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)

Radiation nephritis is the principle late toxicity seen after total body irradiation in barrier-maintained rats when hematologic toxicity is prevented by bone marrow transplantation. Renal dysfunction is observed for single doses as low as 7.5 Gy. Hepatic blood flow, as measured by indocyanine green clearance, is decreased after 8.5-9.5 Gy single-dose total body irradiation. Serum albumin levels are decreased after 9.5 Gy single-dose total body irradiation. Hypoalbuminemia is a symptom of hepatic damage, but can also be caused by renal damage or edema. No decrease in total serum protein is observed, indicating that proteinuria resulting from renal damage is not the cause of hypoalbuminemia. No edema and some dehydration are observed. These data indicate that hepatic damage as well as renal damage may be occurring after total body irradiation plus bone marrow transplantation. Animals given total body irradiation plus bone marrow transplantation show decreased tolerance to a wide variety of immunosuppressive and cytotoxic drugs, even when these drugs are given months after total body irradiation. Altered drug clearance after total body irradiation plus bone marrow transplantation is observed for cis-platinum, vincristine, and adriamycin. The increase in cis-platinum toxicity after total body irradiation plus bone marrow transplantation is caused by decreased renal drug clearance. The decrease in vincristine tolerance and the alterations in adriamycin and vincristine pharmacokinetics are caused by altered drug distribution after total body irradiation plus bone marrow transplantation. These results indicate that bone marrow transplant survivors may show altered clearance of, and decreased tolerance to, a wide variety of drugs that are used after bone marrow transplantation.
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PMID:Hepatic function and drug pharmacokinetics after total body irradiation plus bone marrow transplant. 226 63

A 6-year-old girl with cerebral palsy developed conscious disturbance and generalized convulsion after one-hour hot herb drug bath. Physical examination on admission revealed rectal temperature 41 degrees C, hot skin, respiration 46/min, regular heart beat 98/min, BP 130/60 mmHg, Glascow coma scale 4 (E2M1V1), soft and flat abdomen, no hepatosplenomegaly, no skin rash, no focal neurological sign, increased generalized muscle ton. Laboratory data showed CBC: WBC 20400 cumm (Neutrophils 31%, Lymphocytes 69%), Hb 11.6gm%, ESR 11 mm/hr, arterial blood gas: PH 7.077, PO2 43mmHg, PCO2 57.1mmHg, HCO3- 16 mEq/L, BE-11.5mEq/L, serum sodium 143 mEq./L, potassium 5.2 mEq/L, chloride 101 mEq/L, free calcium ion 3.8mg%, GOT 63IU/L, GPT 263 IU/L, amylase 193 IU/L, alkaline phosphatase 388 IU/L, LDH 1245 IU/L, CPK 677 IU/L, total bilirubin 0.8 mg/dl, direct type 0.1 mg/dl, BUN 18 mg/dl, Glucose 35 mg/dl. Urinalysis revealed proteinuria( ) trace hematuria and pyuria, but no cast. Lumbar puncture is within normal limits. Bacteriology including blood and CSF are normal. Multiple organ failure was noted at that time. Intensive cooling methods were performed including central and peripheral cooling. We used luminal and valium to control the seizure. Condition didn't improve. Afterwards cardiopulmonary arrest developed. Patient expired 8 hours after admission despite of resuscitation. Heat stroke in infancy and childhood is different from that in adulthood. The predisposing factors are high ambient temperature, dehydration, very young baby, sweat gland dysfunction, or ectodermal dysplasia. Definition of heat stroke includes 1) rectal temperature above 41 degrees C, 2) behavioral change, 3) warm skin, wet or dry.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:[Status epilepticus induced by prolonged immersion in hot herb bath: report of one case]. 263 19

Renal vein thrombosis in early infancy is a complication of dehydration and prolonged hypotension. The onset is usually acute and the most common clinical signs are uni- or bilateral frank masses, hematuria, proteinuria and thrombocytopenia. In most cases, with conservative management, the late outcome is favorable. In the adult, renal vein thrombosis is often a silent complication of the nephrotic syndrome, the hypercoagulability of which may be an important factor in the pathogenesis of the thrombosis. Clinically, the presentation of a sudden complete occlusion is that of severe abdominal and lumbar pain with hematuria and loss of function of the kidney that suffers hemorrhagic infarction. Physical examination often reveals an enlarged kidney. With gradual occlusion, renal function is preserved. The initial diagnostic approach is with ultrasound studies and computed tomography; definitive diagnosis is established by renal venography or by selective renal arteriography. In general, a conservative approach including the use of anticoagulant treatment is preferred to surgical intervention. Priapism is a persistent painful penile erection due to ischemic or non-ischemic causes; therapeutic intracavernosal injection of papaverine is becoming the most common cause. In early and mild stages, aspiration of blood from the corpora cavernosa supplemented with intracavernosal irrigation with alpha-stimulating agents is the procedure of first choice; in late and severe ischemia, a shunt procedure may become necessary. Hepatic vein thrombosis occurs in association with a number of conditions considered predisposing factors including the use of oral contraceptives. The clinical picture may be that of an acute illness with abdominal pain, hepatomegaly, ascites and hepatic failure as well as early death. More often, the onset is insidious with slowly developing ascites and wasting. For the diagnosis, hepatic scintigraphy may be helpful but, at present, ultrasonography, computed tomography and magnetic resonance scanning are procedures of choice. There is, as yet, no adequate treatment. A fatal outcome may be prevented by surgical decompression of the congested liver and, in recent years, liver transplantation has been employed. Portal vein thrombosis, in children, is usually considered a complication of umbilical sepsis or a result of a congenital abnormality of the portal vein. In adults, the most frequent causes are hepatic cirrhosis and neoplasia. Clinically, there may be a sudden appearance of ascites with resolution in a symptom-free interval until the onset of other features of portal hypertension occur. Currently, ultrasound real-time imaging supplemented with Doppler capability, computed tomography and magnetic resonance scanning provide the necessary diagnostic information. Variceal hemorrhage is often the first major complication requiring treatment.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
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PMID:Thrombosis in particular organ veins. 268 Aug 53

