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Pivot Concepts:
Gene/Protein
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Target Concepts:
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Query: UMLS:C0024530 (
malaria
)
44,886
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Plasmodium brasilianum causes chronic quartan
malaria
in the common marmoset Callithrix jacchus, whereas Epstein-Barr virus (EBV) infection is followed by an infectious mononucleosis-like syndrome that resolves. We infected weanling marmosets with one or both of these pathogens. Timing of the infections influenced outcome. Six animals were simultaneously infected with both agents; four became seriously ill (with accompanying
proteinuria
and edema) and either died or were killed. Histopathology indicated that glomerulonephritis had developed. The two survivors had more-prolonged parasitemia than did animals infected with P. brasilianum alone, as did animals infected with EBV before P. brasilianum. Five of the six simultaneously infected animals had absent or low titers of antibody to Epstein-Barr viral capsid antigens when compared with the other EBV-infected animals. Our results suggest that combined infection may be part of the etiology of quartan malarial nephropathy.
...
PMID:Glomerulonephritis in common marmosets infected with Plasmodium brasilianum and Epstein-Barr virus. 284 17
Renal biopsies were performed on 21 of 27 Melanesian patients presenting with significant
proteinuria
in Vanuatu from 1983 to 1985. All patients had more than 2 g of
proteinuria
per 24 hours or clinical evidence of the nephrotic syndrome. The average age of the patients who were biopsied was 31 years. Three of the 21 patients had evidence of active
malaria
at the time of presentation, and all of these patients had Plasmodium falciparum. Renal histopathology revealed that six patients (29%) had amyloidosis and five patients (24%) had mesangiocapillary glomerulonephritis (type 1). Of particular note was the fact that only one patient had membranous glomerulonephropathy and only one patient had minimal change nephrotic syndrome, the two most common lesions reported in nephrotic patients in Europe and the United States. Thus, the spectrum of renal histopathology in patients presenting in Vanuatu with significant
proteinuria
is very different from that seen in Western Countries.
...
PMID:The spectrum of renal histopathology in patients with significant proteinuria in Vanuatu. 349 88
Thirteen cases of amyloidosis are reported from Vanuatu between 1983 and 1985. There appears to be a high incidence of the disease similar to that found in Papua New Guinea. The role of
malaria
as an aetiological agent is discussed although most cases had a history of past or active tuberculosis. Most patients presented as either nephrotic syndrome or a syndrome of abdominal pain, diarrhoea, weight loss and
proteinuria
.
...
PMID:Amyloidosis in Vanuatu. 361 94
The prevalence and pathogenesis of renal involvement was investigated in 74 patients with malarial infections. A rise in
proteinuria
of 150 to 5,000 mg per day was seen in 12 out of 27 patients with Plasmodium falciparum infections. SDS-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis revealed either an increase in albumin and high molecular weight proteins alone or an increase in low and high molecular weight proteins. Serum creatinine and urea were increased in 5 patients. In P. vivax infections, 8 out of 46 patients developed a
proteinuria
level of up to 462 mg per day. Low and, to a lesser degree, high molecular weight proteins were increased. In one patient with quartan
malaria
infection,
proteinuria
rose as far as 432 mg per day. There was a correlation between the appearance of
proteinuria
and fever; however, there was no correlation between the amount of
proteinuria
and the height of fever. It is therefore unlikely that a rise in temperature is the only cause of
proteinuria
in malarial infections. The electrophoretic analyses of
proteinuria
indicate that in malarial infections, glomerular as well as tubular lesions may cause reversible
proteinuria
.
...
PMID:Origin of proteinuria in human malaria. 389 Jan 20
A splenectomized aotus monkey infected with human quartan
malaria
(Plasmodium malariae) developed oedema and
proteinuria
. Histological examination revealed a generalized diffuse glomerulonephritis and immunofluorescent staining showed granular deposits of IgM in the glomeruli. The pathological picture resembled that shown by human patients with the quartan
malaria
nephrotic syndrome.
...
PMID:Nephrotic syndrome in monkey infected with human quartan malaria. 500 May 4
Quartan malaria developed following splenectomy 36 years after infection in a 63-year-old hypertensive man. The patient underwent nephrectomy because of left renal calculus, increasing
proteinuria
and hypertension. Splenectomy was done additionally because metastasis of renal tumor to the spleen was suspected at the operation. Attention is drawn to the long silent infection with Plasmodium malariae and to the importance of the spleen in
malaria
.
...
