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

The aim of the study presented here was to investigate whether, in patients showing immediate graft function after renal transplantation, cold-ischemia and reperfusion lead to damage of the glomerular basement membrane and consequently to a loss of heparan sulfate proteoglycans. Loss of these heparan sulfate proteoglycans is a major cause of proteinuria. Time-dependent changes in urinary excretion rates of heparan sulfate proteoglycans but also of total protein, albumin, low- and high-molecular-weight proteins were analyzed quantitatively and by polyacrylamid-gel-electrophoresis in eight patients. Immediately after renal transplantation, severe proteinuria with an excretion rate of up to 251 +/- 108 mg/min was apparent and rapidly declined within 24 h to 4.11 +/- 2.80 mg/min. The gel-electrophoretic pattern showed a nonselective glomerular and tubular proteinuria. The excretion rate of heparan sulfate proteoglycan was increased in this initial reperfusion phase (up to 7 h), most probably because of ischemia- and reperfusion-induced damage of the glomerular basement membrane. The initial nonselective glomerular proteinuria disappeared within 48 h, changing to a mild selective glomerular proteinuria. In this second phase (7 to 48 h), lower levels of heparan sulfate proteoglycan excretion were observed (0.54 +/- 0.54 microgram/min versus 1.66 +/- 1.93 micrograms/min, P < 0.05). However, during the repair process of the glomerular basement membrane, heparan sulfate proteoglycan is synthesized de novo, leading to an increasing heparan sulfate proteoglycan content of the glomerular basement membrane. This second phase is paralleled by the change from a nonselective to a selective glomerular proteinuria. In the third phase, when the heparan sulfate proteoglycan content of the glomerular basement membrane normalizes, glomerular proteinuria was abolished in most of the patients.
...
PMID:Association between heparan sulfate proteoglycan excretion and proteinuria after renal transplantation. 898 47

Renal transplantation using infant donors is associated with significantly less graft survival (GS) and increased morbidity, especially from very young and small donors. We report our results using specific strategies to determine which age and size donor require en bloc renal transplant reconstruction and associated immunologic protocols for optimization of subsequent GS. Forty cadaveric pediatric en bloc renal transplants were performed. Mean donor age was 23.6+/-18.4 months with subgroups: 2-12 months, n=14; 13-24 months, n=19; and 25-60 months, n=7. Mean donor weight was 14.4+/-4.5 kg. All kidneys were placed in primary, nonsensitized (peak PRA = 7.9+/-5.6%) adult (41.6+/-16 years) recipients. Low weight was preferred (62.4+/-12.8 kg). Mean cold ischemia time was 26.9+/-8.6 hr. Immunosuppression consisted of quadruple immunosuppression (QI) with OKT3 induction. All patients had ureteral stents placed intraoperatively. Mean follow-up was 16.9 months. Actuarial GS at 12, 24, and 33 months were 100% (n=13), 85% (n=20), and 71% (n=7), respectively. Total GS was 35/40=88%. All grafts functioned immediately and there were no technical losses. Biopsy proven rejections occurred in 12 (30%) patients, developing at 16-167 days postoperatively (mean = 50.3 days). Mean serum creatinine at one week and 1, 6, 12, and 18 months were 2.1+/-2.0, 1.5+/-0.8, 1.3+/-0.5, 1.1+/-0.4, and 0.9+/-0.4 mg/dl, respectively. Functional isotopic renography, as well as sonographic monitoring reflected rapid initial and continued growth in these kidneys. Mean BP at 12 and 24 months postoperatively were 145/83+/-18/13 and 122/76+/-20/10 mmHg, respectively, with no significant proteinuria noted. Excellent results with minimal complications utilizing very small and young infant donors can be achieved with QI immunosuppression, and selection of low immune reactive and noncomplicated adult recipients. Additionally, maximal renal dosing by minimizing recipient weight may prevent future hyperfiltration damage.
...
PMID:Immunologic and patient selection strategies for successful utilization of less than 15 kg pediatric donor kidneys--long term experiences with 40 transplants. 902 Mar 23

