition of the disease and cessation of the responsible drug are usually the only necessary therapy. Chronic interstitial nephritis is most often seen after prolonged use of several different types of analgesic agents, including aspirin, acetaminophen, and nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs. These patients develop recurrent papillary necrosis and eventually chronic renal failure. They are also at risk of developing transitional cell carcinomas of the urinary collecting system. Some patients who are receiving cyclosporine also develop chronic renal failure due to interstitial fibrosis.
...
PMID:Drug-induced nephropathies. 219 61

Acute renal failure is a most challenging clinical problem when it occurs in pregnancy. It requires an understanding of the normal physiology of the kidney in pregnancy and the natural history of different underlying renal diseases when pregnancy occurs. Because patients with chronic renal disease may present with worsening proteinuria, hypertension, and renal function, these disorders must be excluded from those conditions that cause acute deterioration of renal failure in otherwise normal women during pregnancy. As in all patients who develop acute renal failure, prerenal and obstructive causes must be excluded. Particularly important causes of prerenal azotemia in pregnancy include hyperemesis gravidarum and uterine hemorrhage, especially if it is unsuspected as in abruptio placentae. Infectious causes of acute renal failure in the pregnant woman include acute pyelonephritis and septic abortion. The clinical presentation of both these conditions should be apparent, and appropriate diagnosis and treatment can then be promptly instituted. Renal cortical necrosis is another cause of renal failure that occurs more frequently in pregnancy, and it must be differentiated from the many causes of acute tubular necrosis that may be associated with pregnancy. Those conditions that cause renal failure unique to pregnancy must always be considered when renal function deteriorates in the last trimester or the postpartum period. Severe preeclampsia, acute fatty liver of pregnancy, and idiopathic postpartum acute renal failure may all present similar complications, but the approach to each of these clinical disorders must be individualized. By understanding the causes of renal functional deterioration in pregnancy, a logical differential diagnosis can be established, allowing appropriate therapeutic decisions to preserve both maternal and fetal well-being.
...
PMID:Acute renal failure in pregnancy. 305 11

The physical properties and chemical composition of urine are highly variable and are determined in large measure by the quantity and the type of food consumed. The specific gravity is the ratio of the density to that of water, and it is dependent on the number and weight of solute particles and on the temperature of the sample. The weight of solute particles is constituted mainly of urea (73%), chloride (5.4%), sodium (5.1%), potassium (2.4%), phosphate (2.0%), uric acid (1.7%), and sulfate (1.3%). Nevertheless, urine osmolality depends only on the number of solute particles. The renal production of maximally concentrated urine and formation of dilute urine may be reduced to two basic elements: (1) generation and maintenance of a renal medullary solute concentration hypertonic to plasma and (2) a mechanism for osmotic equilibration between the inner medulla and the collecting duct fluid. The interaction of the renal medullary countercurrent system, circulating levels of antidiuretic hormone, and thirst regulates water metabolism. Renin, aldosterone, prostaglandins, and kinins also play a role. Clinical estimation of the concentrating and diluting capacity can be performed by relatively simple provocative tests. However, urinary specific gravity after taking no fluids for 12 h overnight should be 1.025 or more, so that the second urine in the morning is a useful sample for screening purposes. Many preservation procedures affect specific gravity measurements. The concentration of solids (or water) in urine can be measured by weighing, hydrometer, refractometry, surface tension, osmolality, a reagent strip, or oscillations of a capillary tube. These measurements are interrelated, not identical. Urinary density measurement is useful to assess the disorders of water balance and to discriminate between prerenal azotemia and acute tubular necrosis. The water balance regulates the serum sodium concentration, therefore disorders are revealed by hypo- and hypernatremia. The disturbances are due to renal and nonrenal diseases, mainly liver, cardiovascular, intestinal, endocrine, and iatrogenic. Fluid management is an important topic of intensive care medicine. Moreover, the usefulness of specific gravity measurement of urine lies in interpreting other findings of urinalysis, both chemical and microscopical.
...
PMID:Relative density of urine: methods and clinical significance. 307 30

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.
...
PMID:Acute renal failure. 333 29

Urinary doubly refractile lipid bodies (DRLB) are a characteristic finding in patients with glomerular renal diseases causing heavy proteinuria. DRLB are felt to be an uncommon finding in glomerular diseases without heavy proteinuria, and a rare finding in nonglomerular renal diseases. In order to determine whether DRLB are found in nonglomerular renal diseases, we reviewed the medical records of all patients who had urinalyses performed in our laboratory from February 1975 to June 1983. Three hundred sixty one patients demonstrated less than or equal to +2 proteinuria, and at least two DRLB. Of these, 290 were identified as having a single renal diagnosis. One hundred forty eight patients (51%) had a variety of acute and chronic glomerular diseases, and 125 patients (43.2%) had nonglomerular renal diseases, including acute tubular necrosis (ATN), prerenal azotemia, chronic interstitial nephritis, polycystic kidney disease, acute interstitial nephritis, renal neoplasia, and acute myeloma kidney. Ten patients had transient proteinuria associated with acute illness, and seven patients had no renal disease at all. Only two patients with nonglomerular renal disease had more than five DRLB per 20 high power microscopic fields. The frequency of DRLB in patients with nonglomerular renal diseases was: chronic interstitial nephritis, 26%; polycystic kidney disease, 38%; prerenal azotemia, 20%; ATN, 15%; and acute interstitial nephritis, 33%. These data suggest that at lower levels of proteinuria, DRLB are found frequently in nonglomerular renal diseases, and that DRLB do not differentiate glomerular from nonglomerular renal diseases unless more than five DRLB are found on urinary sediment examination.
...
PMID:Urinary doubly refractile lipid bodies in nonglomerular renal diseases. 335 69

Over a 3 1/2 year period, 133 children with hepatic failure underwent orthotopic liver transplantation (OLT) at our center. Renal failure (creatinine clearance less than 20 ml/min/1.73 m2) was present in 19 (14.3%) of these children. In seven of the 19 children, renal failure was present before OLT, and in the other 12 after OLT. The causes of renal failure included hepatorenal syndrome in seven, postischemic acute tubular necrosis in five, severe prerenal azotemia in five, and cyclosporine nephrotoxicity in two. Eight other patients died of renal failure while awaiting emergency transplantation. Of the total of 31 deaths among 133 children who underwent OLT, nine occurred in the 19 patients with renal failure. Thus patients with OLT and renal failure had a significantly higher mortality than other patients with transplants (P less than 0.025). Dialysis was not associated with improved survival. The majority of deaths in patients with renal failure were related to severe hemorrhage, thromboembolic events, and systemic fungal infections. Our experience suggests that renal failure is common in children with hepatic failure and is associated with reduced patient survival after OLT.
...
PMID:Renal failure in children with hepatic failure undergoing liver transplantation. 351 8


<< Previous 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 Next >>