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Query: UMLS:C0033687 (proteinuria)
24,015 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

A 34-year-old quadripara was hospitalized in the 33rd gestational week due to an acute hypertensive crisis, headache, upper abdominal pain, icterus, and proteinuria. Laboratory testing revealed hemolysis, hepatic dysfunction, and thrombopenia. The values returned toward normal after delivery by cesarean section. Diffuse bleeding in the surgical wound and acute renal failure necessitated two relaparotomies, intensive hemotherapy, and hemodialysis. Mother and child were released in good condition. Anesthesiological and obstetrical aspects of the HELLP syndrome are discussed.
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PMID:[The HELLP syndrome--a rare form of preeclampsia. Anesthesiologic and obstetric aspects]. 291 50

We studied 29 patients affected by acute renal failure due to multiple myeloma with Bence-Jones proteinuria greater than 1 g/day to evaluate the effectiveness of plasma exchange in the treatment of severe myeloma nephropathy. Renal failure was severe enough to require dialysis in 24 cases, while the remaining 5 patients showed serum creatinine levels greater than 5 mg/dl. The patients were randomly allocated to Group I (15 patients undergoing plasma exchange together with corticosteroids, cytotoxic drug, hemodialysis only when needed) or to Group II (14 patients undergoing peritoneal dialysis together with corticosteroids and cytotoxic drug). In Group I Bence-Jones proteinuria decreased dramatically (P less than 0.01) with a significant increase in urine output (P less than 0.001), while Group II presented a slight reduction in Bence-Jones proteinuria without a significant increase in daily diuresis. Thirteen out the 15 Group I patients recovered renal function reaching serum creatinine levels less than or equal to 2.5 mg/dl in most cases. Only two patients in Group II improved renal failure well enough to stop dialysis. The one-year survival rate was significantly higher in Group I (66%) than in Group II (28%, P less than 0.01). We conclude that plasma exchange associated to chemotherapy rapidly removes large amounts of light chains, improves both renal function and long-term survival expectancies.
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PMID:Controlled plasma exchange trial in acute renal failure due to multiple myeloma. 304 77

This review has demonstrated that there is a considerable amount of information in the medical literature concerning hydrocarbon-associated kidney effects. The existing data lends itself to a variety of divergent interpretations. Ravnskov has stated that "glomerulonephritis should be recognized legally as an occupational disease," yet there is no mention of hydrocarbon exposure in the differential diagnosis of glomerulonephritis in two standard American textbooks of internal medicine. Two recently published textbooks of occupational medicine state without reservation that "studies have linked hydrocarbon exposure to glomerulonephritis" and base this conclusion on the previously cited studies of Beirne and Brennan, Zimmerman, and Ravnskov. Based on this review, the following conclusions have been reasonably substantiated: 1. Massive exposure to petroleum distillates on rare occasions may cause acute renal failure due to tubular necrosis. This appears to be a reversible lesion which, depending on the level of exposure, the medical care and support available, and pre-existing renal function, may be without chronic sequelae. 2. Case reports linking Goodpasture's syndrome and other types of glomerulonephritis to hydrocarbon exposure are based on circumstantial evidence and cannot be used to establish a causal association. 3. The evidence from the eight case-control studies of hydrocarbon exposure and glomerulonephritis is inconclusive. Six of the eight published case-control studies show a positive association between hydrocarbon exposure and glomerulonephritis, but four of the six studies have methodologic flaws that could explain the observed effect. The findings in the one positive study that is methodologically acceptable were not replicated in a subsequent study utilizing a similar design. 4. Studies of hydrocarbon-exposed occupational cohorts have generally revealed a lower than expected risk of death from renal causes. As with most historical cohorts, the specific exposures, intensities and durations of exposure have been poorly defined. Effects of mortality that may occur among highly exposed subsets of these occupational cohorts may be diluted by a relatively large proportion of workers with minimal or no exposure to the class of hydrocarbons in question. 5. Studies of renal biochemistry and renal function effects have been uniformly negative in groups of workers from several industries with relatively high exposures of long duration to a variety of hydrocarbon solvents. The statistically significant differences in proteinuria and cell excretion observed in one of the studies should not be confused with clinical significance.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
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PMID:A review of the non-neoplastic kidney effects of hydrocarbon exposure in humans. 304 37

