Gene/Protein
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Query: UMLS:C0033687 (
proteinuria
)
24,015
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Submaximal bicycle ergometry was used in the evaluation of cardiac function in 22 patients with juvenile diabetes and 21 age-matched control subjects. Six patients had moderate to severe retinopathy and 2 had peripheral neuropathy. Half of the patients, but only 3 of the controls, were smokers. No differences were found in BP, serum cholesterol, triglycerides and serum creatinine levels between diabetics and controls. None had
proteinuria
. Patients with juvenile diabetes had higher heart rates (HR) at rest as well as during and after exercise than the healthy controls. Diabetics also had a reduced HR response to postural changes compared with the controls. Five diabetics and one control had a pathological exercise ECG (0.05 less than P less than 0.1) that may indicate early non-symptomatic
coronary heart disease
. The observed changes in HR may be due to autonomic neuropathy.
...
PMID:Response to bicycle exercise testing in long-standing juvenile diabetes. 42 49
Gouty arthritis in females is relatively infrequent, although the sex ratio may be somewhat altered in different races. A positive family history is relatively prevalent among females whose onset of gout is premenopausal. In those patients with a postmenopausal onset, the incidence of diuretic-associated gout is high. The bimodal distribution of serum urate might be related to some variance of genetic transmission in female gout. Hypertension and
coronary heart disease
are common coexisting conditions, as is true of gouty arthritis in males. Chronic urinary tract infection dating from previous pregnancies is a frequent complication. The relative prevalence of
proteinuria
and diminished renal function leads to increased hyperuricemia, with a tendency to a low urinary uric acid output. This explains in part the higher incidence of extensive tophaceous deposition but lower incidence of renal calculi. Diuretics are associated with a higher urine pH, likewise, they reduce the urinary uric acid excretion. This also may contribute to the lower incidence of renal calculi. There may be some statistical support for the low fertility rate among the gouty females. Only two females became pregnant after the onset of gouty arthritis. All other pregnancies occurred before the onset of arthritis. Even then, abnormal pregnancies were relatively frequent. Some hormonal malfunction among the gouty females cannot be discounted. Both renal calculi and tophi are frequent in female gout associated with blood dyscrasias. They may manifest early, preceding the first attack of acute gouty arthritis. In both the male and female secondary gout, the primary underlying disease governs the uric acid metabolism and the clinical symptomatology of gout. The predominant role in pathogenesis is the excessive rate of uric acid production, and its disposal is governed by the different stages of the underlying disease and the treatment. Thus, secondary gout in females appears to be somewhat different from primary gout in females, but not different from secondary gout in males.
...
PMID:Some unusual features of gouty arthritis in females. 83 22
Lipoprotein(a) (Lp(a)) has recently been recognized to be a risk factor for
coronary heart disease
. Lp(a) median values in the absence of renal disease are around 10 mg/dl. Higher levels (greater than or equal to 30 mg/dl) correlate with the occurrence of
coronary heart disease
, particularly in the presence of elevated cholesterol. We have studied Lp(a) in 76 adults with
proteinuria
. Fifty had glomerular diseases and 26 non-glomerular diseases, with renal function varying from normal to advanced chronic renal failure. Lp(a) values were shifted to the right, with a median of 21.0 mg/dl, and 25% of patients had values of 30 mg/dl or more. Lp(a) did not correlate with cholesterol, age, lipoprotein subclasses, apoproteins A-I or B-100, albumin, creatinine, or creatinine clearance. Median Lp(a) values did not differ significantly comparing men versus women, or glomerular versus non-glomerular disease. Lp(a) may inhibit fibrinolysis, and is deposited in atherosclerotic lesions. Although the cause of these elevated Lp(a) levels is uncertain, we propose that they contribute to the increased risk of
coronary heart disease
in the nephrotic syndrome, and may play a role in progressive renal disease.
...
