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Query: UMLS:C0026764 (
multiple myeloma
)
36,148
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
This study was addressed to explore the reactivity of natural anti-idiotypes from commercial lots of immunoglobulins to several idiotypes (Ids), usually expressed by anti-DNA molecules in
lupus nephritis
. Eleven intravenous immunoglobulin (IVIG) preparations and nine (three polyvalent and six hyper-immune) intramuscular IgG were investigated for specific content of anti-DNA, anti-F(ab')2 and antibodies reacting with several anti-DNA IgG Ids. Two samples (nos 6 and 11) showed high reactivity with allogeneic F(ab')2 and with F(ab')2 of
myeloma
proteins bearing the anti-DNA Id 3I+ and the 8.12+. Since both 3I and 8.12 Id markers are known to characterize pathogenic anti-DNA IgG in systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE), anti-Id antibodies to these markers were obtained by absorbing the IVIG samples nos 6 and 11 to Sepharose columns coupled with pooled F(ab')2 fragments of 3I(+)-F4(+)-8.12(+)-
myeloma
proteins. Inhibition experiments showed that anti-8.12 Id-eluted IgG induced a selective suppression of the DNA-reactive antibodies derived from patients with active
lupus nephritis
to their substrate, suggesting the involvement of 8.12+ molecules in the SLE glomerular damage. Since 8.12+ anti-DNA are nephritogenic antibodies, the occurrence of anti-8.12+ Id in commercial IVIG may be of potential therapeutic relevance in modulating the pathogenic SLE Id network. Previous variable results of IVIG treatment in SLE, such as resolution of proteinuria or worsening nephritis, could be related to variable enrichment of different lots of IVIG in suppressive anti-pathogenic Id antibodies.
...
PMID:Pathogenic anti-DNA idiotype-reactive IgG in intravenous immunoglobulin preparations. 803 14
To study the pathogenesis of
lupus nephritis
, the cross reactivity between anti-DNA antibody and glycosaminoglycans (GAGs) was investigated. Monoclonal anti-DNA antibodies were obtained from hybridomas by the fusion of MRL/lpr/lpr splenocytes with murine
myeloma
cells. Some of these monoclonal anti-DNA antibodies showed cross reactivity with GAGs, such as hyaluronic acid, chondroitin sulfate and heparan sulfate. To elucidate the mechanism of cross reactivity, inhibition assays with propanol and polyethylenimine (PEI), a cationic agent, were carried out. Increase of the concentration of PEI (0.6-2.0% vol/vol) resulted in a dose dependent decrease in the binding ability of anti-DNA antibody to GAGs. Propanol, an organic reagent which disrupts the van der Waals bonds between epitopes and paratopes, showed little inhibitory effect on the binding activity of monoclonal anti-DNA antibody to GAGs. These results indicate that the binding of anti-DNA antibody to GAGs is due to a charge interaction rather than van der Waals forces. Anti-DNA antibody which can react with GAGs in the glomerular basement membrane seems to play an important role in the pathogenesis of
lupus nephritis
.
...
PMID:A study on cross-reactivity of anti-DNA antibody with glycosaminoglycans. 821 20
The authors have recently shown that antibodies with anti-idiotype (Id) specificity to pathogenic Ids of
lupus nephritis
may occasionally occur in several intravenous immune globulin (IVIG) preparations because they are present in healthy donors and the healthy relatives of SLE patients. In the present study, the authors purified these anti-Ids and treated two SLE patients with nephritis in parallel with conventional high-dose IVIG management with a commercial preparation (IVIG 6) in three controls for two months. Because pathogenic Ids of anti-DNA molecules, such as both 8.12 and F4 Ids, show a cationic mobility in isoelectric focusing, a commercial preparation of IVIG (11) was absorbed on a Sepharose column coupled with DC-305-39
myeloma
protein, namely an 8.12+ and F4+ cationic IgG. Infusion of the eluate (EL-11) induced a prompt resolution of proteinuria levels and an evident decrease of serum levels of anti-DNA antibodies in both patients, whereas in the three controls, proteinuria and anti-DNA antibodies were scarcely reduced. In addition, plasma levels of interleukin (IL)-6 and tumour necrosis factor (TNF)-alpha were also significantly influenced by both treatments. The mean values of both cytokines increased significantly after 1 h and then progressively declined over the next 48 h. It was of interest, however, that the increased TNF-alpha in the two EL-11-treated patients was significantly lower than in the three controls. The data suggest that reduction of active
lupus nephritis
by enriched specific anti-Id molecules is the result of two (or perhaps more) mechanisms: suppression of pathogenic idiotypes at the cellular level and improvement in the mesangium of the secretion of anti-inflammatory cytokines, such as IL-6, whose defective function is related to the autoimmune disorder.
...
