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Query: UMLS:C0033687 (
proteinuria
)
24,015
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The Authors for a better knowledge of the senile kidney have studied the urinary proteins of a group of elderly people resident in a geriatric institute. For instance they have noted the percentage of
proteinuria
in the urine of 313 patients (M and F) with various pathology, making also an electrophoresis of the urinary proteins. They put in evidence that the subjects with
proteinuria
were older than others, without
proteinuria
, and noted the high incidence of the
infectious diseases
of the urinary tract in these patients. In a second time the urine of 247 apparently healthy elderly people has been studied. Through an accurate examination (that is comprehensive of some serum parameters and a comparison with subjects without
proteinuria
) the Authors discussed a way of growing old defined "with biological trouble".
...
PMID:[Proteinuria in the aged]. 66 30
Chronic atrophic pyelonephritis is associated with vesicoureteric reflux in infancy. Reflux disappears during childhood in 50% of cases. It is more commonly detected in infants (49%) and children (26%) with infection than in adults (4.4%). Severe reflux may persist in adults and is usually (94%) associated with scarring. Patients with end-stage renal failure due to pyelonephritis are much younger than patients with end-stage renal failure due to other causes. The incidence of reflux according to sex is equal in infancy, but after infancy both pyelonephritic scarring and reflux are far more common in females.
Infection
is the likely cause of progressive scarring in females. Hypertension is associated with chronic atrophic pyelonephritis.
Proteinuria
is the worst prognostic feature in patients with reflux nephropathy and pyelonephritic scarring. Intrarenal reflux determines the site of scarring. The role of surgical correction of vesicoureteric reflux remains uncertain, but meticulous control of infection appears to prevent progressive scarring.
...
PMID:Reflux nephropathy and chronic atrophic pyelonephritis: a review. 73 56
Lipid A antibody titers were measured by the passive hemolysis test in 349 humans. In two out of 20 healthy adults and 16 out of 18 children with recurrent urinary tract infection (UTI) in the presence of anomalies anti-lipid A antibodies were present. In contrast, no titers were found in 23 newborn babies. In a group of 156 patients with acute UTI, 28% revealed positive titers, whereas in a group of 132 patients with recurrent UTI titers occurred in 81%. In a selected group of 132 patients with recurrent infections of the upper tract 59 (=96%) showed definite titers. There was no difference in the development of anti-lipid A antibodies between men and women and the height of the titers did not correlate with the clinical picture of the disease (acute or chronic). The combination of
proteinuria
and anti-lipid A antibodies indicates the presence of recurrent UTI or chronic pyelonephritis with about 90% accuracy. The titers are caused by immunogenically active lipid A in the body. Since lipid A has the ability to remain in the renal tissue for a long period of time and thereby to maintain the inflamatory response, long-term antimicrobial prophylaxis (six months) should be given to patients with a high risk of recurrent UTI.
Infection
1977
PMID:[Occurence, significance and clinical consequences of lipid A antibody titers in patients with urinary tract infection (author's transl)]. 91 62
Seventy-five patients with congenital nephrotic syndrome of Finnish type were identified in Finland in the period 1965-1973, giving an incidence of 12-2/10(5). A large placenta and
proteinuria
from birth are the hallmarks of the disease. About one-quarter of the patients had oedema and/or abdominal distension at birth and in all cases the full nephrotic syndrome was documented before 2 months. More than half of the patients died before 6 months and none lived longer than 2 years 3 months. A slight rise in blood urea nitrogen or serum creatinine levels occurred in 14 cases, but in none of these did a frank uraemia develop before death.
Infection
appeared to be the immediate cause of death in 31% of the cases; in 43% no cause of death other than congenital nephrotic syndrome could be shown. Thrombi in large vessels were found in 11 out of 58 necropsies.
...
PMID:Congenital nephrotic syndrome of Finnish type. Study of 75 patients. 93 78
A review of 869 cases of multiple myeloma seen at the Mayo Clinic from 1960 through 1971 revealed that 98% of patients were 40 years of age or older and that 61% of them were males. Inital findings were bone pain in 68% of patients, anemia in 62%, renal insufficiency in 55%, hypercalcemia in 30%, a palpable liver in 21%, and a palpable spleen in 5%.
Proteinuria
was noted in 88% and Bence Jones
proteinuria
was identified in 49%. Skeletal roentgenographic abnormalities were seen in 79%. Serum protein electrophoresis showed a spike in 76%, hypogammaglobulinemia in 9%, and minor or no abnormalities in 15%, and a globulin spike was seen 75% of the urinary electrophoretic patterns. Immunoelectrophoresis of the serum revealed a monoclonal heavy chain in 83% and a monoclonal light chain in the serum, in 8% (Bence Jones proteinemia). Three patients had no monoclonal protein in the serum or the urine ("nonsecretory"). Amyloidosis was found in 7% of the patients. Follow-up information was obtained in 99.7% ; 82% of the 869 patients have died.
Infection
and renal insufficiency were the most common specific causes of death. The median survival was 20 months; 66% of the patients were alive at 1 year and 18% at 5 years.
...
PMID:Multiple myeloma: review of 869 cases. 1252 72
Infection
in ventriculo-atrial shunts implanted for relief of raised intracranial pressure may, in rare cases, result in glomerulonephritis (shunt-nephritis). Most frequently, infection with low-virulent bacteria is concerned. This results in mild or subclinical symptoms with the subsequent risk that the condition is overlooked. The glomerular damage is considered to be precipitated by deposition of immune complexes in the kidneys and subsequent activation of the complement system. The renal manifestations consist of varying degrees of
proteinuria
, haematuria and reduction of renal function. Treatment consists of removal of the shunt. If continued relief of pressure in the ventricular system is necessary, a ventriculo-peritoneal shunt should be implanted. Normally, the prognosis of the renal disease is good. If the diagnosis and treatment are delayed, irreversible renal damage may result. Regular control of urine (
proteinuria
, haematuria) and blood (Hb, serumcreatinine and serum complement) are recommended in the follow up control of patients with ventriculo-atrial shunts.