PMID:Quartan malaria following splenectomy 36 years after infection. 703 67
The association between Schistosoma mansoni infection and kidney lesions was investigated in school children selected from three primary schools in Machakos District, Kenya, namely Miu (n = 159), Kitengei (n = 160) and Misuuni (n = 99) schools. The children were examined parasitologically for S. mansoni infection, clinically for enlargement of the liver and spleen, and biochemically for
proteinuria
and serum and urine creatinine. High prevalences of S. mansoni infection, ranging from 84-96%, were seen in all the schools, but the geometric mean intensity of egg excretion varied, being relatively low in Misuuni (31 eggs/g), medium in Miu (182 eggs/g) and high in Kitengei (413 eggs/g). The prevalence of pathological
proteinuria
(> or = 200 mg/l) in the schools ranged from 10.1% in Miu to 28.8% in Kitengei. No difference in the levels of
proteinuria
was noted between age or sex groups. No association between intensity of infection and pathological
proteinuria
was observed in any of the schools, nor was any correlation between organomegaly and
proteinuria
observed. However, significant correlations between
malaria
and organomegaly (p < 0.001) and between
malaria
and
proteinuria
(p < 0.05) were observed when pooling data from all schools. These findings suggest that S. mansoni induced nephrotic syndromes are not common in children from this highly endemic area of Kenya.
...
PMID:A survey of Schistosoma mansoni induced kidney disease in children in an endemic area of Machakos District, Kenya. 786 51
Renal function was assessed in 40 children during the acute illness and after recovery from falciparum
malaria
. Creatinine clearance was significantly lower during the acute illness than after recovery. Six of 18 children with impaired creatinine clearance (< 50 ml/min/1.73 m2) had evidence of acute tubular dysfunction. Hyponatraemia occurred in 12.5% during the acute phase. Fractional sodium excretion was raised in 27% during the acute illness and continuing sodium wastage occurred in 17% after recovery. Plasma potassium was significantly higher and fractional potassium excretion (FeK) significantly lower during the acute illness than after recovery. There was a positive correlation between FeNa and FeK both during and after recovery from the illness but they did not exactly mirror each other in every individual. Urine sodium:potassium ratios were similar during and after recovery from the illness and was related to FeNa. Fractional glucose excretion was zero. Mild
proteinuria
occurred in 40% during the acute illness but were not related to creatinine clearance, body temperature at presentation, or peripheral parasite density.
Proteinuria
was absent after recovery. Acute intrinsic renal impairment occurs during apparently 'uncomplicated' falciparum
malaria
in children.
...
PMID:Renal function in acute falciparum malaria. 866 27
We assessed the clinical characteristics of newly-diagnosed diabetic patients presenting to the Mulago Hospital Diabetic Clinic for the first time between 1 January 1993 and 10 August 1994. There were 252 patients: 117 men and 135 women. Mean age at onset of diabetes was 45 years (range 2-87 years) and peak incidence was at 40-49 years. Body mass index (BMI) was available in only 71 patients, of whom 53.5% (33.8% female, 19.7% male) were overweight (BMI > 25 in women, in > 27 men) and 11.3% (8.5% men, 2.8% women) were underweight (BMI < 20). Obesity was more marked in young women. Almost all patients presented with the classical symptoms of diabetes, and the majority were severely hyperglycaemic. A family history of diabetes was identified in 16%. Concurrent illnesses at diagnosis of diabetes were unusual. Sepsis was commonest (11.9%), followed by
malaria
(7.8%), tuberculosis (1.2%), AIDS (1.2%) and pancreatitis (0.8%). Peripheral neuropathy was present in 46.4% of patients, hypertension (BP > 150/100) in 27.3%, impotence in 22.2% of the men,
proteinuria
in 17.1%, ischaemic heart disease in 4.8%, foot ulcers in 4.0% and cataracts in 3.2%. Insulin was the most commonly prescribed treatment (52.8%); 31% of patients received oral hypoglycaemic agents, only 15.1% were managed on diet only, and 1.2% opted for herbal medicine.
...
PMID:The presentation of newly-diagnosed diabetic patients in Uganda. 891 47
Twenty-six cases (4.8%) from a total of 540 patients with acute renal failure (ARF) of diverse aetiology had ARF in association with falciparum
malaria
. Their ages ranged from 15 to 85 years (mean 31.2). Urinary sediment abnormalities and
proteinuria
(less than 1 g/24 h) were observed in 15 (57.7%) cases. The probable underlying factors leading to ARF were: volume depletion 17 (65.3%), intravascular haemolysis 8 (30.8%), hyperparasitaemia 8 (30.8%), cholestatic jaundice 6 (23%), and hypotension 5 (19.2%). Dialysis therapy was required in 15 patients (57.7%) as they had severe renal failure, and the remaining 11 patients improved with supportive measures. All patients received antimalarial therapy. The clinical course of ARF was consistent with acute tubular necrosis in 20 patients. Six cases were subjected to percutaneous renal biopsy. One patient showed histological features of necrotizing glomerulonephritis along with acute tubulointerstitial nephritis. The biopsies in the other five patients showed features of acute tubular necrosis in three, and acute interstitial oedema with patchy tubular necrosis in two. The mortality rate was 30.8%. Thus falciparum
malaria
, which has been an important cause of ARF in certain highly endemic zones of India, is showing an increasing prevalence in other parts such as Eastern Uttar Pradesh due to an imbalance between the increasing population and inadequate sanitary facilities, which further worsen during floods.
...
PMID:Acute renal failure in falciparum malaria--increasing prevalence in some areas of India--a need for awareness. 930 75
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