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Query: UMLS:C0028754 (
obesity
)
124,988
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Although hypoalbuminemia is a fundamental characteristic of nephrotic syndrome (NS), there are many patients with massive proteinuria that do not develop hypoalbuminemia. We have studied the clinical and biochemical characteristics of 19 patients with persistent massive proteinuria (greater than 5 g/d) and normal serum albumin (group I) in comparison with 16 patients with similar proteinuria excretion, but persistent hypoalbuminemia (group II). Most of group I patients had diagnoses suggesting glomerular hyperfiltration (focal glomerulosclerosis [FGS] associated with vesicoureteral reflux [VUR], reduction of renal mass, proteinuria associated with
obesity
, sclerotic phase of idiopathic crescentic
glomerulonephritis
[GN] in contrast with those of group II, in which membranous GN was the most frequent diagnosis. We prospectively investigated differences in the antiproteinuric effect of captopril, an antiotensin-converting enzyme inhibitor (ACEI); after 6 months of treatment, proteinuria decreased clearly in group I (7.1 +/- 1.7 to 3.7 +/- 1.7 g/d; P less than 0.001), whereas no significant changes were observed in group II (8.1 +/- 2.4 to 8.8 +/- 4 g/d). Serum creatinine (Scr) remained stable during captopril treatment in group I, whereas three patients in group II showed a worsening of renal function.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Nephrotic proteinuria without hypoalbuminemia: clinical characteristics and response to angiotensin-converting enzyme inhibition. 199 78
Isolated non inflammatory lesions of renal microarteries (eventually with mild thickening of tubular basement membranes, but with negative immunofluorescent glomerular studies) were observed in 25 patients (22 males) in whom renal biopsy have been performed for proteinuria (P). Selection criteria were: pathological lesions by definition; absence of hypertension (HT) in clinical and at the time of biopsy; minimum follow up of 4 years after the first statement of the proteinuria (4 to 29 years; mean 14 years). Three groups have been isolated: 1. 3 patients have had an acute glomerulonephritis followed by disappearance of proteinuria. It reappears 1 to 5 years later. HT was discovered 2, 8 and 11 years after the proteinuria. Renal failure occurred 1 and 3 years after HT. 2. 14 patients had hereditary or acquired vascular risk factors (
obesity
, smoking, ethylism). In 7, HT occurred 3 to 15 years after P. In 2, renal failure occurred 4 to 8 years later. 3. 8 patients had no vascular risk factor; in 3 of them Ht developed 7, 13 and 20 years after the first statement. A positive immunofluorescence with IgM or C3 on renal arterioles had been found in only 3 of the 10 patients who in group 2 and 3 became hypertensive. A proteinuria may precede the occurrence of HT without being induced by
glomerulonephritis
. Group 2 and 3 suggest that these renal lesions of arterial sclerosis precede and may be a factor of HT. Indeed, this entity may be considered as a prehypertensive condition.
...
PMID:[Primary microvascular lesions of the kidney or pre-hypertensive nephroangiosclerosis. 25 cases]. 309 92
The New Zealand
Obese
(NZO) mouse was studied as a potential model for autoimmune diabetes. NZO mice develop
obesity
, glucose intolerance, and insulin resistance, and have low-titer IgM antibodies to the insulin receptor. It is shown that they have circulating antibodies to both native DNA and denatured, single-stranded DNA. The antibody levels are higher in females, and, up to 6 mo of age, are comparable to those found in the related NZB X NZW F1 (NZB/W) mouse, a model for systemic lupus erythematosus. After 6 mo of age the antibody levels in NZO mice fall toward normal, in contrast to the persistently elevated levels in NZB/W mice. NZB/W mice are known to succumb to immune complex-mediated proliferative
glomerulonephritis
before 1 yr of age, whereas NZO mice survive. NZO kidneys exhibit light microscopic features of both diabetic and lupus nephropathies: glomerular proliferation, mesangial deposits, mild basement membrane thickening, glomerulosclerosis, eosinophilic nodules in some glomeruli, occasional hyalinization of the glomerular arterioles, and healing arteriolar inflammation. These changes are associated with glomerular deposition of immunoglobulin, especially IgM, in a granular pattern on fluorescent staining. The NZO mouse, therefore, has evidence of a generalized immune disorder and provides a model for studying the relationship between autoimmunity,
obesity
, and diabetes.
...
PMID:Diabetes is associated with autoimmunity in the New Zealand obese (NZO) mouse. 700 65
The post-renal transplant courses of 53 children and adolescents were evaluated for the prevalence and the etiology of hypertension. The blood pressures were averaged over specific time periods following transplantation and converted to percentile ranks according to standards for age. The number of antihypertensives employed to control blood pressure was assessed. Factors such as sex,
obesity
, race, donor source, antigen match, steroid administration, rejection, recurrent
glomerulonephritis
, pre-transplant nephrectomy, renal function and proteinuria were assessed as to their importance in producing hypertension or normotension in the post-transplant period. The average blood pressure was well within acceptable range shortly after transplantation. The patients requiring antihypertensives to control blood pressure dropped by two years post transplant. Chronic rejection was by far the most important factor influencing average blood pressure and the need to employ antihypertensives. Alternate-day prednisone and good graft function were important in establishing the normotensive state.
