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Query: UMLS:C0033687 (
proteinuria
)
24,015
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
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 12 year old boy and his two sisters with Hashimoto's thyroiditis and renal impairment were studied. Three generations of this family had autoimmune thyroid disease: Graves' disease was diagnosed in the first generation, and the second and third generations had
thyroid enlargement
with abnormal thyroid function and immunological abnormalities. The disease in this family could not be explained simply by the types of human leucocyte antigens found. Renal disease in autoimmune thyroid disease is uncommon, treatment difficult, and the prognosis unknown. The
proteinuria
disappeared in all three children during the three and a half years of follow up, which implies that the renal impairment may be transitory in some patients.
...
PMID:Familial Hashimoto's thyroiditis with kidney impairment. 366 85
Secondary amyloidosis is a rare complication of Crohn's disease, especially in pediatric patients. This report describes an 11-year-old child with Crohn's disease who developed intermittent
proteinuria
and
thyroid enlargement
at 14 years of age as the initial manifestations of secondary amyloidosis. Deterioration in renal function resulted in her death at 20 years of age. Published reports that discuss the occurrence of systemic amyloidosis in Crohn's disease and the pediatric age group are reviewed.
...
PMID:Secondary amyloidosis in Crohn's disease of childhood. 376 Nov 15
Amyloidosis appears to be a rare complication of cystic fibrosis. We discuss three patients with amyloidosis complicating cystic fibrosis to add to the six patients previously recorded. The presenting problem was
proteinuria
in five patients,
thyromegaly
in three patients, and hepatosplenomegaly in one patient. The progression of
proteinuria
to nephrotic syndrome and edema occurred in eight of nine patients and portended a very poor prognosis. The kidneys, adrenal glands, spleen, thyroid gland, liver, heart, and bowel were most frequently involved. Renal involvement is a frequent and devastating complication of amyloidosis in patients with cystic fibrosis.
...
PMID:Amyloidosis as a complication of cystic fibrosis. 392 58
Renal transplantation was performed in a 24-yr-old woman with type AA systemic amyloidosis. Renal biopsy at 11 yr post-transplantation showed no amyloid recurrence, but the presence of mesangial proliferative glomerulonephritis and focal segmental glomerular sclerosis. Renal function was satisfactory with the exception of mild
proteinuria
. Symptoms related to systemic amyloidosis including
goiter
and cardiac deposition, improved post-transplantation. Renal transplantation is the recommended therapy for type AA systemic amyloidosis.
...
PMID:Renal transplantation in systemic amyloidosis. 1075 Oct 60
Genetic inactivation of ClC-5, a voltage-gated chloride channel prominently expressed in the kidney, leads to
proteinuria
because of defective apical endocytosis in proximal tubular cells. Because thyroid hormone secretion depends on apical endocytosis of thyroglobulin (Tg), we investigated whether ClC-5 is expressed in the thyroid and affects its function, using Clcn5-deficient knockout (KO) mice. We found that ClC-5 is highly expressed in wild-type mouse thyroid ( approximately 40% of mRNA kidney level). The protein was immunolocalized at the apical pole of thyrocytes. In Percoll gradients, ClC-5 overlapped with plasma membrane and early endosome markers, but best codistributed with the late endosomal marker, Rab7. ClC-5 KO mice were euthyroid (normal T4 and TSH serum levels) but developed a
goiter
with parallel iodine and Tg accumulation (i.e. normal Tg iodination level). When comparing ClC-5 KO with wild-type mice, thyroid 125I uptake after 1 h was doubled, incorporation into Tg was decreased by approximately 2-fold, so that trichloroacetic acid-soluble 125I increased approximately 4-fold. Enhanced 125I- efflux upon perchlorate and presence of 125I-Tg as autoradiographic rings at follicle periphery demonstrated delayed iodide organification. Endocytic trafficking of 125I-Tg toward lysosomes was not inhibited. Expression of pendrin, an I-/Cl- exchanger involved in apical iodide efflux, was selectively decreased by 60% in KO mice at mRNA and protein levels. Thus, ClC-5 is well expressed in the thyroid but is not critical for apical endocytosis, contrary to the kidney. Instead, the
goiter
associated with ClC-5 KO results from impaired rate of apical iodide efflux by down-regulation of pendrin expression.
...
PMID:The loss of the chloride channel, ClC-5, delays apical iodide efflux and induces a euthyroid goiter in the mouse thyroid gland. 1630 76
Both rheumatoid vasculitis and amyloidosis in rheumatoid arthritis (RA) are uncommon. We describe a patient in whom they occurred together and were associated with fatal intra-abdominal hemorrhage. A 56-year-old Caucasian woman was referred because of increasing lethargy, edema, and
proteinuria
. She had suffered from seropositive, erosive, nodular RA for 14 years. Previously, she had undergone numerous joint replacements, a thyroidectomy for amyloid-associated (AA) amyloidosis of the thyroid that caused a large
goiter
and a renal biopsy that showed renal AA-amyloidosis in the context of nephrotic syndrome. As her condition deteriorated, this patient became increasingly reluctant to go to the hospital and to take drugs beyond analgesics. Thus, her RA was chronically under treated. While in the hospital for evaluation, this patient suddenly developed hypotension, tachycardia, and a severe colicky left-sided abdominal pain radiating from the left upper quadrant/epigastric region to the left iliac fossa. Computed tomography (CT) showed a large amount of echogenic free fluid within the abdomen and marked thickening of the omentum. At laparotomy, 2 liters of free blood was found adjacent to a hematoma of the greater omentum, and it was evacuated without identification of a discrete bleeding point. All solid and hollow organs were normal. The omentum was noted to be very friable. She developed a more disseminated bleeding diathesis and persistent peritoneal hemorrhage via her abdominal drains. She succumbed shortly afterward. Histology revealed extensive omental hemorrhage and one large vessel within the area of hemorrhage showed a severe necrotizing vasculitis. Extensive amyloid deposition was also found within the walls of the smaller omental arterioles. Vasculitis in the context of RA is relatively rare and is associated with under treated, seropositive disease. Skin and nerve involvement are most common, but bowel involvement has been reported, with a highly significant morbidity (partly due to late presentation/recognition). Similarly, AA-amyloidosis is a rare but feared long-term concomitant of under treated RA. Early recognition can permit successful anti-inflammatory therapy to affect a clinical and pathological remission; continued inflammatory stimulation is associated with rapid progression and demise. Chronically under treated patients with RA are more prone to rare but potentially devastating complications. Gastrointestinal catastrophes are a feature of both rheumatoid vasculitis and of amyloidosis, here uniquely co-localized.