PMID:Intravenous immune globulin therapy of lupus nephritis: use of pathogenic anti-DNA-reactive IgG. 862 51
In summary, use of plasmapheresis has changed in recent years given advances in medical technology that have allowed a wider clinical application in the critical care setting. Membrane filtration technology has provided an alternative to centrifugation that can be easily applied in intensive care units. Use of plasmapheresis has also changed in recent years reflecting the availability of evidence largely obtained from controlled prospective studies. However, the clinical efficacy of plasmapheresis for many acute renal conditions is still controversial. Plasmapheresis appears to be a useful adjunct to conventional therapy in the treatment of anti-GBM nephritis, severe dialysis-dependent forms of pauciimmune RPGN, cryoglobulinemia, and HUS-TTP. Reported data also suggest a possible benefit of plasmapheresis in patients with
myeloma
cast nephropathy, sepsis, and poisoning/overdose, but the case for plasmapheresis in these disorders is largely unproven and the reported evidence insufficient to recommend its use outside research settings. In contrast, data from controlled trials do not support a role for plasmapheresis in immune complex-mediated RPGN, such as
lupus nephritis
, and acute allograft rejection. The more widespread application of prospective, randomized, controlled clinical trials should help to better define the value of plasmapheresis for treatment of acute renal diseases.
...
PMID:Plasmapheresis. Technical aspects and indications. 1205 39
This series of articles on the management of glomerulonephritis (GN) has been prepared by a team of experts in the evidence-based format consistent with peer review of published data. Each author was asked to review the literature for his assigned histological type, with emphasis on therapy and limited to adult studies. The age limit was not considered for minimal change disease and focal segmental glomerulosclerosis, because of the high prevalence of these glomerulopathies in children. The particular treatment recommendations for each type of glomerular disease were graded by each author according to the amount of evidence provided in these reviewed studies. The first two articles concentrate on indications and techniques for kidney biopsy. Each subsequent article focuses on and describes the highest level of evidence supporting the recommendation for therapy in IgA nephropathy (Ig-GN), minimal change nephropathy (MCN) and focal segmental glomerulosclerosis (FSGS), membranous glomerulonephritis (MGN),
lupus nephritis
, ANCA-associated vasculitis, HCV-associated cryoglobulinaemia and renal involvement in paraproteinemic disorders. The article on IgA nephropathy emphasises the importance of carefully evaluating both clinical and histologic findings before settling on the treatment. The recent, renewed interest in steroids and many immunosuppressive agents is discussed in detail. Recommendations related to the patient's age are also provided. MCN and FSGS are treated together because these forms share similar evidence-based recommendations. For both of these diseases, in fact, the initial treatment approach in children should be prednisone or prednisolone for four to six weeks. The therapeutic response in adults is slower than in children, but adults experience fewer relapses and a more prolonged remission. There is also a discussion on treatment of relapse, frequent relapsing disease and true steroid-resistant disease as well as the role of new immunosuppressive agents. Membranous nephropathy is a frequent cause of nephrotic syndrome in adults and, in one third of these patients, leads to end-stage renal disease. However, the treatment of this form is as yet a matter of discussion. Based on extensive critical review of the literature, the following recommendations are put forward: (a) no treatment in the absence of nephrotic syndrome; (b) patients with heavy proteinuria should receive a 6-month treatment with i.v. methylprednisolone (MP) pulse therapy for three consecutive days followed by oral MP (0.4 mg/kg/day) (months 1, 3, 5) and chlorambucil or cyclophosphamide (months 2, 4, 6); (c) the dosage of chlorambucil or cyclophosphamide should be lowered in older patients; (d) cyclosporine is a second-choice treatment. The treatment of
lupus nephritis
depends on the histologic class. No specific treatment is usually necessary for class I and IIA. Oral steroids are indicated in patients with class IIb, proteinuria and active systemic disease. Steroids and azathioprine are the treatment of choice for patients with class III and IV, but cyclosporine can be an effective alternative therapy. Cyclophosphamide is more effective than azathioprine when severe acute renal involvement is present. The treatment of ANCA-associated vasculitis depends mainly on clinical presentation, oral prednisone + oral or i.v. cyclophosphamide are generally effective. In the most severe cases, the association of MP pulse therapy with cyclophosphamide is probably more effective. Plasma exchange is probably justified in unresponsive patients. Azathioprine should replace cyclophosphamide during the maintenance therapy. In HCV-associated mixed cryoglobulinemia the treatment also depends on the severity of renal involvement. The treatment for chronic HCV infection involves alpha interferon alone or preferably in combination with ribavirin. Aggressive therapy, including i.v. MP, plasmapheresis and cyclophosphamide is primarily reserved for patients with acute severe disease, as manifested by progressive renal failure, distal necroses requiring amputation, or advanced neuropathy. Uncontrolled studies suggest that this regimen can improve renal function. Renal involvement is a common problem in paraproteinemic disorders that include
multiple myeloma
, Waldentrom's macroglobulinaemia and monoclonal gammopathy. The most common renal diseases in this setting are cast nephropathy, primary amyloidosis cast nephropathy, primary amyloidosis, and light chain deposition disease that are related to the overproduction of monoclonal immunoglobulin light chains. The approach to therapy varies with the cause of the renal dysfunction. Patients with amyloidosis or light-chain deposition disease are generally treated with chemotherapy, but the most effective therapy for
myeloma
kidney is prevention by minimising the risk factors that promote light chain filtration and subsequent obstruction by cast formation within the tubules. Chemotherapy or stem cell or bone marrow transplantation to decrease filtered light chain load, prevent volume depletion and maintain high fluid intake to reduce light chain concentration within the tubular lumen are indicated in almost all the patients.
