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Query: UMLS:C0033687 (
proteinuria
)
24,015
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
We treated a 13-year-old girl who developed myeloperoxidase-antineutrophil cytoplasmic antibody (MPO-ANCA)-related crescentic glomerulonephritis (GN) during propylthiouracil (PTU) treatment for
Graves' disease
. MPO-ANCA-related crescentic GN during PTU therapy has been described previously in only one recent report of 2 children. We report this case here and describe 15 (13 adult cases) more patients with MPO-ANCA-related GN associated with PTU found in a literature review. The mean age at onset was 41.3 years, and the length of PTU administration ranged from 2 weeks to 6 years (mean 3.5 years). Clinical signs and symptoms were hematuria (100%),
proteinuria
(100%), arthralgia (7 of 16 cases; 43.8%), fever (4 cases; 20.0%), purpura (2 cases; 12.5%), skin ulcer (1 case; 6.3%) and dyspnea (1 case; 6.3%). These patients were treated with steroid (15 cases; 93.8%), cyclophosphamide (8 cases; 50.0%), steroid pulse therapy (4 cases; 25.0%), or plasma exchange (1 case; 6.3%), or were not treated (1 case; 6.3%). Most patients revealed crescentic GN (15 cases; 93.8%) on renal biopsy, while one exhibited mesangial proliferative GN (6.3%). For 2 of the 16 patients (12.5%) irreversible renal dysfunction persisted and hemodialysis was started. Patients with
Graves' disease
treated with PTU should be observed carefully by urinalysis and monitoring of the serum creatinine level.
...
PMID:[A pediatric case of myeloperoxidase-antineutrophil cytoplasmic (ANCA)-related crescentic glomerulonephritis associated with propylthiouracil treatment for Graves' disease]. 989 62
Systemic vasculitis is a rare complication of therapy with antithyroid medication. Antineutrophilic cytoplasmic antibody (ANCA)-associated vasculitis has been described in patients treated with propylthiouracil (PTU) and methimazole (MMI). The majority of cases have underlying
Graves' disease
. The authors report 2 children who developed ANCA-associated systemic vasculitis during PTU therapy of
Graves' disease
. One patient, after PTU treatment for 3 years, developed severe systemic vasculitis. After 3 weeks of arthritis, she abruptly presented with hematuria,
proteinuria
and edema concomitant with anemia. Her serum creatinine was elevated, to 6 mg/dl. Renal biopsy revealed crescentic glomerulonephritis. After admission, she developed intracerebral hemorrhage and pulmonary hemorrhage. She had positive perinuclear-ANCA (p-ANCA) with a titer of 1:160. Despite intensive therapy with immunosuppressive agents and plasmapheresis, as well as discontinuation of PTU, she died of the complications of severe systemic vasculitis. The other patient developed fever, arthralgia and leukocytoclastic vasculitis of the skin during treatment with PTU for about 2 years. Her symptoms and skin lesions disappeared after discontinuation of PTU. However, she has had a persistently high titer of p-ANCA 1:320 through 17 months follow-up time. Thus, patients who are treated with PTU can develop ANCA-positive vasculitis in a mild or severe form. Therefore, they should be carefully followed and monitored, not only for their thyroid status but also the serious complications of PTU.
...
PMID:Antineutrophilic cytoplasmic antibody-positive systemic vasculitis associated with propylthiouracil therapy: report of 2 children with Graves' disease. 1254 9
A 17-year-old woman was admitted because of
proteinuria
, microhematuria and liver dysfunction with increased antinuclear antibody and anti-myeloperoxidase antibody (MPO-ANCA). Fourteen months' previously, urinalysis and liver function showed normal range. At that time she suffered from tachycardia and weight reduction, diagnosed as
Graves' disease
, she was given propylthiouracil for treatment of her
Graves' disease
. The histological finding of renal biopsy was compatible with minor glomerular abnormalities. Liver biopsy finding was compatible with autoimmune hepatitis. After we had administered prednisolone, liver function returned to normal range and urine protein became negative. Then we performed subtotal thyroidectomy, and she was not given propylthiouracil. MPO-ANCA decreased gradually.
...
PMID:Graves' disease accompanied by anti-myeloperoxidase antibody-related nephropathy and autoimmune hepatitis. 1528 91
The association of renal disease and autoimmune thyroid disorders has been reported previously. Renal findings associated with autoimmune thyroiditis present more commonly as
proteinuria
ranging from mild to nephrotic levels. We report here two adolescent girls with hyperthyroidism associated with transient
proteinuria
correlated with thyroid hormone levels. They had positive antithyroid peroxidase and antithyroglobulin antibodies. Ultrasonographic and scintigraphic findings of the thyroid gland were consistent with
Graves' disease
in both. Their renal functions were normal except
proteinuria
(daily protein excretion of 13.5 mg/m2/h in patient 1 and 11 mg/m2/h in patient 2). When they became euthyroid on antithyroid treatment,
proteinuria
decreased without associated hematuria and/or hypertension. In conclusion, patients with autoimmune thyroid disease should be assessed for the possibility of
proteinuria
and the etiological investigation of
proteinuria
should include evaluation of thyroid functions.
...