...
PMID:Spontaneous abdominal hemorrhage with AA-amyloidosis and vasculitis in a patient with rheumatoid arthritis. 1703 2
Mice lacking the LDL receptor associated protein (RAP) have a severe defect of thyroglobulin secretion into the colloid, associated with moderately increased serum TSH levels and histological features of early
goiter
. RAP is expressed also in renal proximal tubule cells, where it functions as a molecular chaperone for the endocytic receptor megalin, which is responsible for reabsorption of low molecular weight proteins from the glomerular filtrate. Here we investigated whether the thyroid phenotype in RAP knockout (KO) mice is associated with kidney alterations. By immunohistochemistry, we found that in RAP KO mice megalin expression on the apical membrane of renal proximal tubule cells was markedly reduced, with intracellular retention of the receptor. The reduced expression of megalin was associated with its impaired function. Thus, urinary protein concentrations and urinary protein excretion in 24 h were higher in RAP KO than in wild-type mice. Coomassie staining of urine samples revealed an increased intensity of low molecular mass bands in the urine of RAP KO mice, indicating that they had low molecular weight
proteinuria
. Therefore, we concluded that disruption of the RAP gene determines not only thyroid abnormalities, but also a severe defect of megalin expression and function in the kidney.
...
PMID:Kidney abnormalities in low density lipoprotein receptor associated protein knockout mice. 1829 6
Congenital nephrotic syndrome is commonly associated with hypothyroidism. Thyroid hormone supplementation is recommended as standard of care. The hypothyroidism is postulated to occur secondary to chronic massive
proteinuria
with loss of thyroid binding globulin, thyroid hormone and iodine. Previous reports have indicated that thyroxin may be discontinued following bilateral nephrectomy. We report our experience with one child with congenital nephrotic syndrome, Finnish type, and hypothyroidism who had a high requirement for thyroxin (100-150 microg/d) from infancy to 4 years of age. Hypothyroidism persisted despite bilateral nephrectomy and later following renal transplantation. However, his thyroxin requirement is now substantially lower (62.5 microg/d) at age 14 years. No
goiter
was detected clinically and antithyroid antibodies were negative. Thyroid ultrasound and 123I scan revealed a thyroid gland in the anatomically normal location. 123I uptake was elevated, 18% at 6 hours and 51% at 24 hours (normal values: 3-16% at 6 hours and 8-25% at 24 hours). Perchlorate was unavailable for a perchlorate washout study. We speculate that this patient may have an intrinsic problem with thyroid hormone synthesis. It is unclear whether this is related or coincidental to the Finnish nephrotic syndrome. We recommend following thyroid functions closely if thyroxin is discontinued following bilateral nephrectomies in Finnish type congenital nephrotic syndrome.
...
PMID:Congenital nephrotic syndrome and persistent hypothyroidism after bilateral nephrectomy. 1871 47
A 6-year-old previously healthy Japanese girl was found to have dipstick 2+
proteinuria
and a
goiter
based on the results of a routine school medical examination. Her serum free-thyroxine level was 4.98 ng/dL (normal range 0.95-1.74 ng/dL), thyroid-stimulating hormone (TSH) was less than 0.003 microU/mL (0.34-3.88 microU/mL), anti-microsomal (anti-thyroid-peroxidase) antibody was 1600 T (up to 100), anti-thyroglobulin antibody was 400 T (up to 100), and TSH-receptor antibody was 84% (up to +/-10%). These results are consistent with a diagnosis of Graves' disease. Electron microscopy examination of a renal biopsy specimen revealed electron-dense deposits located in the subepithelial spaces, and immunofluorescence microscopy examination demonstrated bright granular stainings of immunoglobulin G along the glomerular capillary walls. These findings are characteristic of membranous nephropathy. To investigate the relationship between the membranous nephropathy and Graves' disease, we carried out a second immunofluorescence study, which revealed that the immunoglobulin G granular deposits corresponded to glomerular granular staining of thyroid-peroxidase, whereas staining for thyroglobulin was absent. It was therefore assumed that the deposition of immune complexes mediated by thyroid-peroxidase had caused the membranous nephropathy in this patient. This is the first report of membranous nephropathy associated with Graves' disease in which deposits of thyroid-peroxidase, rather than thyroglobulin, have been confirmed in the kidney.
...
PMID:Membranous nephropathy associated with thyroid-peroxidase antigen. 1876 90
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