Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0033687 (proteinuria)
24,015 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Spontaneous renal artery embolism is not rare, but a correct diagnosis and appropriate treatment are often delayed. Clinical features and follow-up of 17 cases are reported. Cardiac disease or arrhythmias pre-existed in 16 patients. Initial symptoms included flank pain (seven cases), abdominal or chest pain alone (seven), and nausea and vomiting (eight). Fever (greater than or equal to 37.5 degree C) occurred in 10 cases and flank tenderness in only eight. Laboratory findings included leukocytosis, proteinuria, hematuria, and elevated levels of lactic dehydrogenase, serum glutamic-oxalacetic transaminase, serum glutamic-pyruvic transaminase, and alkaline phosphatase. Serum creatinine level exceeded 1.3 mg/dl in 88% and 4.0 mg/dl in 65%; four patients required dialysis. The diagnosis, made by scintiscan, arteriography, or both was often delayed. Renal embolization was bilateral in seven patients and unilateral in 10, with serum creatinine level above 4.0 mg/dl in five of the latter. Emboli to other organs caused early death; cardiovascular disease led to later death. With anticoagulants, renal function returned in patients surviving more than 1 month, even those with bilateral emboli. Thus, renal embolism is recognizable if the disease is considered, and a favorable outcome is common with long-term anticoagulants.
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PMID:Renal artery embolism: clinical features and long-term follow-up of 17 cases. 69 26

A retrospective record analysis of 112 juvenile-onset diabetics with nephropathy was conducted in order to determine their clinical course. The mean duration of diabetes at the onset of proteinuria was 17.3+/-6.0 years. Early renal failure appeared two years after the onset of protein-uria, and severe renal failure (mean serum creatinine level, 8.5+/-3.9 mg/100 ml) four years after the onset of proteinuria. The mean duration of life after the onset of severe renal failure was six months. The mortality was 53%, with 59% of the deaths attributable to renal failure and 36% to cardiovascular disease. All patients experienced progressive deterioration of renal function as well as the other complications of diabetes, the rate of progression being accelerated toward the end of the course. Juvenile onset diabetics should be considered for renal transplantation before the serum creatinine level reaches 8.5 mg/100 ml.
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PMID:The clinical course of diabetic nephropathy. 98 37

According to international consensus, microalbuminuria is defined as an elevated urinary albumin excretion rate (UAER) of 20-200 micrograms/min, which is below the proteinuric range. Nephropathy is a major complication in IDDM, seen in about 30% of patients after many years of diabetes. Increasing microalbuminuria is an excellent marker of subsequent nephropathy in these patients. End-stage diabetic nephropathy is also important in NIDDM, but in most Western countries this serious complication eventually develops in only 5 to 10% of cases, whereas the majority of patients die before this from cardiovascular disease. In completely healthy individuals there is no clear correlation between age and UAER, at least up to about 70 years of age. The mean excretion rate is around 5 micrograms/min, with a considerable range, but excretion only rarely exceeds 15 micrograms/min. In population studies among middle-aged and elderly individuals, higher values are seen. In newly diagnosed NIDDM about 40% of patients show an excretion rate above 15-20 micrograms/min. There is a significant but not precise correlation between albumin excretion rate and glycemic control, and usually UAER is reduced by standard antidiabetic treatment. In a considerable number of patients, high values cannot be reduced. In the course of NIDDM about 20-30% of patients show microalbuminuria. In patients with known diabetes, microalbuminuria is related not only to subsequent diabetic proteinuria, but even more strongly to early death, mainly from cardiovascular disease. Even slight microalbuminuria (15-40 mg/l in early morning urines) is clearly associated with increased mortality. In subjects with newly detected elevated blood glucose (by screening) microalbuminuria also predicts early mortality. The mechanisms are not established, but several arteriosclerosis-related risk factors are seen more frequently in patients with microalbuminuria, e.g. lipid abnormalities, elevated systolic blood pressure (BP), hemostatic measures, as well other markers of cardiovascular disease. Usually there is a significant but not precise correlation between BP and UAER in groups of patients throughout the course of diabetes. New studies document that also in the elderly background population microalbuminuria is a significant risk factor for early death, maybe even stronger than the established risk markers, which thus may be confounded with the presence of microalbuminuria.
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PMID:Microalbuminuria in non-insulin-dependent diabetes. 129 5

