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Query: UMLS:C0033687 (
proteinuria
)
24,015
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The nephrotic syndrome may be associated with several complications caused by severe
proteinuria
. The consequences of severe renal protein loss are disturbances of water and electrolyte metabolism, thromboses and thromboembolic complications, hyperlipidemia with accelerated
atherosclerosis
and, finally, some other complications due to the decreased oncotic pressure and the renal loss of transport globulins and immunoglobulins. Diagnosis and treatment of these complications are important in the management of patients with nephrotic syndrome. In the present study, the frequency and localization of thromboses and thromboembolic complications in 11 patients with nephrotic syndrome are described. In addition, factors which are known to be responsible for the hypercoagulable state in nephrotic syndrome were evaluated and correlated to the thromboembolic complications in these patients. An important finding was that in all patients with thromboses and thromboembolic complications, the serum albumin concentrations were below 2 g/100 ml, whereas, with one exception, serum albumin levels were above 2 g/100 ml in cases without thromboembolic complications. Our results indicate that serum albumin levels may be used as an indirect parameter to assess the risk of thromboembolic complications in patients with nephrotic syndrome.
...
PMID:[Complications of nephrotic syndrome with special reference to thromboembolic accidents]. 37 Sep 77
A new strain of rat characterized by genetic obesity, endogenous hyperlipidemia, and hypertension was obtained in this laboratory. The abnormal phenotype is inherited as a homozygous recessive trait. The animals exhibit marked hypertriglyceridemia, moderate hypercholesterolemia, and an electrophoretic pattern resembling that of human Type IV hyperlipoproteinemia. The average life-span is less than 1 year, due largely to the development of premature renal and vascular disease. The kidney lesion has both glomerulonephritic and nephrosclerotic components and is accompanied by marked
proteinuria
. About 12% of animals develop urinary tract calculi. The vascular disease consists of fibrous and fatty-fibrous intimal plaques, and polyarteritis. The obese animal offers a useful model for investigating abnormal lipid metabolism and the etiology and pathogenesis of
atherosclerosis
.
...
PMID:Pathologic findings and laboratory data in a new strain of obese hypertensive rats. 117 27
Nephrotic patients with persistent
proteinuria
also have various lipid abnormalities that may promote
atherosclerosis
and more rapid progression of renal disease. We aimed to find out whether dietary manipulation can correct the hyperlipidaemia found in these patients. After a baseline control period of 8 weeks on their usual diets, 20 untreated patients with chronic glomerular diseases, stable long-lasting severe
proteinuria
(5.9 [SD 3.4] g/24 h) and hyperlipidaemia (mean serum cholesterol 8.69 [3.34] mmol/l) ate a vegetarian soy diet for 8 weeks. The diet was low in fat (28% of total calories) and protein (0.71 [0.36] g/kg ideal body weight daily), cholesterol free, and rich in monounsaturated and polyunsaturated fatty acids (polyunsaturated/saturated ratio 2.5) and in fibre (40 g/day). After the diet period the patients resumed their usual diets for 8 weeks (washout period). During the soy-diet period there were significant falls in serum cholesterol (total, low-density lipoprotein, and high-density lipoprotein) and apolipoproteins A and B, but serum triglyceride concentrations did not change. Urinary protein excretion fell significantly. The concentrations of all lipid fractions and the amount of
proteinuria
tended to return towards baseline values during the washout period. We do not know whether the favourable effect of this dietary manipulation on
proteinuria
was due to the qualitative or quantitative modifications of dietary protein intake or was a direct consequence of the manipulation of dietary lipid intake.
...
PMID:Effect of vegetarian soy diet on hyperlipidaemia in nephrotic syndrome. 134 66
The development of the nephrotic syndrome is associated with a lipid profile characterized by increased total and low density lipoprotein cholesterol. Although total high density lipoprotein (HDL) values may be in the normal range, there is frequently abnormalities of HDL subclasses, with reduction of the mature HDL2 subfraction. While these lipid changes may be considered a risk for
atherosclerosis
, they revert to normal with remission of the nephrotic syndrome. However, with chronic nephrotic range
proteinuria
, these abnormalities persist and may also be associated with increased levels of lipoprotein (a), increased levels of very light density lipoprotein and further reductions in HDL. These factors could all contribute to greater risk for
atherosclerosis
. Although coronary artery disease is frequently seen in patients with end-stage renal disease, and many uncontrolled studies in patients with chronic nephrotic syndrome have suggested an increased prevalence of cardiovascular disease, no prospective studies to evaluate relationship between lipid abnormalities and cardiac disease have been performed in patients with the nephrotic syndrome. Recent experimental data have also suggested a relationship between hyperlipidemia and progressive renal injury. Unfortunately, human epidemiological data are incomplete in correlating lipid changes with renal disease in patients with chronic nephrotic syndrome. No therapeutic trials have tested whether or not pharmacologic interventions will benefit either the cardiac or renal disease that ensues in patients with chronic persistent nephrotic syndrome. Thus, considerably more data are needed to help clarify this important area.