PMID:Autoimmune thyroiditis with associated proteinuria: report of two patients. 1581 12
Vasculitis associated to antineutrophil cytoplasmic antibodies (ANCA) is a rare complication of therapy with antithyroid medication. They were mainly described in patients treated with propylthiouracil (PTU), carbimazole, methimazole and rarely by benzylthiouracil (Basden). We report a case of 12-years-old girl treated by benzylthiouracil for
Grave's disease
who developed after 2 years vasculitis associated with cutaneous involvement (generalized ulcer necrotic purpura) and glomerulonephritis with
proteinuria
of 24 hours at 26 mg/kg/day, microscopic hematuria and renal failure with creatinemia level at 135 micromol/l. The ANCA type antiMPO (myeloperoxidase) was positive. The histology study of the renal needle biopsy was in favour with focal necrotizing glomerulonephritisand crescents with different evolutive stages. The discontinuation of benzylthiouracil and the treatment by the corticoids involved a disappearance of cutaneous lesions, a negative result of
proteinuria
, a normalization of the renal function (creatinemia=84 micromol/l) and a disappearance of hematuria and ANCA. These results permitted to announce hypothesis that benzylthiouracil was implicated in development of vasculitis associated to ANCA.
...
PMID:[Vasculitis with renal involvement and antineutrophil cytoplasmic antibodies (ANCA) in a child receiving benzylthiouracil]. 1765 41
A previously healthy middle-aged woman noted a rapid onset of flank pain with gross hematuria. Enhanced CT scan showed thrombosis of the inferior vena cava and right renal vein. Laboratory findings revealed nephrotic
proteinuria
, Sjogren's syndrome (SjS), and
Graves' disease
(GD). A right nephrectomy was performed because of progressive and refractory renal necrosis. Renal specimens showed venous infarction with diffuse hemorrhagic and severe congestive renal necrosis, and membranous nephropathy (MN). The present case was diagnosed as acute renal necrosis due to catastrophic thrombosis in a patient with SjS, GD, and MN. It was thought that sudden development of thrombosis may have been caused by the status of the autoimmune disorders, and the associated MN.
...
PMID:A fulminant case of renal vein thrombosis in a patient with autoimmune disorder and membranous nephropathy. 1848 May 84
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
Rare associations of immunological disorders can often tell more than mice and rats about the pathogenesis of immunologically mediated human kidney disease. Cases of glomerular disease with thyroiditis and
Graves' disease
and of minimal change disease with lymphoepithelioma-like thymic carcinoma and lymphomatoid papulosis were recently reported in Pediatric Nephrology. These rare associations can contribute to the unraveling of the pathogenesis of membranous nephropathy (MN) and minimal change disease (MCD) and lead to the testing of novel research hypotheses. In MN, the target antigen may be thyroglobulin or another thyroid-released antigen that becomes planted in the glomerulus, but other scenarios can be envisaged, including epitope spreading, polyreactivity of pathogenic antibodies, and dysregulation of T regulatory cells, leading to the production of a variety of auto-antibodies with different specificities [immune dysregulation, polyendocrinopathy, enteropathy, X-linked (IPEX syndrome)]. The occurrence of MCD with hemopathies supports the role of T cells in the pathogenesis of
proteinuria
, although the characteristics of those T cells remain to be established and the glomerular permeability factor(s) identified.
...
PMID:Pathophysiological lessons from rare associations of immunological disorders. 1934 67
A 72-year-old woman was admitted to our hospital because of massive
proteinuria
of 2.2 g/day. She had seen a general practitioner for management of
Basedow
disease, diabetes mellitus and hypertension for 24 years. On admission, she complained of anorexia and nausea. Laboratory data showed serum creatinine of 3.62 mg/dL and MPO-ANCA of 68 EU. Renal biopsy revealed crescentic glomerulonephritis complicated with membranous nephropathy. Thiamazole (MMI), which was being given for
Basedow
disease for years, was withdrawn on the suspicion as a cause of MPO-ANCA. Three years after the withdrawal of MMI, renal failure slowly progressed to the end-stage, while MPO-ANCA was negative. She was introduced onto hemodialysis. At that time, MPO-ANCA became positive again, the titer being 12.9 EU. Therefore, we suspected a relapse of ANCA-related vasculitis and performed steroid pulse therapy on the patient with methylprednisolone at 0.5 g/day for 3 days. On hospital day 14, MPO-ANCA became negative. On day 25, however, severe acute pancreatitis developed and a pancreatic tumor lesion was found on CT. In spite of amelioration of the pancreatitis by medical treatment, the pancreatic tumor lesion did not show any significant change. On day 48, she died of multiple organ failure. Autopsy showed a mucinous cyst adenoma of pancreas and necrotizing pancreatitis. We suspected steroid therapy as the cause of the pancreatic lesions.
...
PMID:[MPO-ANCA related vasculitis complicating mucinous cystadenoma of the pancreas and severe acute pancreatitis after steroid pulse therapy: a case report]. 1906 54
The health status of a woman with type 1 diabetes was followed during pregnancy in a maternity hospital. In addition to insulin, thyroxine therapy was applied due to hypothyreosis as a consequence of
Basedow
disease. Nephropathy and significant
proteinuria
had developed as complications of diabetes, with the
proteinuria
increasing considerably during pregnancy. Simultaneously thyroxine doses increased to exceptionally high levels. The cause of increasing doses was found to be secretion of thyroxine into urine. The phenomenon has been described earlier, but it is not generally recognized.
...
PMID:[No thyroxin dose seemed sufficient--why?]. 1967 99
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