PMID:Lipoprotein(a) in patients with proteinuria. 132 68
Patients with heavy
proteinuria
have an increased incidence of venous thrombosis and
coronary heart disease
(
CHD
). They also exhibit perturbations in lipoprotein metabolism. Lipoprotein (a) (Lp(a)) predisposes to
CHD
; it may also promote intravascular thrombosis since it contains apolipoprotein (a), which could act as a competitive inhibitor of plasminogen activation. We have measured the concentration of serum Lp(a) in 10 men with
proteinuria
due to idiopathic membranous nephropathy (IMN), in eight men with a similar diagnosis but who were in remission, and in 103 healthy men. Serum Lp(a) levels were significantly elevated in the men with active IMN, having a median value of 31.3 (range 3.2-75.0) mg/dl, whereas they were 8.4 (3.4-31.5) mg/dl in the patients in remission, which was similar to the value of 11.3 (< 0.8-87.4) mg/dl found in the healthy controls. Lp(a) is unique in containing an apolipoprotein which is a giant mutant of plasminogen and it is thus possible that the high circulating levels of Lp(a) contribute to the vascular morbidity associated with
proteinuria
by promoting thrombosis or atherogenesis or both.
...
PMID:Serum lipoprotein (a) in men with proteinuria due to idiopathic membranous nephropathy. 133 76
A review of the putative risk factors associated with the development of
coronary heart disease
in diabetes is presented. Emphasis is given to the effect of nephropathy (persistent
proteinuria
) and hypertension on cardiovascular mortality in IDDM. Risk factors associated with CHD in NIDDM are also reviewed. Finally, possible reasons to explain the increased incidence of CHD associated with
proteinuria
in IDDM patients, including lipoprotein abnormalities, increased fibrinogen levels, increased platelet adhesiveness, and altered hemostatic variables, are discussed.
...
PMID:Risk factors for coronary heart disease in diabetes mellitus. 152 26
Until recently Type 1 diabetes has been characterized by a considerable degree of mortality, mainly associated with the development of diabetic nephropathy. Diabetic nephropathy is characterized by persistent
proteinuria
, decreasing glomerular filtration rate (GFR), increasing blood pressure, and morphological changes.
Proteinuria
represents a late stage in a prolonged process, which begins at the onset of Type 1 diabetes, when urinary albumin excretion is at the lower end of its normal range (less than 10 mg 24-h-1). However, in those patients who will later develop persistent
proteinuria
, urinary albumin excretion increases exponentially at about 20% per year. These patients also tend to have rising blood pressure and falling GFR, higher rates of proliferative retinopathy and
coronary heart disease
, and elevated levels of cardiovascular risk factors. As intervention is possible in all these areas, identification of such patients is required and especially as the imposition of strict metabolic control may postpone or arrest progression to overt nephropathy. Where patients deteriorate despite such control the institution of early antihypertensive therapy and the effective management of end stage renal disease will bring further improvements in the prognosis of diabetic nephropathy.
...
PMID:Natural history of diabetic complications: early detection and progression. 182 54
Diabetics have an increased risk of cardiovascular morbidity and mortality. Compelling evidence suggests that there is cause-effect relationship between alterations of serum lipids and lipoproteins, and atherosclerosis and
coronary heart disease
in non diabetic-population. Among insulin dependent diabetics, the prevalence of macrovascular disease is particularly increased in those with established clinical nephropathy and it has been partly attributed to concomitant hypertension and serum lipoprotein abnormalities. However, the effect of diabetic nephropathy and factors associated with it on Coronary Artery Disease (CAD) appears to be conditional. Many Patients in many studies did not have CAD despite a long duration of persistent
proteinuria
and renal failure There is the possibility that CAD is an outcome of a multistage process, and diabetes related conditions may accelerate progression through certain stage only. In that case, the pattern of appearance of CAD would be determined by the natural history of atherosclerosis rather than by duration of diabetes. The purpose of our study is to analyze retrospectively the incidence of CAD and its association with blood pressure, serum total cholesterol, HDL cholesterol, duration of diabetes, serum triglycerides and HbAlc in a cohort of insulin dependent diabetic patients without nephropathy.
...
