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

Accepted causes (acute insults) and risk factors for the development of acute renal failure were defined, quantitatively assessed, and tested for statistical significance in 143 patients with acute tubular necrosis. Sixty-two percent of patients had more than one acute insult, and 48 percent had more than one suspected risk factor. Hypotension, excessive aminoglycoside exposure, pigmenturia, and dehydration were identified as highly significant acute insults, while it was concluded that sepsis and administration of radiocontrast material could not be incriminated as causes of acute tubular necrosis. An additive interaction between acute insults was demonstrated, and the severity of acute renal failure was related to the number and severity of acute insults. Patients with oliguric renal failure had more severe acute insults than patients with nonoliguric renal failure. Preexisting renal disease and chronic hypertension were significant risk factors, the latter only when hypotension had been one of the acute insults. An age of more than 59 years, gout and/or chronic hyperuricemia, diabetes, and long-term diuretic administration were not found to be significant risk factors.
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PMID:Acute renal failure. Multivariate analysis of causes and risk factors. 711 78

The kidney is one of the organs susceptible to heavy metal intoxication. The total body burden and "saturation" level in renal tissue are important limiting factors to the onset of renal injuries. Acute or chronic exposure to many of heavy metals can induce renal tubulointerstitial injuries, including acute tubular necrosis, chronic tubulointerstitial nephritis, Fanconi syndrome, renal tubular acidosis, and renal tubular dysfunction without morphological changes. Chronic cadmium intoxication can cause irreversible Fanconi syndrome with chronic tubulointerstitial nephritis. Both urinary low-molecular weight protein excretion and urinary cadmium excretion (greater than 200-400 ppm) are the most reliable earlier markers of tubulointerstitial injury in chronic cadmium intoxication. The role of metallothionein is central to an understanding of cadmium-induced nephropathy. Acute lead intoxication in children can cause reversible Fanconi syndrome. Hypertension, hyperuricemia, and elevated serum creatinine, without Fanconi syndrome, are clinical manifestations of chronic lead exposure in adults. Nuclear inclusion body in proximal tubular cell is characteristic. Chronic exposure to inorganic germanium can cause chronic renal failure without urinary abnormalities, due to tubular degeneration and interstitial fibrosis, mainly in the thick ascending limb of Henle and distal tubulus.
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PMID:[Tubulointerstitial injuries in heavy metal intoxications]. 756 49