...
PMID:[Shunt-nephritis]. 173 30
Infection
with the human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1) can cause a spectrum of renal disease, termed acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS) nephropathy. The most common clinical manifestations of kidney involvement in HIV-1-infected patients are
proteinuria
and/or nephrotic syndrome, and the histopathological pattern usually reveals focal segmental glomerulosclerosis. We describe an 8-year-old child with AIDS who presented with recurrent gross hematuria. A kidney biopsy demonstrated IgA nephropathy. This unique case indicates that the range of kidney disease in HIV-infected children may be broader than originally thought, and that these patients warrant a complete evaluation of any renal abnormality.
...
PMID:IgA nephropathy in a child with human immunodeficiency virus type 1 infection. 176 86
In this review of 159 pts with systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE) followed for 18 years, 78 pts had major infections (20/100 pt-years). Patients with infection had a higher incidence of
proteinuria
, central nervous system involvement, the use of methylprednisolone boluses and mortality rate.
Infection
was independent of the amount of steroids and immunosuppressor drugs used. Microorganisms were isolated in 77% of the cases, gram negative enterobacteria were the most common isolates. 30% of the pts had pulmonary infection; and 84% of the infections happened during steroid therapy. Immunosuppression was associated to repeated infections. The 19 pts with fatal infections had a higher frequency of pneumonia and septicemia, and received high doses of steroids (> or = 40 mg). No relation to immunosuppression was found in this group. In 26% opportunistic microorganisms were isolated in association to the use of high doses of steroids. Even if survival of SLE has improved in the last 40 years, infections are still an important cause of mortality, most of them related to aggressive steroid therapy.
...
PMID:[Infections in systemic lupus erythematosus]. 184 4
From 1956 through 1989, 38 men and 26 women were seen at the Mayo Clinic with biopsy-proven AA. The underlying disorder was rheumatic disease in 42,
infectious disease
in 11, inflammatory bowel disease in 6, and other causes in 5. All patients were symptomatic at the time of diagnosis. Fifty-eight of the 64 patients had
proteinuria
or renal insufficiency. Fourteen also had significant symptoms of gastrointestinal amyloid, and 6 had amyloid goiter. None of the patients had symptomatic cardiac involvement, and only 3 had palpable hepatomegaly. Renal, gastric, rectal, fat, and marrow biopsies were positive for amyloid in 100%, 94%, 82%, 58%, and 46% of tested patients, respectively. The median survival of the entire group was 24.5 months. Thirty-five of the 47 deceased patients died as a direct result of their amyloidosis, primarily from complications of renal failure. Nine were successfully treated and had regression of the disease. Two with bronchiectasis responded to long-term cyclic antibiotic therapy, as did 1 patient with osteomyelitis. One patient with inflammatory bowel disease responded to surgical resection, and 1 with familial Mediterranean fever responded to colchicine. Four patients with rheumatic disease were treated with cyclophosphamide (in 2) and methotrexate (in 2), with complete resolution of their renal disease. All 9 successfully treated patients are alive, with a median follow-up of 58 months. Statistical analysis revealed that creatinine values greater than or equal to 2.0 mg/dl (P less than 0.003) and a serum albumin value less than 2.5 g/dl (P less than 0.02) were associated with a poorer survival. The single strongest variable associated with poor survival was a serum creatinine level greater than 2 mg/dl at presentation, with a median survival of 11.2 months compared to patients with a creatinine level less than 2.0 mg/dl, with a median survival of 56.9 months.
...
PMID:Secondary systemic amyloidosis: response and survival in 64 patients. 206 9
A variety of tubular marker proteins, as compared to healthy controls, are excreted at an increased rate in the urine of patients with renal damage. Beside cytoplasmic glutathione-S-transferase and lysosomal beta-N-acetyl-glucosaminidase (beta-NAG) the majority of kidney-related urine proteins derives from membrane surface components of the most vulnerable proximal tubule epithelia, among them ala-(leu-gly)-aminopeptidase, gamma-glutamyl transpeptidase (GGT), the tubular portion of angiotensinase A, the major brush border glycoprotein 'SGP-240' and adenosine-deaminase-binding protein. Urinary tissue proteins, e.g. brush border (BB) microvilli, are immunologically identical with those antigens prepared from cell membranes of the human kidney itself. BB antigens are shed into the urine of patients with glomerulonephritis, interstitial nephritis, systemic diseases, e.g. systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE), diabetes mellitus and multiple myeloma, arterial hypertension,
infectious diseases
(malaria, AIDS) and after operations, renal grafting and administration of X-ray contrast media, aminoglycosides or certain cytostatics (cis-platinum). Tissue
proteinuria
of tubular proteins is determined by enzyme-kinetic or quantitative immunological assays applying either poly- or monoclonal antikidney antibodies. Clinical, ultrastructural and histochemical studies support the idea that both 'soluble' and high-molecular-weight membrane particles (vacuolar blebs, greater than 10(6) dalton) as well as microfilamental components of the epithelial cytoskeleton contribute to tubular 'histuria' which appears as a sensitive parameter in monitoring tubular damage under clinical conditions at a very early phase.
...
PMID:Urinary proteins of tubular origin: basic immunochemical and clinical aspects. 225 76
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