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Query: UMLS:C0033687 (
proteinuria
)
24,015
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The frequency of mesangial IgA deposition was examined in 250 consecutive autopsy cases without known renal disease. Diffuse granular mesangial deposits of IgA were detected in 12 of 250 cases (4.8%). In six patients IgA deposits were associated with liver cirrhosis. Six patients (2.4%) suffered from various other conditions including endocarditis, bronchial asthma, cardiovascular disease, and
neoplasia
. Two of these patients had completely negative urine analysis on repeated investigations, whereas three patients exhibited microscopic haematuria and/or mild
proteinuria
. IgA1 was the major constituent in all specimens. C3c deposits in glomeruli were detected in one kidney. Our findings indicate that clinically overt renal disease is present in only a limited proportion of individuals with mesangial IgA deposits. Apparently, it represents the tip of an iceberg.
...
PMID:Frequency of mesangial IgA deposits in a non-selected autopsy series. 251 84
Nephrotic syndrome due to renal amyloidosis in association with hypernephroma underwent gradual but complete remission with loss of
proteinuria
after unilateral nephrectomy. Remission persisted for over five years despite the development of intracranial metastatic disease and the administration of dexamethasone, but relapse occurred 6 months before eventual death. This case history appears to be unique amongst the descriptions of
tumor
-associated amyloidosis.
...
PMID:Remission of nephrotic syndrome in amyloidosis associated with a hypernephroma. 258 47
We describe the occurrence of a nephrotic syndrome in association with transitional cell carcinoma of the bladder. The
proteinuria
disappeared several weeks after removal of the
tumor
. Light and electron microscopy were compatible with a minimal-change lesion, but immunofluorescence showed linear immunoglobulin deposition. Immunoglobulins eluted from the
tumor
reacted specifically with the kidney and vice versa. We conclude that antibody formation against a specific component of basement membrane common to both kidney and
tumor
gave rise to the nephropathy in this case.
...
PMID:Nephrotic syndrome associated with transitional cell carcinoma of the bladder. 265 48
We report a 7-year-old girl who presented with membranous glomerulonephritis and steroid-resistant nephrotic syndrome in association with a benign ovarian tumour. Surgical excision of the
tumor
led to complete disappearance of the
proteinuria
within 2 weeks.
Tumour
-associated membranous nephropathy in children is rare, as a review of the literature shows.
...
PMID:Membranous nephropathy associated with ovarian tumour in a young girl: recovery after removal. 266 14
Renal vein thrombosis in early infancy is a complication of dehydration and prolonged hypotension. The onset is usually acute and the most common clinical signs are uni- or bilateral frank masses, hematuria,
proteinuria
and thrombocytopenia. In most cases, with conservative management, the late outcome is favorable. In the adult, renal vein thrombosis is often a silent complication of the nephrotic syndrome, the hypercoagulability of which may be an important factor in the pathogenesis of the thrombosis. Clinically, the presentation of a sudden complete occlusion is that of severe abdominal and lumbar pain with hematuria and loss of function of the kidney that suffers hemorrhagic infarction. Physical examination often reveals an enlarged kidney. With gradual occlusion, renal function is preserved. The initial diagnostic approach is with ultrasound studies and computed tomography; definitive diagnosis is established by renal venography or by selective renal arteriography. In general, a conservative approach including the use of anticoagulant treatment is preferred to surgical intervention. Priapism is a persistent painful penile erection due to ischemic or non-ischemic causes; therapeutic intracavernosal injection of papaverine is becoming the most common cause. In early and mild stages, aspiration of blood from the corpora cavernosa supplemented with intracavernosal irrigation with alpha-stimulating agents is the procedure of first choice; in late and severe ischemia, a shunt procedure may become necessary. Hepatic vein thrombosis occurs in association with a number of conditions considered predisposing factors including the use of oral contraceptives. The clinical picture may be that of an acute illness with abdominal pain, hepatomegaly, ascites and hepatic failure as well as early death. More often, the onset is insidious with slowly developing ascites and wasting. For the diagnosis, hepatic scintigraphy may be helpful but, at present, ultrasonography, computed tomography and magnetic resonance scanning are procedures of choice. There is, as yet, no adequate treatment. A fatal outcome may be prevented by surgical decompression of the congested liver and, in recent years, liver transplantation has been employed. Portal vein thrombosis, in children, is usually considered a complication of umbilical sepsis or a result of a congenital abnormality of the portal vein. In adults, the most frequent causes are hepatic cirrhosis and
neoplasia
. Clinically, there may be a sudden appearance of ascites with resolution in a symptom-free interval until the onset of other features of portal hypertension occur. Currently, ultrasound real-time imaging supplemented with Doppler capability, computed tomography and magnetic resonance scanning provide the necessary diagnostic information. Variceal hemorrhage is often the first major complication requiring treatment.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
...