...
PMID:Hypertension in a pediatric and adolescent population following kidney transplantation. 704 20
The dynamics in schoolchildren's health status varies in time, as the incidence of some chronic diseases decreases and that of the others increases. As a result, the health status of schoolchildren has deteriorated due to a reduction in the number of healthy children and an increase in the number of chronic patients in the past 30 years. Nervous, immune (allergic), and blood diseases have become frequent. Chronic ENT diseases have been encountered more infrequently due to the noticeable reduction in the incidence rates of tonsillitis and otitis. The positive trend is that schoolchildren have no rheumatism, infective allergic myocarditis, chronic pneumonia and diffuse
glomerulonephritis
and that the prevalence of locomotor disorders, renal and metabolic (
obesity
) diseases is low. During school time, the health status of children slightly improves due to the lower incidence rates of chronic diseases and the higher proportion of healthy children, but it has remained still worse than it was 30 years ago. The formation of chronic diseases has been found to occur in health group II children, who have morphological and functional changes, in 50% of cases from the first to the sixth forms and in 20% of cases from the seventh to the tenth forms. The present-day children are characterized by a combination of abnormalities and functional disturbances. This all require active and timely prophylactic measures to block chronization at the premorbid stage. Lifestyle (to keep the hygienic school regime, to do exercises and to go in for sports), sociohygienic conditions and genetic factors have profound effects on the health status.
...
PMID:[The health status dynamics of schoolchildren and the importance of biomedical factors in its development]. 768 98
The benefits of treating severe Henoch-Schoenlein Purpura (HSP)
glomerulonephritis
have not been established. In this study, we evaluate the outcome of 21 children with severe HSP nephritis treated with corticosteroids and azathioprine. Between 1977 and 1995, 78 children (age range 1 to 16 years) were seen for evaluation of HSP. Thirty-one underwent kidney biopsy; indications included nephritic and/or nephrotic onset (15 patients), persistently decreased creatinine clearance (5 patients), or proteinuria > 4 g/24 h (11 patients). Twenty treated patients had diffuse mesangial proliferation with crescents in 6-100% (mean 40%) of glomeruli. One treated patient, not biopsied due to extreme
obesity
, had a creatinine clearance of 49 ml/min/1.73 m2 and proteinuria of 21.3 g/24 h. These 21 patients were initially treated with azathioprine and daily oral prednisone (13 patients) or i.v. methyl-prednisolone (8 patients), followed by azathioprine and alternate-day prednisone for 9-24 (mean 15) months. The average follow-up was 32 months. Over the course of follow-up, 19 treated patients showed a decline in hematuria (> 5 red blood cells/high power field) from 100% to 16% (p < 0.01), a fall in the serum creatinine from 1.71 +/- 2.20 to 0.78 +/- 0.25 mg/dl (p < 0.01), an increase in creatinine clearance from 76 +/- 43 to 122 +/- 26 ml/min/1.73 m2 (p < 0.01), and a reduction in proteinuria from 8.8 +/- 7.5 to 0.47 +/- 0.39 g/24 h (p < 0.01). Two treated patients progressed to end-stage renal failure. There was no difference in outcome comparing patients initially treated with prednisone versus methyl-prednisolone. These observations suggest that corticosteroid and azathioprine therapy is effective in crescentic HSP nephritis.
...
PMID:Response of crescentic Henoch-Schoenlein purpura nephritis to corticosteroid and azathioprine therapy. 949 Dec 79
The advent of gene targeting has led to the generation of several mouse strains deficient in select leukocyte adhesion receptors. These strains of mice have been very informative about the roles of cell adhesion molecules in leukocyte-endothelium interaction and have produced some surprises: roles for leukocyte adhesion receptors have been demonstrated in development as well as pathologies like
obesity
, and evidence for functional synergies between adhesion receptors have been provided. We attempt in this review to first outline the technique of gene targeting and give an overview of leukocyte adhesion receptors and mice deficient in these receptors. Second, we discuss models of experimental
glomerulonephritis
and what we have learned about leukocyte adhesion receptors in the pathogenesis of
glomerulonephritis
through studies in knockout mice.
...
