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Query: UMLS:C0022672 (
acute tubular necrosis
)
2,175
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Foscarnet
is a pyrophosphate analogue that has been successfully used in severe cytomegalovirus (CMV) infections. Little is known of the incidence and mechanisms of foscarnet-induced nephrotoxicity as most data comes from recipients of renal allografts or from patients with severe underlying disease or with other nephrotoxic drugs. We have retrospectively analyzed the evolution of renal function after 56 courses of foscarnet. In addition, we have prospectively studied the protective effects of hydration on foscarnet nephrotoxicity (2.5 liters of saline/day during the night before the foscarnet therapy and throughout the course of treatment).
Foscarnet
-induced acute renal failure was defined as a rise in serum creatinine of at least 25% from the basal value. An increase in serum creatinine occurred in 37 cases out of the 56 courses of foscarnet (66%). The mean serum creatinine prior to foscarnet was 80.5 +/- 3.3 mumol/l and the mean increase was 190 +/- 28.3 mumol/l (range 80-1,000). Peak serum creatinine was higher than 200 and 300 mumol/l in 16 and 13 patients, respectively. Kidney obtained at autopsy from a 30-year-old male with AIDS, CMV pneumonitis and acute renal failure secondary to foscarnet administration showed an extensive tubular necrosis. In the group which was prospectively hydrated only 1 patient had an acute renal failure. The mean serum creatinine at the peak (96 +/- 4 mumol/l) and at the end of the treatment (83 +/- 4 mumol/l) was significantly lower (p less than 0.05) than in non hydrated patients. In conclusion, foscarnet is a highly nephrotoxic drug which induces
acute tubular necrosis
.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Foscarnet nephrotoxicity: mechanism, incidence and prevention. 255 31
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.
...
PMID:[Human immunodeficiency virus and acute renal insufficiency]. 961 98