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)

Circulating immune complexes were examined in patients with hemophilia or von Willebrand's disease in order to determine the immediate or long-term side effects after transfusion. The conglutinin binding assay which allows quantitation of C3bi-bearing immune complexes was used for 82 patients with hemophilia A. Immune complexes were detected in 37 (45%) of these cases prior to transfusion. Immune complexes also were detected in four of 11 patients with hemophilia A and factor VIII inhibitors, in five of 11 patients with hemophilia B, and in three of 10 patients with von Willebrand's disease. The levels of circulating immune complexes in 21 patients with hemophilia A and seven with von Willebrand's disease significantly increased 24 hours after concentrate or cryoprecipitate transfusions. Purified immune complexes from three patients with hemophilia A were shown to contain IgG, IgM, and complement components. No factor VIII coagulant or antigenic protein or fibrinogen was identified in the immune complexes using specific antisera. Side effects immediately after transfusion were not associated with immune complexes. The levels of factor VIII or IX after transfusion were not particularly decreased in relation to the presence of immune complexes. Finally, the presence of circulating immune complexes in the patients studied did not correlate with the number of transfusions, the units of concentrates injected, the presence of HBsAg or HbsAb, the levels of plasma aspartate transferase, or the presence of rheumatoid factor. Proteinuria was absent in all the patients studied.
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PMID:Effect of circulating immune complexes on transfusional therapy in patients with hemophilia or von Willebrand's disease. 642 Sep 54

Chronic proliferative synovitis secondary to haemathroses is a major complication in patients with severe haemophilia. Current management strategies include prophylactic infusions of the missing coagulation factor, corticosteroids, synoviorthesis and/or synovectomy with variable degrees of benefit. In addition, patients with coagulation factor inhibitors are not amenable to the invasive therapeutic modalities. The gross and microscopic findings of the synovitis in haemophilic arthritis are remarkably similar to those seen in patients with rheumatoid arthritis, although the pathophysiology of these two conditions are quite different. Haemophilic arthropathy, in the later stages, resembles degenerative rather than inflammatory joint disease. Oral D-penicillamine, a drug effective in the proliferative synovitis of rheumatoid arthritis, was evaluated in 16 patients. Ten patients had an unequivocal response, while three had a reduction in palpable synovium and three had no response. Thus 81% of the patients had a beneficial response. Minor reversible drug side-effects occurred in two patients (proteinuria in one and a rash in the second). The results of this study suggest that D-penicillamine is an effective and safe drug for the treatment of haemophilic chronic synovitis.
Haemophilia 2003 Jan
PMID:Treatment of chronic haemophilic synovitis in humans with D-penicillamine. 1255 81

We encountered a 2-year-old boy with acquired haemophilia, which rarely occurs in children, who was complicated with nephrotic syndrome. In mid-August 2001, he was diagnosed to have nephrotic syndrome based on the presence of massive proteinuria and hypoalbuminaemia. Activated partial thromboplastin time (APTT) was normal at 42.4 s at that time. After starting prednisone administration of 2 mg kg(-1) day(-1), the proteinuria disappeared immediately. However, in early October the same year, subcutaneous ecchymosis and intramuscular bleeding occurred for no apparent reason, and from the examination results his APTT was 106.4 s, factor VIII (FVIII) activity was <1%, and the anti-FVIII inhibitor titre was 6.9 BU ml(-1). As a result, he was diagnosed to have acquired haemophilia. The anti-nuclear antibody and anti-phospholipid antibody were negative. With recombinant activated FVII, haemostasis was obtained, and after administering three courses of steroid pulse therapy (methyl prednisolone: 20 mg kg(-1) day(-1) x 3 days), the anti-FVIII inhibitory activity disappeared. An analysis of the immunological and coagulation properties of his FVIII autoantibodies showed the anti-FVIII inhibitory activity to be mediated by IgG(1) antibody. In other words, his FVIII inhibitor was a Th1 dominant and it provided a good response to treatment. These findings correlate with those of previous reports. The patient thereafter frequently demonstrated a recurrence of nephrotic syndrome. As a result, he is presently being managed with cyclosporine. However, no recurrence of the anti-FVIII titre has been observed.
Haemophilia 2005 May
PMID:Successful steroid pulse treatment in childhood acquired haemophilia with nephrotic syndrome. 1587 76