...
PMID:Is the aggressive management of hyperlipidemia in nephrotic syndrome mandatory? 140 64
The nephrotic syndrome is characterized by
proteinuria
, hypoalbuminemia and hypercholesterolemia. Hypercholesterolemia is in some cases a risk factor for
atherosclerosis
in this group of patients. The lipid plasma spectrum was studied in 45 patients with the nephrotic syndrome. Most pronounced changes of the lipid composition of the plasma were revealed in patients with systemic lupus erythematosus and a special form of mesangio-proliferative glomerulonephritis which is characterized by a torpid course and rapid development of chronic renal failure. Plasma atherogenicity was calculated according to the index of plasma atherogenicity. A high atherogenicity index was revealed in patients with an association of the nephrotic syndrome and arterial hypertension. Plasma atherogenicity is determined mainly by the level of high-density-lipoprotein cholesterol.
...
PMID:[Lipidemia in the nephrotic syndrome and the atherogenicity of the plasma]. 145 41
The most serious complication of diabetes mellitus is clinical nephropathy. The development of persistent
proteinuria
(urinary excretion of more than 300 mg albumin/24 hours) implies an extremely high risk of early death. Renal failure is the most frequent cause of death but the mortality of cardiovascular diseases is also increased. Besides the link between albuminuria (nephropathy) and
atherosclerosis
in coronary arteries, albuminuria is also a predictor of microangiopathy in other organs than the kidneys. The annual incidence of proliferative retinopathy in early nephropathy is 10-15% compared to only 1% in patients without nephropathy. Also signs of cardiomyopathy have been demonstrated in early nephropathy. Further we have described markers of universal endothelial damage in these patients, and we hypothesize that albuminuria not only is a predictor of renal disease but also of widespread vascular disease. Long-term improvement of metabolic control by use of insulin infusion pumps and early antihypertensive treatment seem to stop the further progression of early diabetic nephropathy and to significantly improve the prognosis of clinical nephropathy.
...
PMID:Diabetic retinopathy, nephropathy and neuropathy. Generalized vascular damage in insulin-dependent diabetic patients. 149 Jun 95
Patients with the clinical diagnosis of ischemic heart disease who were found to be free of significant coronary artery atherosclerotic disease (n = 150) underwent coronary vasodilator reserve testing, 2-dimensional echocardiography, and dipyridamole limited-stress thallium testing. After exclusions (predominantly for technically poor coronary artery Doppler signals or suboptimal echocardiography), 100 patients formed the study population. The purpose was to characterize typical cardiac and coronary artery findings in hypertensive patients with severe left ventricular (LV) hypertrophy (n = 15) and to investigate the evidence for myocardial ischemia unrelated to coronary
atherosclerosis
in early and advanced hypertensive heart disease. Normotensive and hypertensive control groups without LV hypertrophy (n = 12 and 34, respectively) were used for comparison. Severe LV hypertrophy was defined as LV mass index greater than or equal to 50% above established gender specific norms using 2-dimensional-directed M-mode echocardiography and the cube equation corrected to agree with necropsy estimates of mass. Clinical characteristics more often associated with severe LV hypertrophy were black race (67%), diabetes mellitus (33%),
proteinuria
(47%) and elevated creatinine (1.5 +/- 0.9 mg/dl). Baseline electrocardiograms and dipyridamole limited-stress thallium scans were highly likely to be abnormal (94 and 73%, respectively). Both eccentric and concentric cardiac hypertrophies were found in the severe group. Ejection fraction was significantly lower (0.51 vs 0.68, p = 0.002) and basal coronary flow velocity higher (12.0 vs 5.0 cm/s, p = 0.0004) among these patients when compared with normotensive control patients. Coronary flow reserve did not differ between control groups but was significantly depressed in patients with severe LV hypertrophy (2.5 vs 3.9, p = 0.001).(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Morphologic, hemodynamic and coronary perfusion characteristics in severe left ventricular hypertrophy secondary to systemic hypertension and evidence for nonatherosclerotic myocardial ischemia. 153 Sep 94
Apparently the incidence of coronary artery disease in systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE) has been increasing. However, most of the cases had been treated with corticosteroids, and had atherosclerotic lesions in the coronary arterial tree. A 21-year-old man with latent and untreated SLE had an attack of acute myocardial infarction. Coronary arteriography showed eccentric stenotic lesion at the proximal segment of the right coronary artery. One week later, in the 2nd coronary arteriography, this stenotic lesion was not able to be recognized. We supposed that the coronary artery occlusion was due to thrombus formation, and was not related to
atherosclerosis
, arteritis and embolus. He had no coronary risk factors. Laboratory data showed lymphocytopenia,
proteinuria
, positive antinuclear antibody, and positive LE cell, and the case was diagnosed as SLE. Subsequent investigations showed the presence of antibodies to cardiolipin. It was suggested that anticardiolipin antibody and other thrombogenic factors were the causes of the coronary occlusive thrombosis in this patient with SLE.