It is clearly recognized that patients with NIDDM have an increased risk for CHD. Recent data indicate that persons with glucose concentrations in the nondiabetic range also may be at higher risk for CHD. These associations may not represent cause and effect, however. Emerging data suggest that hyperglycemia and CHD may both arise from hyperinsulinemia/insulin resistance. In support of this hypothesis are studies showing that NIDDM and CHD have many risk factors in common, including age, elevated blood pressure, dyslipidemia, adiposity, and a central pattern of fat distribution. Moreover, these risk factors are frequent concomitants of hyperinsulinemia, itself a risk factor for CHD and perhaps for NIDDM. Although the duration of NIDDM has been infrequently related to risk of CHD, the authors hypothesize that duration of hyperinsulinemia/insulin resistance would be a more sensitive marker for risk of CHD. The relation of IDDM to CHD is a different situation. The etiological process leading to IDDM, namely the destruction of beta-cells in genetically predisposed persons, is not related to cardiovascular risk. However, IDDM patients still have an excess of CVD, the risk factors for which may vary according to the location of the diseases (e.g., LEAD vs. CHD). There is a strong relationship between proteinuria and CVD, which has led to a general theory of vascular complications in IDDM based on defective heparan sulfate metabolism (Steno hypothesis). Recent evidence challenges parts of this hypothesis, and the possibility is raised that a higher case-fatality rate in a subgroup of patients with both renal and CVD explains part of the renal connection, as does the general worsening of CVD risk factors.
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PMID:Diabetes mellitus and macrovascular complications. An epidemiological perspective. 139 12

Diabetes mellitus has become the leading cause of ESRF in the United States. Patients with diabetic nephropathy suffer high cardiovascular morbidity and mortality. Because only 40% of diabetic patients eventually develop diabetic kidney disease, it may be possible to devise primary prevention measures targeted at the subset of patients at risk. Recently, a predisposition to hypertension, a family history of diabetic nephropathy, and a family history of CVD disease each have been associated independently with the development of diabetic renal complication in IDDM. Risk factors for macrovascular damage, including raised arterial BP, dyslipidemia, and insulin resistance, can be detected early in the course of progression to diabetic nephropathy. These risk indicators recently have been shown to be already present at the stage of normoalbuminuria in those patients who eventually will progress to microalbuminuria. Treatment of established renal disease can only delay the onset of ESRF, and lowering of microalbuminuria has been shown to retard the onset of persistent proteinuria. However, no study to date has demonstrated prevention of renal disease in these patients. The ultimate aim should, therefore, be the prevention of the transition from normoalbuminuria to microalbuminuria in individuals who are at higher risk of diabetic renal disease and CVD.
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PMID:Diabetic nephropathy. Future avenue. 139 18

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.
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PMID:Is the aggressive management of hyperlipidemia in nephrotic syndrome mandatory? 140 64

Diabetic patients are at increased risk of cardiovascular disease, particularly when proteinuria is present. Lipoprotein(a)[Lp(a)] levels were assessed in 37 patients with insulin dependent (IDDM) and in 75 patients with non-insulin dependent (NIDDM) diabetes who showed varying degrees of proteinuria and glycaemic control. Median Lp(a) in 112 diabetic patients was significantly greater than in 116 healthy controls (113 vs 48 mg/L; p less than 0.01). 86 of the patients had first morning urine albumin concentration less than 30 mg/L (normoalbuminuria = NA), 16 patients 30-200 mg/L (microalbuminuria = MA) and ten patients greater than 200 mg/L (albuminuria = ALB). There was no significant difference in median Lp(a) concentration between the three groups (NA = 108, MA = 163, ALB = 98 mg/L; p greater than 0.5). No significant difference in median Lp(a) or NIDDM treated with oral agents and/or diet (120, 98, 115 mg/L respectively; p greater than 0.7). When the 86 NA patients were divided on the basis of median fructosamine concentration (357 mumol/L), no significant difference was found in median Lp(a) levels between those grouped below or above this median (98 mg/L vs 118 mg/L; p greater than 0.5). Across all diabetics studied there was no significant correlation present between Lp(a) and urinary protein or glycaemic control. These cross-sectional results suggest that median Lp(a) concentration is increased in both IDDM and NIDDM patients, but this increase is not related to the degree of proteinuria or short-term glycaemic control.
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PMID:Lipoprotein(a) concentration in diabetes: relationship to proteinuria and diabetes control. 144 18