Long-term prognosis in kidney transplant recipients depends on multiple factors. To investigate whether mild proteinuria within the first 6 months following transplantation is a determinant of the long-term function and survival of kidney transplants, 357 patients transplanted between 1980 and 1990 were retrospectively examined over a period of 5 years. 25.5% of the patients developed an early proteinuria between 0.25 and 1.0 g/day over 6 or more months. This group was well matched concerning gender, age of recipient, underlying disease, time on hemodialysis, donor age, cold ischemia time and HLA mismatches with the group without proteinuria (n = 266). Five-year transplant survival in the group with proteinuria was 58.9% in contrast to 85.6% in recipients without proteinuria. Intermittent proteinuria did not worsen long-term prognosis. Proteinuria of 12 months or longer further reduced 5-year transplant survival to 42.6%. Over the whole observation period, serum creatinine in recipients with proteinuria was about 0.5 mg/dl higher as compared with patients without proteinuria. No correlation between proteinuria and gender, age of recipient, duration of hemodialysis, age of donor, cold ischemia time and mismatches could be detected. In conclusion, early proteinuria apparently is not due to established donor or recipient factors. However, there is a strong correlation of proteinuria with worse transplant function and survival.
...
PMID:Influence of proteinuria on long-term transplant survival in kidney transplant recipients. 904 35

Ischemic injury to cadaver organs is a major risk factor for development of chronic organ dysfunction. We have recently shown that the B7 costimulatory pathway plays a critical role in early organ dysfunction developing after renal cold ischemia/reperfusion injury. We extended these observations to investigate the role of this pathway in the development and progression of chronic organ dysfunction following such injury. Uninephrectomized rats which underwent cold ischemia/reperfusion injury developed progressive proteinuria as compared to uninephrectomized controls. Animals treated with CTLA4Ig, which blocks B7 costimulation, starting on the day of injury had significantly better long-term survival and developed significantly less proteinuria than control animals treated with control Ig. RT-PCR analysis of kidney tissue showed significant reduction in expression of activation and inflammatory cytokines, chemoattractants, and growth factors, as compared to controls. Delaying administration of CTLA4Ig for one week, but not four weeks, after injury was still effective in ameliorating development of progressive proteinuria. Interestingly, selective blockade of B7-1 by a mutant form of CTLA4Ig had no effect on early or chronic organ dysfunction. These findings indicate the long-term functional and molecular consequences of experimental cold ischemia/reperfusion injury, and suggest that B7-2 is critical in the development of organ dysfunction following ischemic injury, even in the absence of alloantigen.
...
PMID:CD28-b7 blockade in organ dysfunction secondary to cold ischemia/reperfusion injury. 940 22

We studied 733 cadaveric renal transplant patients (747 transplants) under cyclosporin immunosuppression, to: (i) establish the risk profile for acute renal failure (ARF) after renal transplantation in a unit using many sub-optimal donors; (ii) assess the long-term prognostic relevance of ARF; and (iii) explore the synergistic prognostic significance of delayed graft function and acute rejection during the early post-transplant period. Transplanting from a non-heart-beating or elderly donor, protracted cold ischaemia, haemodialysis immediately before transplant surgery, poor HLA matching, and grafting to a hypersensitized recipient without residual renal function, all independently predicted delayed graft function. This delay had no detrimental effect on patient or graft survival, but prolonged ARF was associated with increased mortality from infection. Late markers of graft dysfunction (poor graft function, proteinuria, hypertension) were highly prevalent among grafts affected by ARF, specially in prolonged ARF. Delayed graft function and early acute rejection showed a definite, albeit not strong, additive impact on late graft survival, and also on the prevalence of late markers of graft dysfunction.
...
PMID:The prognostic significance of acute renal failure after renal transplantation in patients treated with cyclosporin. 951 10

