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Query: UMLS:C0022672 (
acute tubular necrosis
)
2,175
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
This patient had severe dehydration and renal failure presumed to be extrarenal. After volume replacement, the course was not typical for simple extrarenal
azotemia
or
acute tubular necrosis
. Tubular handling of salt and water may not provide adequate criteria to evaluate the cause of reduced glomerular filtration rate.
...
PMID:Acute renal failure: a diagnostic dilemma. 685 13
There are specific clinical settings in which each of the urine electrolytes may be diagnostically useful. The urine sodium alone is not efficient in differentiating prerenal
azotemia
from
acute tubular necrosis
, but if urine sodium is coupled with some measure of the renal concentrating ability, e.g., the urine:plasma creatinine ratio. discrimination between these two conditions is much improved. Usefulness of the urine sodium in other settings (evaluation of hyponatremia, prediction of acute rejection in renal transplant recipients, index of salt balance) is controversial. Urine potassium may be useful in the evaluation of hypokalemia of obscure etiology and, occasionally, in the form of the urinary Na/K ratio, as a guide to diuretic therapy. Urine chloride is assuming importance in the differential diagnosis of metabolic alkalosis, particularly when Bartter's syndrome is a consideration.
...
PMID:Measurement of urine electrolytes: clinical significance and methods. 702 36
Two cases of
acute tubular necrosis
without hepatic failure following acetaminophen overdose are reported. A 19-year-old Caucasian woman ingested 100 500-mg capsules of acetaminophen. She was admitted to a hospital 68 hours after ingestion, and serum acetaminophen concentration 70 hours after ingestion was 3 microgram/ml. Liver-function test results were markedly elevated, and urinalysis was abnormal on admission. Liver function improved over the next five days, but the patient's renal function deteriorated. Her condition initially was diagnosed as prerenal
azotemia
, but was later consistent with
acute tubular necrosis
. Hemodialysis was begun on the fifth day of hospitalization. On the eleventh hospital day, the patient's renal function began to improve, and she was subsequently discharged. In the second case, a 19-year-old Spanish-American woman ingested 30 500-mg capsules of acetaminophen. She was seen in an emergency room 16 hours after the ingestion; her serum acetaminophen concentration was 32 microgram/ml 19 hours after ingestion. Oral acetylcysteine therapy was begun, and liver-function test results were elevated and peaked on the third hospital day. Renal function began to decline on the fifth hospital day; her condition was consistent with
acute tubular necrosis
. She was hemodialyzed once, and her renal function improved on the tenth hospital day. She was subsequently discharged. It is concluded that acute renal failure without prior hepatic failure may occur after acetaminophen overdose.
...
PMID:Acute renal failure after acetaminophen overdose: report of two cases. 728 22
Twenty-three women of ages 13 to 44 years were hospitalized with illnesses fulfilling the criteria of the case definition for the toxic-shock syndrome (TSS) associated with coagulase-positive staphylococci. Disease onset occurred during menses in 22, and all were oliguric when admitted. Prolonged hypotension and a reduced central venous pressure were common features. Measurements of urine volume and creatinine clearance in eight patients identified two types of acute renal failure, oliguric and nonoliguric, and prerenal
azotemia
related to intravascular volume depletion. Urinary sodium excretion and measurement of the renal index (UNa divided by U/PCr) provided further support for the presence of both prerenal and intrinsic renal failure. Hemodialysis was required in one patient in whom findings on renal nuclide scan were consistent with
acute tubular necrosis
. Pyuria was frequent, but proteinuria and more than five erythrocytes per high-power field were infrequent. Other features included initial hyponatremia and the combination of hypoproteinemia, hypoalbuminemia, hypocalcemia and hypophosphatemia of several days' duration. The hypoalbuminemia was believed to be due to exudation of protein from the intra- to the extravascular space. The hypoalbuminemia was believed to be due to exudation of protein from the intra- to the extravascular space. The hypocalcemia was probably related to the hypoalbuminemia. The pathogenesis of hypophosphatemia in the presence of acute renal failure is unclear. Following the intravenous administration of colloids, fluids and, in seven patients, dopamine, all recovered from the acute illness.
...
PMID:Renal manifestations of the staphylococcal toxic-shock syndrome. 728 46
This prospective study compares the fractional excretion of sodium, FENa, urinary sodium concentration, UNa, urine osmolality, Uosm, and the U/P creatinine ratio in their diagnostic effectiveness in 87 patients with acute renal failure: 22
acute tubular necrosis
, 18 non-oliguric
acute tubular necrosis
, 12 acute urinary tract obstruction, 14 acute glomerulonephritis, and 21 pre-renal
azotemia
. Discriminant analysis demonstrated a correct diagnostic classification in 86 of 87 patients using FENa, and only 46, 60 and 65 correct using Uosm, UNa, and U/P Cr, respectively. FENa is identified as the most effective non-invasive test for the differential diagnosis of acute renal failure. An FENa of 1 classifies all entities into two groups: FENa more than 1;
acute tubular necrosis
, non-oliguric
acute tubular necrosis
and urinary tract obstruction and less than 1; pre-renal
azotemia
and acute glomerulonephritis (P less than 0.001).
...
