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)

We report a 2-year-old boy with renovascular hypertension caused by stenosis of the left renal artery that was successfully treated by percutaneous transluminal angioplasty (PTA). He initially presented with severe hyponatremia, hypokalemia, polyuria, transient proteinuria and weight loss. This phenomenon is known to occur in patients with renovascular and malignant hypertension, called hyponatremia hypertensive syndrome, but was thought to be rare in children. Renovascular hypertension should be considered as a cause of hyponatremia in children. In addition, PTA is an appropriate treatment even in very young children with renovascular hypertension.
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PMID:Severe hyponatremia in a patient with renovascular hypertension: case report. 783 Aug 65

The antiphospholipid syndrome is usually defined by the association of a clinical manifestation (recurrent venous and/or arterial thrombosis, recurrent spontaneous miscarriages) and a biological abnormality (anticardiolipin antibody, lupus anticoagulant). We retrospectively analyzed the records of 5 patients (4 females, 1 male, aged 30 +/- 12 years) with antiphospholipid syndrome, primary (n = 1) or secondary to systemic lupus erythematosus (n = 4), who developed malignant systemic hypertension with renal insufficiency, in the absence of lupus nephritis. Before the episode of malignant hypertension, all patients had normal systemic blood pressure and renal function. During malignant hypertension the systolic pressure was 206 +/- 39 mmHg and the diastolic pressure 130 +/- 25 mmHg, peak serum creatinine was 204 +/- 95 mumol/l, daily proteinuria was 1.1 +/- 0.8 gr, and complement serum levels were normal in all patients. Renal angiography found normal proximal renal arteries. Renal biopsy showed ischaemic glomeruli without proliferative lesions (n = 5), focal intimal fibrosis either isolated (n = 3) or associated with thrombosis (n = 2) of the intrarenal vessels, and the absence of vasculitis. Immunofluorescence study did not reveal typical lupus deposits. Patients were treated with antihypertensive agents, increasing doses of prednisone (n = 3), and anticoagulant (n = 2) or anti-aggregant therapy (n = 1). After a mean follow-up of 6.8 +/- 5.2 years, 4 patients were still alive with normal blood pressure and renal function, whereas 1 patient died of a probable catastrophic antiphospholipid syndrome. Patients with antiphospholipid syndrome, primary or secondary to systemic lupus erythematosus, may develop malignant hypertension with renal insufficiency and intrarenal vascular lesions, in the absence of lupus nephritis.
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PMID:Malignant hypertension in antiphospholipid syndrome without overt lupus nephritis. 827 82

The aim of this study was to determine whether activation of vasopressin (AVP) peripheral V1 receptors is involved in the development of malignant hypertension, stroke, and end-organ damage in stroke-prone spontaneously hypertensive rats (SHR-SPs). For this purpose, young salt-loaded SHR-SPs were treated orally daily from their 5th to 34th week of age, by a selective AVP V1 receptor antagonist, SR 49059, used in a dose (30 mg/kg) that achieved complete peripheral V1 receptor blockade. Untreated SHR-SPs served as controls. SR 49059 slightly and transiently (8th to 10th week of age) limited the rise in blood pressure, but thereafter systolic blood pressure values were similar in the two groups of SHR-SPs. Stroke-related mortality was not significantly different in SR 49059-treated and in control animals (65% vs 65% at 30 weeks, 65% vs 83% at 34 weeks). SR 49059 did not prevent the increases in fluid intake, diuresis and proteinuria seen in controls. Histological examination of the brain, kidneys and heart revealed that the development of fibrinoid necrosis and arterial thickening was not prevented by SR 49059, nor was that of malignant nephroangiosclerosis and of myocardial infarction and fibrosis. These data strongly suggest that AVP peripheral V1 receptor activation is not involved in the pathological processes that develop in SHR-SPs.
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PMID:Are vasopressin peripheral V1 receptors involved in the development of malignant hypertension and stroke in SHR-SPs? 861 11

The certificates of death of 14 deceased patients with Laurence-Moon-Bardet-Biedl (LMBB) syndrome, in which retinal dystrophy is dominant feature, were review. Death occurred at a considerably younger age than in the general population. Renal disease was noted as primary or contributing cause of death in 7 cases with the diagnoses: cyst of the kidney, renal sclerosis, renal failure, proteinuria, renal disease unspecified and malignant hypertension with renal involvement. It is concluded that renal involvement is characteristic of individuals with LMBB syndrome and seems to reduce life expectancy considerably.
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PMID:The cause of death in Laurence-Moon-Bardet-Biedl syndrome. 874 Nov 18