...
PMID:[Instructions and implementations for percutaneous renal biopsy. Guidelines for the therapy of glomerular nephropaties]. 1466 2
Renal biopsy is a fundamental tool in the diagnosis and prognostic of multiple nephrological and systemic pathologies. At our institution the first patient submitted to this technique, at 1994, showed Berger disease. Until 2002 we have performed 91 renal biopsies (57 men and 34 women) with the following annual distribution: 1994 (n=3), 1995 (n=3), 1996 (n=3), 1997 (n=15), 1998 (n=5), 1999 (n=23), 2000 (n=13) and 2001 (n=26). Ultrasound guidance was always used and in most of cases the technique was performed with Vim-Silverman (14G) needle. BARD automatic system was employed in only five patients. The clinical diagnosis that lead to renal biopsy were: nephrotic syndrome (n=27), asyntomatic urinary abnormalities (n=25), acute or rapidly progressive renal failure (n=18), chronic renal failure (n=15), hypertension (n=4) and acute nephritis (n=2). The efficacy for optic histological diagnosis was 92.3% (84/91). However, if we include seven cases of presumed IgA nephropathy that don't included fragment for immunofluorescence (IF) analysis the efficacy declined to 84.6% (77/91). The mean number of glomeruli per fragment was 18.3 -/+ 14.2 [0-80]. Histological diagnosis were the following: Berger disease (n=24), idiopathic nephrotic syndrome (n=18),
lupus nephritis
(n=8), mesangial proliferative glomerulonephritis without glomeruli in the IF fragment (n=6), without glomeruli (n=6), secondary nephrotic syndrome (n=4), tubulointerstitial nephritis or acute tubular necrosis (n=4), diabetic nephropathy (n=3),
myeloma
kidney (n=3), pauci-imune and crescentic glomerulonephritis (n=3), hypertensive nephropathy (n=2), IgM mesangial proliferative glomerulonephritis (n=2) and various (n=8). Gross hematuria appeared in 9 patients (9.9%). Only in three of these patients it was showed, by ecography, the existence of kidney haematoma. Bleeding throughout the mandrill in four cases, leaded to transfusion in only three patients. We have registered one accidental spleen puncture. Nephrectomy for incontrollable bleeding was never needed. Higher glomerulosclerosis (30% vs 8%; p<0.01) and also a greater extent of tubulointersticial lesions (100% vs 63%; p<0.01), were predictors of progression into end-stage or advanced renal failure. Concluding, renal biopsy with ultrasound guidance was valuable for diagnosis in 84.6% of our proceedings. Our serie is similar to others concerning serious complications. Nephrologists and radiologists improved progressively their coordination performing this technique, improving the results during this period of 8 years.
...
PMID:[Percutaneous kidney biopsy: eight years-experience]. 1563 24
We report an unusual histologic manifestation of light chain deposition disease in a 69-year-old female patient, who presented with nephrotic syndrome and an increased serum creatinine. The renal biopsy findings by light and electron microscopy suggested a glomerulonephritis with massive immune-complex deposition, such as
lupus nephritis
. However, the overall clinical scenario was inconsistent with lupus. Subsequent tests revealed
multiple myeloma
confirmed by bone marrow biopsy and identification of a monoclonal kappa light chain immunoglobulin by serum and urine immunoelectrophoresis and immunofixation. Additional immunohistochemistry of the first biopsy also demonstrated strong kappa light chain staining of the glomerular capillary walls and mesangium but not lambda light chain or IgG staining. The patient responded well to therapy and was asymptomatic until nearly 7 years later. A repeat biopsy revealed similar findings to the first biopsy with the addition of immunofluorescence microscopy, which confirmed the prominent kappa light chain staining of the glomeruli, tubular basement membranes, and interstitium with corresponding electron-dense deposits visualized by electron microscopy. This case represents an unusual histologic variant of light chain deposition disease, which to our knowledge has not been previously described and further expands the wide clinicopathologic spectrum within the diagnostic entity of light chain deposition disease.