Post-reperfusion inflammation as well as anti-allograft response occur following kidney transplantation. We evaluated tissue damage by multiple renal indicators and searched for rejection predictors forewarning serum creatinine upturns. Twenty recipients (43 +/- 9 y; donors' age 35 +/- 16 y) of first renal grafts were studied. All through their hospital stay (35 +/- 18 d, range 17-75 d) we measured serum levels of urea, creatinine and electrolytes along with urinary excretion rates of total protein, albumin, enzymes (GGT, NAG, AAP) and electrolytes. During the period of observation, peaks were seen on the 1st day for serum creatinine, serum K+ and urine albumin output; on the 2nd day for urine Na+, GGT, AAP and protein excretion rates; on the 4th day for urea and creatinine outputs; on the 5th day for NAG output. On the 14th day, serum urea and creatinine as well as urine GGT, NAG, AAP, albumin and total protein were still elevated compared to 20 healthy control subjects. Delayed/slow graft function was observed in six recipients with higher pre-transplantation plasma lipids and lower donor HDL cholesterol. Hospital stay time was correlated with need for post-transplantation dialysis (p = 0.01) and recipient proteinuria by time 0 (TO) to day 3 (p = 0.02). Cold ischemia time was positively associated with 0-3 d serum creatinine, 0-3 d urinary urea and protein outputs (multiple r 0.9, p < 0.001). Multivariate analysis of longitudinal data showed that recipients' serum creatinine was positively correlated (p < 0.001) with urine AAP and negatively correlated with urine albumin, with diuresis volume and urine creatinine (p < 0.01). Serum creatinine elevations were preceded (previous 1-7 d) by increases in urinary indicators, the probability being higher in the presence of multiple simultaneous abnormalities. Useful parameters predictive of favorable graft outcome prior to transplantation included a brief cold ischemia time and a normal donor/recipient serum lipoprotein profile. Following transplantation, useful parameters were a high diuresis volume at time zero along with low urine NAG and high albumin outputs; early (first opst-graft 3 d) polyuria, low urea and GGT, high K, NAG and total protein excretions.
...
PMID:Urinary excretion rates of multiple renal indicators after kidney transplantation: clinical significance for early graft outcome. 957 59

A 22-year-old woman began to have the symptoms of anorexia, high fever, cough and general fatigue from June of 1997. She was admitted in our hospital on Aug. 8th, 1997 for the further detail examination because of pancytopenia and positive antinuclear antibody (ANA). Her laboratory findings and clinical symptoms were compatible with systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE) such as leukopenia, proteinuria, hypocomplementemia, positive ANA, elevated titer of autoantibodies including anti-DNA, anti-Sm, anti-RNP antibodies, polyarthralgia and photosensitivity. The administration of oral prednisolone (40 mg/day) was started on Aug. 15th, 1997 under the diagnosis of SLE. However, she had severe abdominal pain in epigastrium with elevated serum amylase, ascites and dull shape of pancreas tail by CT scan compatible with acute pancreatitis. On Aug. 18th, her general condition was worsening with fever, epigastralgia, abdominal distension, anemia, weak palpation of radial artery, hypotension, tachycardia, shallow breathing and cold sensation on both extremities as shock. In spite of steroid pulse therapy with nafamostat mesilate intraarterial infusion, her condition was not improved. The dose of 50 mg/day of cyclophosphamide was added to the regimen on Aug. 22nd. Then, gradually her condition started to be restored. Anemia, leukopenia, hypocomplementemia continued. Second steroid pulse therapy was done on Sep. 5th. After then, she became better in her clinical symptoms and laboratory data. The dose of PSL was tapered to 15 mg/day and 7.5 mg/day update of Oct. 1998 without the pseudcysts found after pancreatitis. She is a rare case who recovered from severe acute pancreatitis due to SLE itself.
...
PMID:[A case of systemic lupus erythematosus associated with severe acute pancreatitis]. 1043 57