...
PMID:[A case of myocardial infarction in a young man with systemic lupus erythematosus]. 158 50
Diabetic patients who develop
proteinuria
show a marked increase in cardiovascular morbidity and mortality. The precise pathogenesis of human diabetic kidney disease and the factors responsible for the susceptibility to it remain, in part, obscure. However, there is now evidence that renal disease clusters in families and that genetic factors may be of central importance in determining susceptibility. Predisposition to arterial hypertension has been suggested as playing a contributory role in the development of kidney disease. Hypertrophic processes may be implicated in the susceptibility to arterial wall damage and glomerular injury in diabetes. Interestingly, fibroblasts of patients with diabetic nephropathy show a higher Na+/H+ antiport activity and a greater 3H-thymidine incorporation into DNA than fibroblasts of diabetic patients without nephropathy. The first clinical signs of renal involvement are the appearance of microalbuminuria and a small elevation in arterial pressure. Mesangial expansion accompanies these changes. Microalbuminuria is associated with abnormalities of lipoprotein profiles and higher Na+/Li+ countertransport rates. The environmental changes brought about by diabetes could lead in susceptible individuals to increased systemic and intraglomerular pressures on the one hand and to mesangial expansion on the other. These two processes would cause
proteinuria
and glomerulosclerosis. Lipid abnormalities may further aggravate the renal histological damage and, in combination with hypertension, contribute to the accelerated
atherosclerosis
typical of patients with diabetic kidney disease. A vicious circle would thus be triggered, involving reduction in renal function, further hypertension,
proteinuria
, glomerular obsolence and hyperlipidaemia, and eventually end-stage renal failure or premature cardiovascular death.
...
PMID:Risk factors for renal and cardiovascular disease in diabetic patients. 165 64
The abnormalities of lipid metabolism in nephrotic syndrome consist in an increase in total and low-density lipoprotein (LDL) cholesterol, apolipoproteins B (ApoB), C-II and C-III, associated in patients with heavier or marked hypoalbuminemia with an increase in triglycerides and very low-density lipoprotein (VLDL) cholesterol, while the high-density lipoproteins (HDL) are distributed abnormally (increased HDL3 fraction and decreased HDL2 fraction) and the Apo A-I to Apo B ratio is reduced. Both increased hepatic lipoprotein synthesis and reduced removal capacity contribute to this hyperlipidemia.
Proteinuria
may lead to the lipoprotein abnormalities through stimulation of VLDL synthesis by the liver induced by hypoalbuminemia, although it has been more recently suggested that urinary protein loss is associated with the urinary loss of some important cofactor for the regulation of lipid synthesis or catabolism. Treatment of lipid abnormalities in patients with long-lasting heavy
proteinuria
is mandatory, because they may cause or contribute to accelerated
atherosclerosis
, but also because they appear to accelerate progression of renal disease by favouring mesangial sclerosis. Four groups of lipid-lowering drugs have been tested: 1) bile acid-binding resins; 2) fibric acid; 3) probucol; 4) inhibitors of HMG CoA reductase. The drugs of the last group appear to be effective and safe in short-term experiments, but long-term studies are necessary to confirm their validity. A dietary approach, consisting in a strictly vegetarian soy diet, very rich in poly- and monounsaturates fatty acids, has been recently tested by the author, with very promising results.
...
PMID:Lipid changes in the nephrotic syndrome: new insights into pathomechanisms and treatment. 175 84
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