Patients with severe hypertension with retinoscopic bilateral papilloedema only are not classically regarded as having malignant hypertension (MHT). We have encountered 23 such patients between 1965-1993, whilst over a similar period we have seen 315 patients who fulfilled the conventional criteria for MHT with bilateral retinal haemorrhages, exudates with or without papilloedema. We hypothesised that patients with "lone" papilloedema and severe hypertension were suffering from a disease which was identical in aetiology and outcome to conventional MHT. There were no significant differences in age, mean blood pressure, proteinuria or renal function at presentation, ethnic composition, smoking status and followup blood pressure control between the papilloedema group and those presenting with conventional MHT. Clinical features at presentation in the papilloedema only group included strokes in 4, visual disturbance in 2, headaches in 3 and heart failure in 1 patient. Many patients however had no complications at presentation. After a mean followup of 59.8 months, of the "lone" papilloedema group, 7 patients (30.4%) were still alive, 1 patient was on renal dialysis therapy, 13 were dead (56.5%) and 2 (8.7%) were lost to followup. The commonest causes of death were stroke in 4 patients, renal failure in 4 and heart disease in 2. This was a similar pattern of mortality to those patients with "conventional" MHT. Lifetable analyses showed a median survival of 35.9 months for the papilloedema group which was significantly worse than the 108.7 months for the conventional MHT group (Lee-Desu statistic 4.04, p = 0.045). We suggest that patients with high blood pressure and lone bilateral papilloedema may comprise a hitherto unrecognised subgroup of patients with MHT. Once intracerebral pathology has been excluded, these patients need to be treated as aggressively as those with MHT.
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PMID:Severe hypertension with lone bilateral papilloedema: a variant of malignant hypertension. 874

Focal and segmental sclerosed lesions in the glomeruli are found in several pathological entities and more often are found in the corticomedullary junction where renal blood flow and filtration pressure is maximal. Experimental data suggest that hyperfiltration injury results in focal and segmental glomerulosclerosis (FSGS). In keeping with this concept, malignant hypertension is a known cause of nephrotic-range proteinuria and nephrotic syndrome pathalobically represented by FSGS. We report a case of unilateral renal artery stenosis associated with nephrotic syndrome and FSGS in the contralateral kidney only. The kidney with the stenosed renal artery showed normal glomeruli with juxtaglomerular hyperplasia, suggesting that protection from hyperfiltration injury was provided by the presence of high-grade stenosis. Serum creatinine concentration, blood pressure, and proteinuria normalized after aorto-renal bypass surgery. This case shows the importance of hemodynamic factors on the pathogenesis of secondary FSGS and the progression of renal disease.
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PMID:Renal artery stenosis and unilateral focal and segmental glomerulosclerosis. 1070 47

-The ability of endothelin receptor blockade to prevent and to treat established cerebral and renal injury was explored in salt-loaded stroke-prone spontaneously hypertensive rats (SHRSP) with the endothelin receptor subtype-A antagonist A127722. SHRSP were subjected to 1% NaCl intake. The start of treatment with A127722 (35 and 70 mg. kg-1. d-1, respectively) was either synchronized with salt loading or initiated after the first observation of cerebral edema with T2-weighted magnetic resonance imaging. In untreated control animals median survival was 54 days (range, 32 to 80 days) after the start of salt loading. Early-onset A127722 treatment increased median survival to 233 days (range, 92 to 407 days; P<0.05 versus controls) with 35 mg/kg and to 124 days (range, 97 to 169 days; P<0.05 versus control) with 70 mg/kg. The development of cerebral edema was prevented, and systolic blood pressure and proteinuria were dose-dependently reduced. However, all rats in the 70-mg/kg treatment group developed hemorrhages in the basal ganglia shortly before death. Late-onset A127722 treatment failed to affect survival, systolic blood pressure, or proteinuria. Nevertheless, cerebral edema was reduced but not as well as in early-onset treatment. Development of hypertension, cerebral edema, and proteinuria was prevented in SHRSP when A127722 treatment was initiated at the start of salt-loading. However, A127722 treatment did not prolong survival in SHRSP with cerebral edema. This suggests that in SHRSP the endothelin A receptor participates actively in the development of increased blood pressure and initiation of organ damage but participates minimally in established malignant hypertension and progression of target-organ damage.
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PMID:Early-onset but not late-onset endothelin-A-receptor blockade can modulate hypertension, cerebral edema, and proteinuria in stroke-prone hypertensive rats. 993 Oct 94