PMID:Differential diagnosis of acute renal failure. 736 17
A previously described method for recovering a proximal renal tubular epitheal antigen (HRTE-1) from normal human kidney was modified by using ion-exchange and immunoaffinity chromatography in order to create easily reproducible conditions for antigen isolation. Radioiodinated HRTE-1 was then used to establish a 3-hour, double-antibody radioimmunoassay (RIA) for the purpose of testing whether the urinary excretion of this antigen might seve as a useful marker of
acute tubular necrosis
(
ATN
). Urines from 51 patients (
ATN
, 22: chronic nephropathies, 24; prerenal
azotemia
, 5) and from 36 normal subjects were assayed for HRTE-1. 79% of
ATN
patients had abnormal antigen concentrations while 100% of all other urines had urine antigen concentrations within a previously established range for random normal urine samples. When used as a differential diagnostic test of either
ATN
versus chronic nephropathies, or of
ATN
versus prerenal
azotemia
, 90 and 81% discrimination was achieved, respectively. The majority of
ATN
and prerenal
azotemia
patients presenting with atypical conventional diagnostic parameters (urine Na, urine osmolality, urine sediment, fractional Na excretion) were correctly diagnosed by RIA. Further study of HRTE-1 excretion in acute and chronic renal diseases seems indicated, both to elucidate pathophysiologic mechanisms and to determine whether HRTE-1 is a clinically useful marker of
ATN
.
...
PMID:Rapid radioimmunoassay for diagnosing acute tubular necrosis. 739 80
Acetaminophen is the most commonly reported drug overdose in the United States. Acute renal failure occurs in less than 2% of all acetaminophen poisonings and 10% of severely poisoned patients. At the therapeutic dosages, acetaminophen can be toxic to the kidneys in patients who are glutathione depleted (chronic alcohol ingestion, starvation, or fasting) or who take drugs that stimulate the P-450 microsomal oxidase enzymes (anticonvulsants). Acute renal failure due to acetaminophen manifests as
acute tubular necrosis
(
ATN
).
ATN
can occur alone or in combination with hepatic necrosis. The
azotemia
of acetaminophen toxicity is typically reversible, although it may worsen over 7 to 10 days before the recovery of renal function occurs. In severe overdoses, renal failure coincides with hepatic encephalopathy and dialysis may be required. Recognition of acetaminophen nephropathy requires the following: (1) a thorough drug history, including over-the-counter medications such as Tylenol or Nyquil; (2) knowledge of the risk factors that lessen its margin of safety at therapeutic ingestions, i.e., alcoholism; and (3) consideration of acetaminophen in the differential diagnosis of patients who present with combined hepatic dysfunction and
ATN
.
...
PMID:Acute renal failure due to acetaminophen ingestion: a case report and review of the literature. 757 69
Acute renal failure in Legionnaires' disease is rare, but the mortality rate is high [1-3]. Although the actual pathogenesis is not clear, the renal pathology discloses either acute tubulointerstitial nephritis or
acute tubular necrosis
in most cases [3]. We report two cases of Legionnaires' disease complicated by acute renal failure. One patient was completely healthy before, and the other had underlying gouty arthritis and diabetes mellitus. Their renal function was normal before these episodes. The diagnosis of Legionella infection was proved by the indirect fluorescent antibody test on paired sera. After erythromycin treatment, both patients survived. One patient required long-term maintenance hemodialysis, and the other recovered to only mild
azotemia
after a follow-up period of 5 months. Including our cases, only 55 patients have been reported to have Legionella-induced acute renal failure. This is a rare and serious complication of Legionnaires' disease. Early recognition and treatment is mandatory.
...
PMID:Legionnaires' disease with acute renal failure: report of two cases. 761 43
Rocky Mountain spotted fever occurs during seasonal tick activity. A history of exposure to tick-containing habitats within the 3- to 12-day incubation period is a key epidemiological factor. The signs of fever, headache, myalgia, nausea, vomiting, and anorexia at onset of infection are difficult to distinguish from those of self-limited viral infections. Rash usually appears later and, if present, progresses through a sequence of stages and distribution that are never pathognomonic. The effects of disseminated Rickettsia rickettsii infection of endothelial cells include increased vascular permeability, edema, hypovolemia, hypotension, prerenal
azotemia
, and, in life-threatening cases, pulmonary edema, shock,
acute tubular necrosis
, and meningoencephalitis. In severe cases, fluid management is a challenge. The clinical diagnosis, which is difficult, is rarely assisted by laboratory findings because antibodies are usually detected only in convalescence, and immunohistologic methods for detection of rickettsiae are unavailable in most clinics. Doxycycline is the treatment of choice except for pregnant or allergic patients, who are treated with chloramphenicol.
...
PMID:Rocky Mountain spotted fever: a seasonal alert. 761 84
The incidence of renal failure due to vascular diseases is increasing. Two reasons for this are the epidemic of atherosclerotic vascular disease in the aging population and the widespread use of vasoactive drugs that can adversely affect renal function. These vascular causes of renal failure include vasomotor disorders such as that associated with nonsteroidal antiinflammatory drugs, small-vessel diseases such as cholesterol crystal embolization, and large-vessel diseases such as renal artery stenosis. These causes of
azotemia
are less familiar to physicians than more classic causes, such as
acute tubular necrosis
, and are less likely to be recognized in their early stages. This article describes the various vascular diseases that impair renal function and outlines the steps necessary to identify them. Although some of these conditions, such as renal artery stenosis, can gradually impair function, the vascular causes of acute renal failure are emphasized in this article. Because the vasculitides primarily cause renal failure through secondary glomerulonephritis, they are mentioned only briefly. Extensive testing is rarely necessary because the cause is usually suspected through syndrome recognition. The diagnosis can then be confirmed by the results of one or two additional tests or by improved renal function after treatment.
...
PMID:Diagnosing vascular causes of renal failure. 867 77
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