Acute renal failure is a most challenging clinical problem when it occurs in pregnancy. It requires an understanding of the normal physiology of the kidney in pregnancy and the natural history of different underlying renal diseases when pregnancy occurs. Because patients with chronic renal disease may present with worsening proteinuria, hypertension, and renal function, these disorders must be excluded from those conditions that cause acute deterioration of renal failure in otherwise normal women during pregnancy. As in all patients who develop acute renal failure, prerenal and obstructive causes must be excluded. Particularly important causes of prerenal azotemia in pregnancy include hyperemesis gravidarum and uterine hemorrhage, especially if it is unsuspected as in abruptio placentae. Infectious causes of acute renal failure in the pregnant woman include acute pyelonephritis and septic abortion. The clinical presentation of both these conditions should be apparent, and appropriate diagnosis and treatment can then be promptly instituted. Renal cortical necrosis is another cause of renal failure that occurs more frequently in pregnancy, and it must be differentiated from the many causes of acute tubular necrosis that may be associated with pregnancy. Those conditions that cause renal failure unique to pregnancy must always be considered when renal function deteriorates in the last trimester or the postpartum period. Severe preeclampsia, acute fatty liver of pregnancy, and idiopathic postpartum acute renal failure may all present similar complications, but the approach to each of these clinical disorders must be individualized. By understanding the causes of renal functional deterioration in pregnancy, a logical differential diagnosis can be established, allowing appropriate therapeutic decisions to preserve both maternal and fetal well-being.
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PMID:Acute renal failure in pregnancy. 305 11

Twenty-seven patients with renal vein thrombosis were retrospectively studied to evaluate their long-term prognosis and relevant prognostic factors. Twenty-four patients presented with a nephrotic syndrome, and 15 had renal impairment (8 acute; 7 moderate). Ten patients had a previous history of proteinuria, and 14 of nephrotic syndrome. Renal biopsy performed in 20 patients, of whom 19 were nephrotic, showed membranous glomerulonephritis in 14, focal segmental glomerulosclerosis in three, minimal change glomerulonephritis in two, and periarteritis nodosa in one. Renal vein thrombosis was angiographically proven in all patients and was bilateral in 18, localised to the left renal vein in seven, and to the right in two. Thrombosis of the inferior vena cava was associated in seven patients. Ten patients were treated by anticoagulants alone, nine by surgical thrombectomy, seven by thrombolysis, and two did not receive any specific treatment. One patient underwent successively thrombectomy and then thrombolysis. Eleven patients died within the first 6 months, mainly from haemorrhagic complications (n = 5) or severe sepsis (n = 2). Survivors were followed up from 6 months to 19 years. Nephrotic syndrome improved or even disappeared in 12 patients, and renal function did not worsen throughout the follow-up in any patients. The main prognostic factors were initial renal function and type of nephropathy: patients with membranous glomerulonephritis had a significantly better renal function and a lower mortality rate than patients with other nephropathies. Initial renal insufficiency was significantly associated with a poor prognosis. There was no advantage, in terms of survival, kidney function and nephrotic syndrome, of either thrombectomy or thrombolysis over anticoagulants alone, despite two complete venous recanalisations after thrombolysis. Accordingly, patients with renal vein thrombosis from membranous glomerulonephritis should be treated by anticoagulants alone, since the long-term prognosis of this disease seems unaffected by intercurrent renal vein thrombosis. With respects to the risk-to-benefit ratio, thrombectomy should be avoided and thrombolysis considered only in patients with initial acute renal failure from acute renal vein thrombosis.
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PMID:The prognosis of renal vein thrombosis: a re-evaluation of 27 cases. 314 96

The progression of renal failure was analyzed in 108 patients with mild to moderate renal impairment, none of whom had received any form of dietary protein, phosphate restriction or immunosuppressive treatment. The reciprocal of plasma creatinine was plotted against time using a minimum of six plasma creatinine values taken over at least six months (mean 13 values over 41 months). Plots indicated there was linear deterioration in 70 patients, non-linear deterioration in 15 and stable renal function in 24. Progressive renal failure was common in patients with glomerulonephritis, diabetic nephropathy, chronic pyelonephritis and polycystic kidney disease. Most patients with hypertensive nephrosclerosis, analgesic nephropathy and renal impairment following acute renal failure were stable. Among those with progressive impairment the mean rates of deterioration were significantly faster for patients with glomerulonephritis and diabetic nephropathy compared to those with chronic pyelonephritis, polycystic kidney disease and undiagnosed renal disease (p less than 0.01). Hence the underlying renal pathological changes appear to be important in determining progression of renal failure and also the subsequent rate of deterioration. For those with linear progression of renal failure there was a significant correlation between 24-h urinary protein excretion and the rate of deterioration. This relationship held for glomerulonephritis and chronic pyelonephritis as separate diagnostic groups only. Proteinuria, therefore, may be a useful prognostic index for the rate of progression of established renal failure. Calcium phosphate product correlated poorly with the rate of deterioration. We were unable to demonstrate a relationship between spontaneous protein intake and deterioration of renal function. However, patients prescribed high protein diets were not included in dietary analysis and we cannot, therefore, exclude the possibility that a high dietary protein intake may accelerate renal failure. Similarly we were unable to show a significant relationship between blood pressure and progression of renal failure although there were weak correlations between mean arterial pressure and rate of deterioration for chronic pyelonephritis and glomerulonephritis.
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PMID:Renal pathology and proteinuria determine progression in untreated mild/moderate chronic renal failure. 320 6

