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Query: UMLS:C0028961 (oliguria)
1,847 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Herein we discuss oliguria and azotemia in neonatal patients associated with perinatal complications, including difficult labor and delivery, and respiratory asphyxia. Renal failure in these patients is accompanied by proteinuria, microscopic hematuria and red blood cell casts, and it generally resolves in 7 to 10 days. Umbilical aortography can be helpful in determining the presence of normal kidneys in these patients.
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PMID:Perinatal asphyxia and renal failure in neonatal patients. 55 90

Report of 2 siblings, aged 12 1/2 and 9 years, with congenital hepatic fibrosis and polycystic disease of the kidneys. Hepatosplenomegaly had been noted in both children at birth. The younger child had suffered from oliguria aged 2 1/2 years. At diagnosis both children had low platelet counts, one also had leucopenia. The cystic disease of the kidneys was verified by angiography. Coeliacography and splenopartography were diagnostically irrelevant. The diagnosis only became apparent from liver biopsy which was performed during splenectomy. After splenectomy there was an increase of platelets, white blood cells and the clotting factors II, V and X. The three years follow-up showed a constancy of renal impairment and of the minor oesophageal varices observed in the one patient who did not have a spontaneous spleno-renal anastomosis. So far no bleeding has been observed. Porto caval anastomosis was omitted in both children. Pros and cons are being discussed.
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PMID:[Congenital hepatic fibrosis and polycystic disease of the kidneys in two siblings (author's transl)]. 55 82

Tubular obstruction in acute renal failure, postulated to cause the restricted excretory function, is suggested by raising intratubular pressure, to lower effective filtration pressure and diminish urine output. To examine the applicability of the obstruction hypothesis to the pathogenesis of experimental acute renal failure, proximal intratubular pressure and renal function were measured after renal insults of different origins and severity. Obstruction in acute renal failure kidneys should manifest itself as an increase in intratubular pressure for a least 12 h, for within this time period following ureteral occlusion, elevated pressures were found to reflect obstruction. The consistent existence of raised proximal intratubular pressure in acute renal failure kidneys could not be detected; ischaemic and nephrototoxic models were found in which no rise in intratubular pressure could be demonstrated. The oliguric nature of acute renal failure kidneys could not be verified; ischaemic and nephrotoxic models were found in which urine output was either normal or enhanced. Only for methaemoglobin induced renal failure were raised intratubular pressure, oliguria and casts concurrent. It is concluded that obstruction is not a consistent feature of experimental acute renal failure and that the obstruction hypothesis may be specifically applicable to only a few models, which include haeme pigment and folic acid induced renal failure.
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PMID:The early phase of experimental acute renal failure. I. Intratubular pressure and obstruction. 56 3

Hemoglobinuria occurred in two children following severe beating. The development of transient oliguria in one child and acute renal failure in the other emphasizes the importance of early recognition of these unusual complications in the syndrome of child abuse. Appropriate therapy should be given to prevent or lessen the severity of acute renal failure in this clinical situation.
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PMID:Child abuse and hemoglobinuria. 57 1

The study included 13 infants under one year complaining of acute gastroenteritis and dehydration who were still in oliguria or anuria 6 hours after rehydration was initiated. They were given a single dose of furosemide at the rate of 1 mg/kg and indices of U/P of urea and osmolarity, ratio urea/plasmatic creatinine, urinary volume, natriuresis and evolution of urea plasmatic figures and of creatinine were determined. Four patients showed no response to the diuretic; all of them died and through clinical and histopathologic evaluation they were classified as having acute renal insufficiency (IRA). The nine patients showing response to the drug with an increase of 5 to 30 times the control figure for urine and natriuresis showed an index U/P of urea of 5.52 +/- 3.82, U/P of osmolarity of 1.32 +/- 09, ratio urea/plasmatic creatinine of 58.7 +/- 19.8 and the figures for urea and creatinine in blood turned normal within 2 to 4 days. This was classed as prerenal azotemia (APR). It is thus concluded that furosemide appears to be a good parameter to make an early differentiation of cases with IRA, but that this measure, the same as the rest of the indices cannot show an absolute value since there are important variations in each individual.
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PMID:[Furosemide in the early diagnosis of acute renal insufficiency in the newborn infant]. 58 41