We present a case of a 74-year-old male, who had a relapse of minimal change nephrotic syndrome (MCNS) as the initial presentation of acquired hemophilia A. MCNS had been maintained in remission with prednisolone 10 mg for 15 years. In early December 2005, the patient developed edema of the right leg, was admitted to a local general hospital, and was diagnosed as having a relapse of MCNS based on massive proteinuria (urine protein 6.1 g/day). One week later, severe anemia (hemoglobin 4.4 g/dl) and acute renal failure (creatinine 2.0 mg/dl) developed, and a CT scan of the abdomen revealed a hematoma in the left iliopsoas muscle. He was referred to our hospital with bleeding tendency. Laboratory examination revealed prolonged APTT 80.5 seconds), reduced factor VIII activity (<1%) and thepresence of factor VIII inhibitor at a titer of 19 Bethesda units/ml, based on which he was diagnosed as having acquired hemophilia A. With recombinant activated FVII, hemostasis was obtained and prednisolone administration 60 mg/day (1 mg/kg) was started. Both the acquired hemophilia A and MCNS responded well to the treatment with prednisolone. Six weeks after initiation of the treatment, factor VIII inhibitor and urine protein disappeared. This patient is considered to be a rare case; to the best of our knowledge, this is the third report of acquired hemophilia A with nephrotic syndrome.
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PMID:[Acquired hemophilia A developed at relapse of minimal change nephrotic syndrome]. 1763 2

To investigate renal function in a group of patients with a history of haemophilia and haematuria. We reviewed 32 medical records of the patients with haemophilia and gross haematuria identified through a computerized haemophilia registry, from January 1993 to December 2004. In all patients but three (two refused to participate and one died) clinical and laboratory tests were performed by the nephrologist. One patient had chronic renal failure because of diabetic nephropathy. In two patients reduced renal function was detected by creatinine clearance measurements, and one of them had Duchenne muscular dystrophy. In four patients minimal proteinuria was diagnosed by the biuret method. Mild reduction in renal function of unknown cause was found in only one of the 29 patients tested.
Haemophilia 2007 Sep
PMID:Haematuria in patients with haemophilia and its influence on renal function and proteinuria. 1788 Apr 34

Hemophilia A (HA) is a serious inherited bleeding disorder resulting from a deficiency of coagulation factor VIII (FVIII). Replacement therapy with intravenous infusion of FVIII can be associated with treatment failure in approximately one-third of patients secondary to the development of neutralizing alloantibodies (inhibitor). Emicizumab is a recombinant, humanized, bispecific monoclonal antibody that binds factor IXa and factor X and mimics FVIII. It has been licensed in many countries for the treatment of patients with HA with and without inhibitors with a favorable efficacy and safety profile. A 7-year-old child with severe HA and FVIII inhibitors, refractory to immune tolerance therapy, developed hematuria with nephrotic-range proteinuria after the first dose of emicizumab and subsequently also after a second dose 6 weeks later, which was associated with mild and transient leukopenia. Renal biopsy revealed a pattern of a full-house lupus nephritis. The patient fully and spontaneously recovered between 2 weeks after symptoms onset. In this report, we provide insights on a new and so far unreported renal complication associated to emicizumab treatment. Although emicizumab offers significant benefits for patient with HA, clinicians should be aware of this rare and potential serious renal adverse effect.
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PMID:Emicizumab-Induced Seronegative Full-House Lupus Nephritis in a Child. 3312 47