The association between medical risk factors and the outcome of foot ulcers was evaluated in 208 consecutive diabetic patients with severe peripheral vascular disease (systolic toe blood pressure < or = 45 mm Hg). All patients were treated and followed by the same foot care team. Eighty patients healed primarily, 83 healed after a minor or major amputation, and 45 died. The systolic toe blood pressure was higher among primary healed (30 +/- 13 mm Hg) compared with amputated (22 +/- 15 mm Hg; p < 0.001) and deceased patients (20 +/- 14 mm Hg; p < 0.001). The patients were comparable regarding age, sex, and diabetes and wound duration. Only 41 (19%) patients had intermitten claudication, whereas 153 (77%) lacked palapble pedal pulses, 36% of whom healed primarily. Rest pain occurred in 72 (33%) patients, 38 (47%) of whom had an amputation and 18 (25%) who healed primarily (p < 0.01). Peripheral edema and proteinuria were more common among patients who healed after amputation compared with those who healed primarily (p < 0.001 and p < 0.01, respectively). Signs of sensory neuropathy were found in 158 (77%) patients. There were no differences concerning cardiovascular disease, smoking habits, or short-term metabolic control between patients who healed primarily or after an amputation. In conclusion, diabetic patients with foot ulcers and severe peripheral vascular disease with low systolic toe blood pressure were not excluded from the possibility of primary healing. The most important risk factors for amputation were a systolic toe pressure of less than 30 mm Hg, peripheral edema, rest pain, and proteinuria.
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PMID:Medical risk factors in diabetic patients with foot ulcers and severe peripheral vascular disease and their influence on outcome. 147 42

Non-insulin-dependent diabetes is associated with a 2-3 fold increased risk of cardiovascular disease. The poor relationship between this risk and either glycaemic control or diabetes duration suggests that some other aspect of the diabetic state, and not hyperglycaemia per se, mediates this risk. This other aspect of diabetes does not comprise alterations in recognized cardiovascular risk factors such as blood pressure or lipids, as the major component of the excess risk is in those diabetics with low levels of the other risk factors. It thus appears that there may be some factors that predispose both to diabetes and to cardiovascular disease. In insulin-dependent diabetics most of the excess risk of cardiovascular disease occurs in subjects with proteinuria, and microalbuminuria or proteinuria in non-insulin-dependent diabetics also substantially increases cardiovascular risk. Although changes in recognized risk factors in diabetics with nephropathy may partly explain these observations, we and others have shown that microalbuminuric non-diabetics also have a markedly increased prevalence of cardiovascular disease and substantially increased cardiovascular mortality. The observations that in insulin-dependent diabetics nephropathy shows family clustering and that these patients have elevated sodium lithium counter-transport rate, a possible genetic marker for the vascular complications of hypertension, have led to the suggestion that microalbuminuria may be a marker of a genetic predisposition to vascular disease.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Microalbuminuria: a genetic link between diabetes and cardiovascular disease? 148 48

In order to obtain more information on the quality of metabolic control and presence of secondary complications in type 2 diabetic patients treated in a hospital outpatient-clinic, we studied 124 of our diabetic patients (56 males, 68 females, age 65 (SD 11) years, duration of diabetes 9, range 1-32 years). HbA1c levels were 7.9% in patients on oral hypoglycaemic agents (n = 56), and 8.2% in insulin-treated patients (n = 59). Cholesterol and triglyceride levels tended to be lower in the insulin-treated patients. The prevalence of vascular abnormalities was high: in comparison with a population of general practice patients more patients had hypertension (56% vs 38%), coronary artery disease (48% vs 40%), and cerebrovascular disease (15% vs 6%). In addition, 35% of our diabetics had signs of peripheral artery disease. Retinopathy was present in 35 patients, microalbuminuria was found in 31 patients, proteinuria in 18 patients. The presence of microalbuminuria and proteinuria was a strong indicator for cardiovascular disease, polyneuropathy and retinopathy. The use of cardiovascular medication was high: 57 patients used antihypertensive therapy, 37 used diuretics, and 26 long-acting nitrates. Only 25 patients took no medication apart from to their diabetes therapy.
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PMID:[Regulation of diabetes and late complications in the ambulatory treatment of patients with Type II diabetes mellitus]. 174 45


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