We encountered a patient with megaureter-megacystis syndrome showing a giant bladder and dilated ureters with marked reflux, which is very rare; to our knowledge, only 2 patients have been reported in Japan. The patient was a 4-year-old boy, who showed inborn polyposia and polyuria, and proteinuria at the age of 1 year. He visited the pediatric department in our hospital complaining of cold-like symptoms, stomachache and diarrhea. Urinary infection and kidney dysfunction were observed, and the patient was hospitalized for close examination. Bilateral pyelocaliceal hydronephrosis was detected by ultrasonography, and the patient was referred to our department. CT revealed bilateral hydronephrosis (right atrophic kidney), hydroureters and megacystis. Bilateral grade V vesicoureteral reflux, an increase in the bladder volume (> 300 ml), and urination without residual urine were noted by voiding cystourethrography. Uroflowmetry revealed that maximum flow rate was 21.6 ml/sec, voided volume was 110 ml, and residual volume was 24 ml. From these examinations, the patient was diagnosed as having megaureter-megacystis syndrome, and underwent antireflux operation of the bilateral ureters using Cohen's procedures.
...
PMID:[The so-called megaureter-megacystis syndrome: a case report]. 1051 89

As a consequence of an advancing discrepancy between supply of suitable grafts and demand from potential recipients, less than optimal organs are increasingly being used. Although clinical studies demonstrate the involvement of various risk factors, including donor age and duration of ischemia on long-term graft outcome, their individual contribution and correlation has not been followed experimentally. After cold ischemic times of 5, 60, and 120 min, kidney allografts of 3-, 12-, and 18-mo-old Fischer 344 donors were transplanted into 3-mo-old Lewis rats. Age-related changes were examined in matched native uninephrectomized controls. Proteinuria and creatinine clearance were determined, and histologic and immunohistologic studies were assessed and quantified at the end of the observation period (20 wk). All grafts functioned satisfactorily with the exception of one graft each from 12- and 18-mo-old donors with prolonged ischemia (120 min). Functional deterioration and structural changes progressed in parallel to increasing donor age and prolonged ischemia. The impact of expanded ischemia was particularly detrimental in grafts from older donor animals. Donor age and duration of ischemia act in a synergistic manner in our model. Brief ischemic times seem of particular relevance when grafts from older donors are being used.
...
PMID:Contribution of prolonged ischemia and donor age to chronic renal allograft dysfunction. 1086 89

Proteinuria is a risks factor that accelerates the progression of renal insufficiency by several mechanisms. In the renal transplant proteinuria is a predictor of progressive renal insufficiency and it is associated with poor patient and graft survival. We have performed a longitudinal observational case-control study to defect and quantify proteinuria in a group of 100 cadaveric renal transplant recipients and to evaluate the influence of several factors on its appearance. We have considered the variables age and sex of the donor and recipient, number of HLA-DR, A and B mismatches, cold ischemia time, basal renal disease, initial immunosuppression, immediate versus delayed graft function and acute rejection. Three patients who did with a functioning graft were excluded from the analysis of the data. All variables were analysed in a regression model of multivariate analysis. Proteinuria in the moths 1, 3, 6, 9 and 12 was: 0.38 +/- 0.27 g/day, 0.38 +/- 0.32 g/day, 0.44 +/- 0.99 g/day, 0.42 +/- 0.58 g/day and 0.37 +/- 0.54 g/day, respectively. We analysed the profile of the proteinuria in each patient individually. Fifty three patients (54.6%) did not develop proteinuria, 12 patients (12.4%) had transient initial proteinuria, 23 patients (23.7%) had persistent proteinuria and 9 patients (9.3%) had progressive proteinuria. The renal function differed between groups. Higher creatinine levels were found in the patients with persistent proteinuria and those with progressive proteinuria. We analysed the patients according to several variables. The age of the donor was higher in the group of patients with persistent proteinuria and the incidence of acute rejection was higher in the group of patients who developed progressive proteinuria, with differences statistically significant. There was no difference in the univariate analysis in the other variables considered. The multivariate analysis confirms that the age of the donor and the basal glomerular disease predict persistent proteinuria and acute rejection predicts progressive proteinuria. According to our study, proteinuria is frequent in the renal transplant recipient with different evolutionary profiles. Two types are associated with bad renal function and have different predictive factors. We encourage the use of drugs which reduce proteinuria.
...
PMID:[Changing profiles of proteinuria in renal transplantation. Predictive factors for its appearance]. 1236 27


<< Previous 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 Next >>