...
PMID:Expanding the pathologic spectrum of light chain deposition disease: a rare variant with clinical follow-up of 7 years. 1569 20
This study among elderly renal Egyptian patients (n=220) with only 20 of them were subjected to renal biopsy. Results showed: diabetic nephropathy in 28.2%, hypertensive nephrosclerosis 25.5%, UTI, cystitis and pyelonephritis in 6.8%, renal stones in 5.9%, obstructive uropathy in 7.6%, simple cysts in 4.5%, CRF of unknown origin in 13.1%, and others in 26.4%. DM and HTN were S related to kidney function tests and increase in elderly. Other cardiovascular risk factors and smoking are reported by previous workers to be HS related to renal diseases. Age was significantly related to GFR, BUN and Cr. but sex difference was not significantly related to renal diseases.
Multiple myeloma
,
lupus nephritis
, vasculitis and hepatitis B were all recorded in few numbers of elderly Egyptians. HCV was more common and more likely to cause renal diseases. Abdomino-pelvic ultrasound was confirmatory to clinical renal diseases diagnosis. Among patients (n=20) biopsies showed focal necrotizing GN in 20%, membranous nephropathy in 50% and renal amyloidosis in 30%. CTIN was associated in some cases due to NSAID intake. Analgesic nephropathy was a common problem that might lead to ARF in some cases especially in the elderly. Ultrasound results among the biopsy group were confirmatory to clinical diagnosis.
...
PMID:Pattern of renal diseases among elderly Egyptians patients with acute or chronic renal diseases in Ain Shams University and Nasser Institute Hospitals, Cairo, Egypt. 1633 99
Direct immunofluorescence (IF) on frozen tissue is the method of choice for the study of medical renal diseases. When no glomeruli are available, IF can be performed on the formalin-fixed paraffin-embedded tissue allocated for light microscopy after antigen retrieval with proteases. In this study, the results of IF on frozen tissue (IF-F) and on deparaffinized, pronase-treated tissue (IF-P) were compared in 71 renal biopsies representing 12 major renal diseases. Using IF-P, diagnostic findings were obtained in 100% of cases of
lupus nephritis
, acute post-infectious glomerulonephritis, cryoglobulinemic glomerulonephritis, fibrillary glomerulonephritis, primary amyloidosis,
myeloma
cast nephropathy, and light-chain Fanconi syndrome (LCFS), 88% of cases of immunoglobulin (Ig)A nephropathy, 80% of cases of light-chain deposition disease, 60% of cases of membranoproliferative glomerulonephritis type 1, 50% of cases of idiopathic membranous glomerulopathy (MGN) and 20% of cases of anti-glomerular basement membrane (GBM) disease. IF-P was less sensitive than IF-F for the detection of C3 in all disease categories and for the detection of IgG in cases of MGN and anti-GBM disease. The diagnostic kappa light-chain staining was demonstrated in 100% of cases of LCFS by IF-P versus 40% by IF-F. We conclude that IF-P is a valuable salvage immunohistochemical technique for renal biopsies lacking adequate cortical sampling for IF-F, and is superior to IF-F for the diagnosis of LCFS.
...
PMID:Immunofluorescence on pronase-digested paraffin sections: a valuable salvage technique for renal biopsies. 1788 46
A retrospective analysis of 1592 renal biopsies received from various hospitals all over Kerala over a period of two years was done. Of the 1544 native kidney biopsies majority of cases (300; 18.84%) were focal segmental glomerulosclerosis. Next infrequency was IgA nephropathy (227; 14.26%). The other diagnoses included post infectious glomerulonephritis (GN) (150; 9.42%),
lupus nephritis
(131; 8.23%), membranous glomerulonephritis (118; 7.41%), minimal change disease (94; 5.94%), interstitial nephritis 87(5.46%), membranoproliferative glomerulonephritis (MPGN) and severe glomerulosclerosis (74; 4.64% each), IgM nephropathy (72; 4.52%), acute tubular necrosis and diabetic glomerulopathy (24; 1.5% each), ANCA-related GN (21;1.32%), amyloidosis (13; 0.82%), Henoch Schonlien purpura (12; 0.75%) atd thrombotic microangiopathy (10; 0.63%). Afew others like
myeloma
cast nephropathy, cholesterol embolism, Clq nephropathy, oxalosis, mixed connective tissue disorder (MCTD, Wegner's granulomatosis etc. also were seen occasionally. 48 cases were allograft biopsies (3.02%).
...
PMID:Non-neoplastic renal diseases in Kerala, India--analysis of 1592 cases, a two year retrospective study. 1788 50
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