PMID:Leukocyte-endothelial cell interactions - lessons from knockout mice. 1021 66
Serum mannose concentration increases in diabetic patients and correlates closely with blood glucose. In patients with
glomerulonephritis
, serum mannose and mannose/glucose ratio positively correlate with dyslipidemia and the extent of urinary protein excretion. We investigated whether changes in serum mannose mark subjects with features of metabolic syndrome, including
obesity
, hypertension, glucose intolerance, and dyslipidemia. The study comprised 20 patients with mean age of 68 (SD 11) years, body mass index 27.2 (SD 5.1) kg/m2, blood glucose 6.2 (SD 1.6) mmol/L, serum total cholesterol 6.3 (SD 1.2) mmol/L, triglyceride 2.0 (SD 0.08) mmol/L, uric acid 320 (SD 109) micromol/L, mannose 60.0 (SD 17) micromol/L, and mannose/glucose ratio 9.7 (SD 1.8) micromol/mmol. Serum mannose correlated with blood glucose (r=0.758, p=0.012), triglyceride (r=0.478, p=0.023), and HDL-cholesterol (r = approximately 0.427, p=0.022). Mannose/glucose ratio correlated with BMI (r=0.581, p=0.033), mannose (r=0.491, p=0.035), and uric acid (r=0.608, p=0.027). The rate of VLDL lipoprotein turnover may be instrumental in the regulation of serum mannose concentration. We conclude that an altered mannose metabolism is a novel consideration among the metabolic abnormalities in the metabolic syndrome.
...
PMID:Metabolic syndrome is associated with changes in D-mannose metabolism. 1069 Oct 51
Advanced glycation end products (AGE) contribute to diabetic tissue injury by two major mechanisms, i.e., the alteration of extracellular matrix architecture through nonenzymatic glycation, with formation of protein crosslinks, and the modulation of cellular functions through interactions with specific cell surface receptors, the best characterized of which is the receptor for AGE (RAGE). Recent evidence suggests that the AGE-RAGE interaction may also be promoted by inflammatory processes and oxidative cellular injury. To characterize the distributions of AGE and RAGE in diabetic kidneys and to determine their specificity for diabetic nephropathy, an immunohistochemical analysis of renal biopsies from patients with diabetic nephropathy (n = 26), hypertensive nephrosclerosis (n = 7), idiopathic focal segmental glomerulosclerosis (n = 11), focal sclerosis secondary to
obesity
(n = 7), and lupus nephritis (n = 11) and from normal control subjects (n = 2) was performed, using affinity-purified antibodies raised to RAGE and two subclasses of AGE, i.e., N(epsilon)-(carboxymethyl)-lysine (CML) and pentosidine (PENT). AGE were detected equally in diffuse and nodular diabetic nephropathy. CML was the major AGE detected in diabetic mesangium (96%), glomerular basement membranes (GBM) (42%), tubular basement membranes (85%), and vessel walls (96%). In diabetic nephropathy, PENT was preferentially located in interstitial collagen (90%) and was less consistently observed in vessel walls (54%), mesangium (77%), GBM (4%), and tubular basement membranes (31%). RAGE was expressed on normal podocytes and was upregulated in diabetic nephropathy. The restriction of RAGE mRNA expression to glomeruli was confirmed by reverse transcription-PCR analysis of microdissected renal tissue compartments. The extent of mesangial and GBM immunoreactivity for CML, but not PENT, was correlated with the severity of diabetic glomerulosclerosis, as assessed pathologically. CML and PENT were also identified in areas of glomerulosclerosis and arteriosclerosis in idiopathic and secondary focal segmental glomerulosclerosis, hypertensive nephrosclerosis, and lupus nephritis. In active lupus nephritis, CML and PENT were detected in the proliferative glomerular tufts and crescents. In conclusion, CML is a major AGE in renal basement membranes in diabetic nephropathy, and its accumulation involves upregulation of RAGE on podocytes. AGE are also accumulated in acute inflammatory
glomerulonephritis
secondary to systemic lupus erythematosus, possibly via enzymatic oxidation of glomerular matrix proteins.
...
PMID:Expression of advanced glycation end products and their cellular receptor RAGE in diabetic nephropathy and nondiabetic renal disease. 1096 90
The incidence of end-stage renal disease (ESRD) has risen considerably in the past two decades. This trend is partly due to the alarming rise in the incidence of type 2 diabetes over the same period, which in turn might be linked to the staggering increase in overweight and
obesity
. If these trends continue, ESRD can be expected not only to cause suffering of ever growing numbers of patients, but also to become an increasing financial as well as logistical burden on the health care system. Therefore, it is imperative not only to gain a better understanding of the molecular, cellular and metabolic mechanisms involved in renal pathology, but also to uncover treatment modalities, including lifestyle changes, that can help prevent and/or slow the progression of kidney pathogenesis. Insights into both of these aspects are provided by animal models of
obesity
and diabetes. It has long been known that food restriction, more so than restriction of any particular dietary component, can greatly enhance longevity in laboratory rodents. These findings are being extended into a variety of other mammals, including nonhuman primates. These studies have indicated that caloric restriction in nonobese laboratory animals does not primarily affect specific disease processes but rather nonspecifically slows the aging process. In contrast, a growing body of evidence suggests that in genetically obese animals, food restriction can prevent or greatly delay the onset of specific degenerative lesions, in particular
glomerulonephritis
associated with
obesity
and diabetes.
...
PMID:Calorie restriction in obesity: prevention of kidney disease in rodents. 1123 85
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