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

Upon entering into aestivation, Protopterus aethiopicus develops a respiratory acidosis. A slow compensatory increase in plasma bicarbonate suffices only to partially restore arterial pH toward normal. The cessation of water intake from the start of aestivation results in hemoconcentration and marked oliguria. The concentrations of most plasma constituents continue to increase progressively, and the electrolyte ratios change. The increase in urea concentration is disproportionately high for the degree of dehydration and constitutes an increasing fraction of total plasma osmolality. Acid-base and electrolyte balance do not reach a new equilibrium within 1 yr in the cocoon.
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PMID:Acid-base balance and plasma composition in the aestivating lungfish (Protopterus). 1 65

The acute intravenous and oral toxicity of single doses of paraquat dichloride was studied in the cynomolgus monkey. Renal handling and effects upon renal function were also investigated following an oral dose of [14C]paraquat. Clinical signs consisted of vomiting, anorexia and dyspnoea. By 48 h all animals showed signs of acute renal failure with oliguria, high plasma urea and SGPT levels and metabolic acidosis. Animals dosed orally showed similar, though less severe, signs to those dosed intravenously. The oral LD50 was approx. 70 mg paraquat cation/kg. Following an oral dose plasma levels peaked by 2 h, but were constant from 12 h to 24 h. Paraquat clearance was high initially and exceeded the creatinine and urea clearance, but fell off markedly after 14 h as renal failure developed. By 18 h urine production had ceased. It is concluded that acute renal failure and acute pulmonary damage are the main causes of death, with interstitial pulmonary fibrosis being a factor in animals surviving the acute phase.
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PMID:The toxicity and renal handling of paraquat in cynomolgus monkeys. 12 Jun 23

A study was performed on 30 patients diagnosed antomopathologically for malignant neoplasia of the lung (epidermoid carcinomas, adenocarcinomas, oat-cell carcinomas, and neoplasias which could not be definitely classified). The following parameters for blood and urine were determined: osmolality, sodium, potassium, urea, and creatinine. Osmotic free water, creatinine, sodium, and potassium clearances were also calculated, as well as the plasma osmolality/urinary osmolality ratio. The basic aim of our study was to investigate for the presence of disturbances in the metabolism of water and alterations in plasmatic and urinary osmolality in this type of tumor. These could appear as complete inadequate ADH secretion syndromes as discovered by Bartter and Schwartz or as incomplete syndromes (hypoosmolality and/or hyponatremia). Among the more significant results was the tendency toward oliguira seen in 44% of the patients and the high incidence of plasmatic hypoosmolality (31%). In three patients plasmatic hypoosmolality and hyponatremia were concommitant in repeated observations. A complete inadequate ADH secretion syndrome was discovered in another patient with an oat-cell carcinoma. He presented plasmatic hypoosmolality, hyponatremia, relative urinary hypertonia, and oliguria but not renal, suprarenal, or hepatic pathology.
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PMID:[Investigation of the hypoosmolal syndrome in carcinomas of the lung (author's transl)]. 22 78

The delayed onset of anuria/oliguria in acute tubular necrosis has been theorized to represent a complicating compartment syndrome, i.e., parenchymal swelling within an unyielding capsule. To test this proposition, 12 monkeys had suprarenal aortic cross-clamping, followed by unilateral renal decapsulation to create an experimental as well as a control kidney unit in the same animal. Histologic examination uniformly confirmed tubular necrosis at death or sacrifice. Subsequent split renal function studies (creatinine, urea, and free water clearances) indicated significantly greater maintenance of renal function by the decapsulated kidney than by its paired control. Clinical evaluation in 21 hemorrhagic shock patients, with the capsule of one kidney stripped, revealed on follow-up that 15 developed a renal failure consistent with acute tubular necrosis. Although three patients with polyuric failure died before split studies could be run and two others have been too recent for computer analysis to have been completed, nine of the remaining ten had significantly greater renal plasma flows (194 versus 121 ml/min M(2), p < .01) and significantly greater urine flows (.99 versus .18 ml/min M(2), p < .01) on the decapsulated side than on the control, as determined by differential renal scans. No significant difference in these same lateralized renal functions was noted in the tenth patient with renal failure and in the six survivors without renal failure. Renal decapsulation as prophylaxis reduced the anticipated incidence of oliguria/anuria from an expected 75% to 7% (p < .01) in these 21 shock patients. Such data suggest that delayed renal ischemia, possibly based on a compartment syndrome, may be the cause for a progression of acute tubular necrosis from polyuria to oliguria and then to anuria.
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PMID:Renal decapsulation in the prevention of post-ischemic oliguria. 40 54