Thirteen men were submitted to graded exhaustive cycle exercise to determine the kinetics of proteinuria in the recovery period. Venous blood samples were analysed for haematocrit, lactate, creatinine, total protein and albumin for 1 h following exercise. Urine samples were collected during a 3-h recovery period. Total protein, albumin, and creatinine levels were determined for these samples. Total protein and albumin urinary excretion increased to 581 and 315 micrograms min-1, respectively, at the end of the 1st h of recovery as compared to 42 and 15 micrograms.min-1 for resting values. Plasma volume returned to pre-exercise levels between 30 and 60 min after cessation of exercise, while urinary total protein and albumin content still remained above the resting values for the following 2 h. Both post-exercise urinary total protein and albumin excretion followed a logarithmic decline with the same half-life of 54 min, thus requiring about 4 h to regain resting values. The reduction of plasma volume and the degree of dehydration do not seem to be involved in the process. The present study indicates the delayed recovery of protein handling by the kidney, as compared with other biochemical parameters, and provides accurate information on the kinetics of post-exercise proteinuria.
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PMID:Renal protein excretion after exercise in man. 275 73

A series of nine cases of neuroleptic malignant syndrome (NMS) are presented with peak measures of autonomic dysfunction and laboratory findings. Urine abnormalities, consisting of proteinuria, casts, or cells, were an associated finding in these cases. Severe hypophosphatemia was present in two patients. Relative dehydration before the onset of the syndrome in eight of the nine patients supports the suggestion that it is a risk factor for the development of NMS. The withdrawal of dopamine agonists was also seen as a trigger for NMS. Autonomic instability and muscular rigidity occurred separately in some cases. Creatine phosphokinase elevation and fever did not necessarily parallel the duration or the degree of muscular rigidity, and this finding supports the idea of a central cause for the symptoms. A systematic approach is presented for the evaluation and treatment of NMS. Observations implicate central dopaminergic mechanisms in the regulation of autonomic functioning and the maintenance of peripheral muscle membrane stability.
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PMID:Neuroleptic malignant syndrome: physiological and laboratory findings in a series of nine cases. 288 91

Although most patients respond well to loop diuretics, poor response is sometimes a problem and some underlying mechanisms were addressed in this study. The renal response to continuous infusion of furosemide was investigated in eight healthy volunteers during controlled isotonic dehydration and after full restoration of volume losses. A rapidly reversible acute tolerance developed in parallel with dehydration and activation of the sympathetic nervous system and the renin-angiotensin-aldosterone system (RAAS). Dehydration also reduced the renal clearance of furosemide substantially, but only decreased the urinary delivery rate of the drug (the principal determinant of the diuretic effect) to a minimal extent. Delayed tolerance to an i.v. bolus dose of furosemide was found in 12 healthy volunteers after 1 week of oral furosemide treatment with and without angiotensin converting enzyme inhibition. No pharmacokinetic changes were seen. This type of tolerance was not related to dehydration or activation of RAAS. Thus, the induced decrease in renal sensitivity to furosemide was probably due to an intrarenal (structural?) adaptation. The pharmacokinetics and pharmacodynamics of piretanide were studied in six healthy volunteers and 22 patients with chronic renal failure (glomerular filtration rate 1-28 ml/min). Poor response to the diuretic action of the drug was found in the patients. This was entirely due to a decrease in the fraction of piretanide excreted unchanged in the urine, and the renal sensitivity to the drug was normal. Multiple daily doses of piretanide of maximally 24 mg are recommended for optimal efficiency in renal failure. Substantial changes in pharmacokinetics of furosemide were found after manipulation of plasma albumin in five patients with nephrosis, while the urinary delivery of the drug scarcely changed. Neither the induced alterations in proteinuria nor those in plasma volume influenced the renal sensitivity to furosemide significantly. Some methodological observations proved to be of significance. Creatinine was found to be an unreliable marker of GFR because of its substantial tubular secretion and reabsorption, both of which were related to the degree of hydration. Likewise, lithium was considered an unreliable marker of proximal tubular reabsorption, since there were reasons to suspect furosemide-sensitive distal lithium reabsorption.
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PMID:Mechanisms of reduced effects of loop diuretics in healthy volunteers and in patients with renal disease. 320 Nov 62