PMID:"Cardiovascular risk factors in insulin dependent diabetes". 192 85
Risk factors for
coronary heart disease
(
CHD
), stroke, congestive heart failure and total mortality were analysed in two random population samples of men in Gothenburg, Sweden, aged 50 and 47-55 years, respectively, at entry. A series of potential risk factors for the above mentioned end-points have been analysed in univariate and multivariate logistic analyses. Population attributable risks were also calculated. Significant risk factors in multivariate analyses are summarized. For
CHD
they were: family history of
CHD
, hypercholesterolemia, hypertension, tobacco smoking, psychologic stress, low social class and diabetes mellitus. In hypertensives,
proteinuria
was measured and found to be significant also. Stroke risk factors were: family history of stroke, blood pressure, smoking, high waist/hip ratio, high plasma fibrinogen, psychologic stress,
proteinuria
, atria fibrillation and transitory ischemic attacks. Hypertension, smoking, high waist/hip ratio and psychologic stress were risk factors for congestive heart failure.
...
PMID:Synergistic effects of risk factors. 220 55
The incidence of fatal
coronary heart disease
(
CHD
) was determined in a population of Pima Indians from the Gila River Indian Community in Arizona. Between 1975 and 1984, 394 deaths occurred among 4,828 subjects aged 5 years or older, and 199 of these occurred in the 1,093 persons with non-insulin-dependent diabetes. Only 28 deaths were attributed to
CHD
; all occurred among the 689 diabetic persons 45 years of age or older. No
CHD
deaths occurred among the 419 nondiabetic subjects 45 years of age or older. The rate of fatal
CHD
among the diabetic subjects was higher in men than in women and increased with advancing age and duration of diabetes. A higher incidence of fatal
CHD
was associated with
proteinuria
, renal insufficiency, medial arterial calcification, diabetic retinopathy, insulin therapy, and an abnormal electrocardiogram. In Pima Indians aged 50-79 years, the incidence of fatal
CHD
was less than half that found in the Framingham population after controlling for age, sex, and diabetes (incidence rate ratio, 0.4; 95% confidence interval, 0.2-0.7). Factors protecting Pima Indians from fatal
CHD
may include racial heritage, low serum concentrations of total and low density lipoprotein cholesterol, and rarity of heavy smoking. Among the diabetic subjects, mortality from diabetic renal disease, which shows many of the same risk factors, may selectively compete and remove those at risk for fatal
CHD
. This would not, however, explain the lack of fatal
CHD
among the nondiabetic subjects. Fatal
CHD
shares many of the risk factors associated with the specific microvascular complications of diabetes, and diabetes and its associated attributes are the major predictors of fatal
CHD
in this population.
...
PMID:Low incidence of fatal coronary heart disease in Pima Indians despite high prevalence of non-insulin-dependent diabetes. 230 42
A population-based prevalence cohort of 1,111 residents of Rochester, Minnesota, who had diabetes mellitus on Jan. 1, 1975, was subjected to follow-up assessment for hospitalizations through Dec. 31, 1980. On the basis of these data, hospitalization rates were calculated for various clinical types of diabetes, and a risk factor analysis was done for non-insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus (NIDDM) to identify high-risk persons for subsequent intervention studies. The adjusted incidence density of hospitalization was 141.6 per 1,000 person-years for NIDDM and 331.3 per 1,000 person-years for insulin-dependent diabetes. Although the modeled clinical characteristics accounted for little variability in NIDDM-related hospitalization, age modified by the effect of gender was the strongest risk factor found (multivariate hazard ratios: 1.0 and 1.43, respectively, for male and female patients younger than 65 years old; 1.88 and 1.83, respectively, for male and female patients 65 years old or older);
coronary heart disease
, diabetic retinopathy, and persistent
proteinuria
were associated with a 50% increased risk. Although older patients with NIDDM (especially men) are at greatest risk for a first hospitalization, clinical factors alone seem inadequate to account for these hospitalizations. The effect of Medicare's prospective payment systems (PPS) was studied by using a data base for Olmsted County, Minnesota, to determine whether PPS decreased the rate of hospitalizations among patients with diabetes. Among Olmsted County residents 65 years of age or older, the adjusted rate of diabetes-associated hospitalizations decreased from 26.5 per 1,000 person-years in 1980 to 16.7 in 1985, whereas the adjusted rate of all other hospitalizations increased from 259.5 per 1,000 person-years to 261.9. Thus, PPS may have reduced hospitalization rates in elderly patients with diabetes.
...
PMID:Utilization trends and risk factors for hospitalization in diabetes mellitus. 240 59
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