ARF will continue to occur as more severely traumatized patients survive with better resuscitation. The incidence of ARF, however, appears to be steadily decreasing and ARF occurs only in patients with severe injury and multiple organ failure. ARF developing for the past three years in MIEMS was a nonoliguric variety in the majority of patients. Management of ORF with dialysis has been disappointing. Prevention of oliguria in ARF appears possible and may be one of the most important steps to decrease the morbidity and fatality rate. Further investigation is required to find the cause and optimum management of NORF.
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PMID:Changing patterns of posttraumatic acute renal failure. 43 16

The diagnostic value of renal concentrating capacity expressed as free water clearance (CH2O), in comparison with other routine criteria for the early identification of acute renal failure (ARF), was evaluated in 1,203 adult patients undergoing cardiac surgical procedures. On the basis of the appearance of pathologic CH2O values in the range of -20 to 0 ml/hour or more positive, reversible or irreversible ARF was observed in 90 (= 7.5%) of our patients. Mortality in the presence of ARF was 47%; total ARF mortality was 3.5%. CH2O was pathologic for the first time on an average of 1.6 days after operation. In contrast, routine ARF criteria reported in the literature, such as serum urea and creatinine at varying substrate levels or oliguria, allowed diagnosis 1 to 5.5 days later. Moreover, these parameters only partially and less frequently met the criteria for ARF at the different levels. Likewise, the incidence of ARF decreased to a minimum of 1.7% and the total ARF mortality to 1.3%, depending on the severity of the criteria used. Altogether, the occurrence of pathologic CH2O values proved to be the earliest, most frequent and most reliable criterion for the recognition of ARF following cardiac surgery with cardiac-pulmonary bypass.
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PMID:The diagnosis of acute renal failure (ARF) following cardiac surgery with cardio-pulmonary bypass. 49 20

Studies showing diminished cortical perfusion and reduced glomerular filtration in acute renal failure are apparently at odds with reports of a persistent nephrogram during urography in this disease. We followed the progression of nephrograms in eight dehydrated normal rats, in seven dehydrated rats treated with 12 mg/kg of mercuric chloride (nephrotoxic acute renal failure), and in nine dehydrated rats receiving 5 g/kg of IM-glycerol (myoglobinuric acute renal failure). To assess the capacity of our technique to identify a persistent, dense nephrogram, hemorrhagic hypotension (mean arterial pressure, 55-70 mm Hg) was induced in three rats. All rats showed nephrograms on magnification radiographs 1 minute following the injection of 1 cc/lb of sodium diatrizoate. Duplicate coded readings showed no prolongation of nephrograms in ARF-affected animals. Only the hypotensive rats manifested nephrograms on 2-hour radiographs. Some differing characteristics of nephrograms among the groups are explainable on the basis of differences in renal blood flow, as determined in separate experiments. Our findings would favor a preglomerular mechanism as the cause of oliguria in acute renal failure.
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PMID:Absence of a persistent nephrogram in experimental acute renal failure. 50 Mar 6

Over a period of 2 years, 82 patients out of 2,390 (3.43%) admitted to an intensive care unit developed acute renal failure (ARF). The diagnosis of ARF was based on the usual criteria of oliguria, a rising blood urea nitrogen and creatinine, urine sodium concentration greater than 20 mmol/l and a U/P osmolality ratio less than 1.1. In 9.2% of patients the latter two criteria were misleading. Sepsis was the commonest cause of vasomotor nephropathy but in 20.7% potentially nephrotoxic agents had been administered before development of ARF. Overall mortality was 73.2%, with patients older than 50 years of age having the highest mortality. ARF is associated with prolonged bed occupancy--an average of 59.8 days for the dialysed patients with ARF versus an average length of stay of 8.4 days for the hospital overall.
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PMID:Aetiology, diagnosis, treatment and prognosis of acute renal failure in an intensive care unit. 54 32

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

To investigate three possible causes of the acute hemolysis in the hemolytic-uremic syndrome, we studied prospectively 207 children and 34 adults with shigellosis in Bangladesh. Nineteen children showed acute hemolytic anemia, a leukemoid reaction, thrombocytopenia and oliguria; nine other had, in addition, a serum urea nitrogen level of over 100 mg per diciliter. Eight of the nine had pseudomembranous colitis, and six of the nine died. The frequency of bacteremia was similar in all grades of shigellosis. Circulating immune complexes were found in 10 of 20 patients with uncomplicated shigellosis and in four of six with severe hemolytic-uremic syndrome. Limulus assay for endotoxemia was positive in nine of 18 patients with hemolysis (50 per cent) and three of 61 with uncomplicated shigellosis (5 per cent) (P less than 0.001). These data support the hypothesis that severe colitis in shigellosis is associated with circulating endotoxin from the colon producing coagulopathy, renal microangiopathy and hemolytic anemia.
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PMID:Hemolytic-uremic syndrome after shigellosis. Relation to endotoxemia and circulating immune complexes. 64 73


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