Diagnosis of multiple myeloma is based on the triad paraproteinemia, osteolytic bone lesions and bone marrow plasma cell infiltration. Clinically, rheumatoid-like pain induced by osteolytic skeletal lesions often prevails. Occasionally, foudroyant bacterial infections - the most frequent cause of death in myelomatosis - or acute/subacute renal failure or rarely, acute hemi- or paraparesis precede diagnosis. Establishment of diagnosis early in the course of the disease and improved cytostatic and symptomatic treatment has led to a decrease in episodes of hyperviscosity-syndromes. Severe renal insufficiency due to Bence-Jones proteinuria prevails in 20% of patients already at time of diagnosis. With increasing duration of the disease, frequency of renal insufficiency further increases. Hypercalcemia with consecutive dehydration and renal insufficiency usually is a complication of long-standing disease. Anemia, leukopenia and thrombo-cytopenia are not only side effects of cytostatic treatment, but also consequences of tumor-induced suppression of hematopoiesis. Polyneuropathies are common in myelomatosis. They probably are the result of specific and/or unspecific binding of paraproteins to myelin sheaths. Effective treatment for this complication is not available at present. Thrombohemorrhagic complications are more frequent in patients with myeloma than in the control group of other hospitalized patients. Non-secretory myeloma, osteoblastic myeloma and Takatsuki syndrome are variants of myelomatosis. Solitary and extramedullary plasmocytoma are different, potentially curable entities. Prognosis is especially poor in patients with plasma cell leukemia and poor in primary amyloidosis.
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PMID:[The clinical picture of multiple myeloma]. 353 47

The winter athlete has several potential tactics for sustaining body temperature in the face of severe cold. An increase in the intensity of physical activity may be counter-productive because of increased respiratory heat loss, increased air or water movement over the body surface, and a pumping of air or water beneath the clothing. Shivering can generate heat at a rate of 10 to 15 kJ/min, but it impairs skilled performance, while the resultant glycogen usage hastens the onset of fatigue and mental confusion. Non-shivering thermogenesis could arise in either brown adipose tissue or white fat. Brown adipose tissue generates heat by the action of free fatty acids in uncoupling mitochondrial electron transport, and by noradrenaline-induced membrane depolarisation and sodium pumping. The existence of brown adipose tissue in human adults is controversial, and although there are theoretical mechanisms of heat production in white fat, their contribution to the maintenance of body temperature is small. Acclimatisation to cold develops over the course of about 10 days, and in humans the primary change is an insulative, hypothermic type of response; this reflects the intermittent nature of most occupational and athletic exposures to cold. Nevertheless, with more sustained exposure to cold air or water, humans can apparently develop the humoral type of acclimatisation described in small mammals, with an increased output of noradrenaline and/or thyroxine. The associated mobilisation of free fatty acids suggests the possibility of using winter sport as a pleasant method of treating obesity. In men, a combination of moderate exercise and facial cooling induces a substantial fat loss over a 1- to 2-week period, with an associated ketonuria, proteinuria, and increase of body mass. Possible factors contributing to this fat loss include: (a) a small energy deficit; (b) the energy cost of synthesising new lean tissue; (c) energy loss through the storage and excretion of ketone bodies; (d) catecholamine-induced 'futile' metabolic cycles with increased resting metabolism; and (e) a specific reaction to cold dehydration. Current limitations for the clinical application of such treatment include uncertainty regarding optimal environmental conditions, concern over possible pathological reactions to cold, and suggestions of a less satisfactory fat mobilisation in female patients. Possible interactions between physical fitness and metabolic reactions to cold remain controversial.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
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PMID:Adaptation to exercise in the cold. 388 60

Gentamicin-associated acute renal failure was diagnosed in 10 dogs. The disease was characterized by a poor prognosis and lengthy hospitalization. Hypoalbuminemia, disorders of potassium homeostasis, proteinuria, hematuria, and cylindruria were common during therapy for renal failure. Fever and dehydration were the most commonly identified potential predisposing factors.
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PMID:Gentamicin-associated acute renal failure in the dog. 398

The type of proteinuria and renal selectivity of glycosyl albumin has been evaluated in seven diabetic patients at the onset of plasma hyperosmolar state and after complete fluid replacement. The main feature of all patients was a marked increase in urinary excretion of beta 2-microglobulin, which promptly returned to normal after the correction of the fluid disequilibrium. This indicates that a reversible tubular injury is the first symptom of the dehydration process in diabetic patients with plasma hyperosmolality.
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PMID:Tubular function and renal selectivity towards glycosyl-albumin in diabetic hyperosmolar states. 399 86


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