Burkitt's lymphoma presented atypically in a six-year-old Nigerian girl with back pain, oliguria and facial oedema following a fall at school. Two weeks later, she developed bilateral ptosis, hepatomegaly and ascites. Burkitt's lymphoma cells were found in both ascitic and cerebrospinal fluids. She was successfully treated with intravenous cyclophosphamide and intrathecal methotrexate but later developed fatal herpes zoster at the same time as the resident doctor developed chicken pox. Chart's review showed that she had been in brief contact with chicken pox during a short stay in a transit ward prior to full admission.
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PMID:Fatal herpes zoster in Burkitt's lymphoma following contact with chicken pox. 59 65

Oliguria, an easily recognizable symptom of postoperative acute renal failure, is analyzed schematically in terms of various diagnostic aspects and a pragmatic therapeutic procedure. Differentiation among pre-, intra-, and postrenal disturbances is important. Acute renal failure caused by simultaneous and often severe insufficiency of other organs, especially in combination with septicemia, still has a bad prognosis. Prophylaxis in the form of adequate volume substitution and shock therapy is urgent in each case.
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PMID:[Renal complications after general surgical operations (author's transl)]. 59 18

The RBF was measured by means of the 133Xe washout method in seventy patients with cirrhosis. The average RBF in controls was 3.72 ml/g-min compared with 2.34 in the patients without ascites, 1.82 in the decompensated patients, 1.47 in the patients with azotaemia and 1.13 in the patients with additional oliguria. The RBF was not significantly correlated to changes in the systemic or portal haemodynamics. Likewise it was not correlated to any biochemical test of liver function except the serum albumin concentration (P less than 0.01). From the present results it can be concluded that a reduction in RBF in cirrhosis frequently is present before sodium and water retention is clinically evident and before laboratory proof of impairment of renal function, and that a subnormal serum albumin concentration may be a factor among several leading to renal hypoperfusion in cirrhosis.
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PMID:Renal blood flow in cirrhosis: relation to systemic and portal haemodynamics and liver function. 59 43

The effects of intravenous dopamine were evaluated in 10 patients with severe but stable coronary artery disease, 17 consecutive patients with primary cardiogenic shock and 3 with severe congestive heart failure and oliguria. Dopamine infusion at 10 mug/kg.min in the 10 patients increased cardiac output by 35%, left ventricular peak dP/dt by 38%, left ventricular minute work index by 44% and mean systolic ejection rate by 7% (P < 0.01); heart rate, aortic pressure, left ventricular end-diastolic pressure and tension-time index were unchanged. For oxygen, potassium and lactate, arterial and coronary sinus values, coronary arteriovenous oxygen differences and myocardial extraction were unchanged. Hemodynamically 13 of the 17 patients in shock responded favourably to dopamine infusion (0.5 to 15 mug/kg.min), with decrease in heart rate, increase in systolic arterial pressure from 75 to 100 mm Hg (P <0.001), decrease in ventricular filling pressure from 20 to 16 mm Hg (P < 0.01) and increase in urine output from 10 to 100 ml/h (P < 0.01). Eleven of those patients survived the shock episode. A close relation was observed between the hemodynamic response to dopamine, survival from the shock episode and the time between onset of shock and initiation of therapy. Low rates of dopamine infusion induced diuresis in the three patients with severe cardiac failure.Dopamine thus seems to improve the mechanical efficiency of the heart in coronary artery disease. Cardiac output is selectively increased and myocardial ischemia does not appear to be induced; those beneficial effects as well as presumably specific action on renal flow and natriuresis, improve immediate survival from cardiogenic shock and severe heart failure.
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PMID:Hemodynamic and therapeutic effects of intravenous dopamine. 60 65

Dopamine was used as the primary catecholamine to treat circulatory shock, manifested by either systemic arterial hypotension or oliguria or both, in 24 children two days to 18 years (mean = 39 months) of age. The dose of dopamine ranged from 0.3 to 25 (mean = 9.3) microgram/kg/minute. The primary problem in four of the 24 patients was infection; two of these patients survived. The other 20 patients had congenital heart disease; 18 developed shock following surgery. Even of these 20 patients survived. With dopamine infusion the average systolic blood pressure increased from 69 +/- 4 (mean +/- SEM) to 81 +/- 4 mm Hg (P less than 0.001) and the mean urine output increased from 0.8 +/- 0.2 to 2.7 +/- 0.8 ml/kg/hour (P less than 0.05). Dopamine produced no adverse consequences. Thirteen patients responded favorably to the drug, with a significant increase in systemic arterial blood pressure and urine production. Four patients did not respond to dopamine and seven had an equivocal response. None of the four patients in whom dopamine was ineffective survived. Although only nine of the 20 patients who responded favorably or equivocally survived, conventional therapy had failed to alter the unfavoarble course in any of the patients.
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PMID:The use of dopamine in children. 62 15


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