Nine patients affected from IgD myeloma were studied retrospectively in order to elucidate the incidence and peculiar traits of related nephropathy. Eight patients developed chronic renal failure, and as many as 5 were already suffering from renal failure since first admission to the hospital. In 3 cases acute renal failure was the major presenting symptom of the disease. Five patients underwent a regular dialytic treatment. We suggest that the high incidence of renal involvement found in IgD myeloma is related to the high incidence of Bence-Jones proteinuria observed in this disease. Presenting atypical symptoms, among which renal failure is the most important, are misleading and characteristic of the disease. Survival time seems to be negatively influenced by the presence of renal failure at the time of diagnosis.
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PMID:Renal involvement in IgD myeloma. 323 38

The proteinuria on admission, on the 3rd day of the disease, of a 15-year-old male patient with acute renal failure (vasomotor nephropathy) showed a glomerular proteinuria-predominant pattern, and had a normal activity of N-acetyl-beta-D-glucosaminidase, indicating little proximal tubular damage. During a late diuretic phase, the excretion of N-acetyl-beta-D-glucosaminidase in the urine increased in accordance with increases of sodium excretion and urine flow, and then decreased to the normal range on the 20th day of the disease. Urine during the late diuretic phase showed a tubular proteinuria pattern and finally returned to a normal pattern on the 47th day of the disease. Thus, transient proximal tubular damage was evidenced in the late diuretic phase of the patient.
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PMID:A change of urinary proteins from a glomerular pattern to a tubular pattern during a late diuretic phase of acute renal failure. 325 65

The incidence of acute renal failure, hypertension and electrolyte disorders in 64 bone marrow transplant recipients randomized to receive either cyclosporin or cyclophosphamide was investigated. Sixty-four per cent of patients developed acute renal failure, 75 per cent hypertension, and 88 per cent significant hypomagnesemia. The incidence of diastolic hypertension and hypomagnesemia was greater in the patents treated with cyclosporin. Hypomagnesemia was due to magnesium wasting by the kidney. Both groups received similar cumulative doses of aminoglycoside antibiotics. Significant proteinuria developed in all but one patient and nephrotic-range proteinuria was noted in 21 per cent. The cause of the proteinuria is unclear; no obvious morphologic changes were seen at autopsy in patients who exhibited nephrotic-range proteinuria. The abnormalities of renal function were shown to be transient in patients who were observed for periods ranging from one to three years. It is concluded that hypertension, renal failure and hypomagnesemia are common in the setting of bone marrow transplantation. Whereas cyclosporin probably aggravates the severity of these disorders, it is likely that other factors (e.g., aminoglycoside antibiotics) play a major role as shown by the high incidence of renal and electrolyte disorders in patients treated with cyclophosphamide alone.
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PMID:Hypertension and renal dysfunction in bone marrow transplant recipients. 327 85

Following a 6-year history of asymptomatic proteinuria and microhematuria, a 51-year-old man suffered from acute systemic eruption, liver dysfunction and acute renal failure immediately after developing a cold and taking drugs including piroxicam, aspirin and bristocycline. Renal biopsy revealed progressive IgA nephropathy associated with acute tubulointerstitial nephritis and granulomatous glomerulitis. Although the drug actually responsible for this condition was not defined, it is likely that drug-induced hypersensitivity angiitis with granulomatous glomerulitis was superimposed on preexisting IgA nephropathy in this patient.
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PMID:Hypersensitivity angiitis with granulomatous glomerulitis in a patient with preexisting IgA nephropathy. 338 49


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