We report a case whose renal failure was due to malignant hypertension and in whom steroid facilitated the recovery of renal function. The patient, a 41-year-old man, was admitted to our hospital because of malaise and macrohematuria. On admission, his blood pressure was 270/160 mmHg. The plasma renin activity (PRA) and aldosterone were markedly elevated. Chest X-ray, echo cardiography and electrocardiogram revealed marked hypertrophy. Hypertensive retinopathy and arteriosclerotic change were noted on ophthalmoscopy. Because of renal dysfunction (blood urea nitrogen 45.6 mg/dl, serum creatinine 4.9 mg/dl with massive proteinuria and increased FENa, renal biopsy was performed on the 8th clinical day. The specimens showed slight proliferation of mesangial cells with mesangiolysis and interstitial cell infiltration, in addition to marked arteriosclerosis and partial collapse of the glomerular tuft. After the administration of a Ca antagonist and angiotensin converting enzyme inhibitor (ACE-I), his mean blood pressure decreased to 100-130 mmHg, and urinary protein decreased as well. Nevertheless, renal dysfunction remained unchanged during the following 3 weeks. Thus, prednisolone (PSL, 30 mg/day) was administered on the 22nd clinical day and renal function improved thereafter without a significant change in blood pressure. The improved renal function was maintained after PSL tapered off on the 184th clinical day. It is suggested that PSL might be the therapy of choice in malignant hypertension, when the renal function has not been improved by anti-hypertensive treatment alone.
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PMID:[A case of malignant hypertension in whom steroid improved renal function]. 1065 31

We report a secretory paraganglioma in an eleven-year-old Trinidadian girl of East Indian descent who presented with malignant hypertension, proteinuria and modest elevation of urinary vanillylmandelic acid levels. The extra-adrenal mass was surgically removed without complications. The patient has been normotensive without evidence of recurrence of disease but with persistent visual sequel two years later. This case reinforces the observation that extraadrenal retroperitoneal paragangliomas can be functionally very active and early computed tomography or other imaging procedure is necessary for rapid noninvasive evaluation, timely surgery and prevention of permanent morbidity.
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PMID:Extraadrenal retroperitoneal paraganglioma causing malignant hypertension and permanent visual loss in an eleven-year-old girl. 1078 62

The aim of the present study is to investigate the pathophysiological characteristics of a number of recent cases of malignant hypertension (MHT) and to compare them to the characteristics of earlier cases. Patients with MHT (age 25-76, mean 44+/-2 years) who were admitted to our hospital from 1984-1999 were retrospectively studied. All of the patients had either grade III or IV retinopathy and diastolic blood pressure levels higher than 120 mmHg. The observations in this study were compared to previously reported findings regarding 59 MHT patients who were admitted from 1971-1983. Of the 37 recent MHT patients, 20 had essential hypertension (EHT) as the underlying disease, 13 had chronic glomerulonephritis (CGN), and the remaining 4 presented with other diseases including pyelonephritis and renovascular hypertension. A positive family history of hypertension was more prevalent in the EHT patients than in other patients, and persistent proteinuria, microhematuria, and anemia were more prevalent in the CGN patients. These characteristics were similar between the recent and previous cases. Within 4 weeks after admission, hemodialysis was initiated in 3 of the 13 patients (23%) with CGN and 2 of the 20 (10%) patients with EHT. The prevalence of renal death at 1 year after admission was 30%, which was lower than the prevalence in the previous cases (42%). Grade IV retinopathy was seen in 45% of the patients admitted from 1984-1999, significantly less than in the patients admitted from 1971-1983 (66%, p<0.05). In addition, left ventricular hypertrophy was less frequently observed on electrocardiogram in the recent cases (67%) than in the previous cases (88%, p<0.05). Our results suggest that the recent cases of MHT demonstrate less severe organ damage.
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PMID:Trends in the pathophysiological characteristics of malignant hypertension. 1167 41


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