PMID:Thrombosis in particular organ veins. 268 Aug 53
We report a case of Castleman's disease of multifocal plasma-cell type revealed by a severe general weakness, associated to a nephrotic syndrome with renal failure. The characteristic aspects of lymphoid hyperplasia with hyalinization of follicles and interfollicular vascular proliferation were observed in mesenteric lymph nodes, the spleen was involved by an infarcted localisation of Castleman's disease. The glomerular lesions were consistent with a proliferative mesangial glomerulonephritis. The removal of the spleen and of the mesenteric nodes involved by the disease, associated with a steroid course was curative. The nephrotic syndrome appears to be etiologically related to the presence of the Castleman's
tumor
. The removal of the
tumor
relieves the
proteinuria
and the renal failure as in other cases reported in the literature.
...
PMID:[Castleman's disease and glomerular nephropathy (apropos of 1 case]. 269 15
Total
proteinuria
(SSA test) and beta-2-microglobulinuria (radial immunodiffusion and radioimmunoassay tests) were measured in 60 rural patients with histologically proven tumors of the renal pelvis and ureters and as many individually matched controls. The controls were the first neighbours of the same sex, age (+/- 2 yrs), profession and migratory history. Urinalysis was performed twice with an interval of nine years (in 1973/4 and 1982/3). As expected, both
proteinuria
and beta-2-microglobulinuria were more frequently elevated among the patients. However, these tests were very often positive among the controls as well. Thus, the prevalence rate of hyper-beta-2-microglobulinuria, as measured by the RIA method in 1982/3, was 26.3% in the control group. A high frequency of the tubular damage, as revealed by this test, among presumably healthy persons has been attributed to the fact that most upper urothelial
tumor
cases come from the Balkan endemic nephropathy foci where a significant proportion of inhabitants show signs of kidney affection.
...
PMID:[Proteinuria and beta 2-microglobulinuria in patients with tumors of the renal pelvis and ureter and in healthy persons from areas of endemic nephropathy]. 269 64
The medical records of 59 dogs with renal amyloidosis were reviewed. Most dogs with amyloidosis were greater than 6 years old, and females were affected more often than males. Beagles, Collies, and Walker Hounds were at increased risk, whereas German Shepherd Dogs and mixed-breed dogs were at decreased risk. Common historical findings were anorexia, polyuria, polydipsia, lethargy, vomiting, and weight loss. Common laboratory findings were leukocytosis, lymphopenia, nonregenerative anemia, hypercholesterolemia, azotemia, hyperphosphatemia, metabolic acidosis, isosthenuria, cylindruria, and
proteinuria
.
Proteinuria
was moderate to severe in most dogs, as assessed by qualitative determination of urine protein concentration, urine protein/urine creatinine ratio, and 24-hour urine protein excretion. Conservative medical management was of little value, and survival ranged from 3 to 20 months in 12 dogs for which this information was available. Moderate to severe diffuse global glomerular amyloidosis was detected in all dogs. Medullary amyloid deposition was multifocal and less severe, but was evident in most dogs. Secondary tubulointerstitial and glomerular lesions were mild or absent in most dogs. Thromboembolism was identified in approximately 14% of affected dogs, underlying inflammatory disease in 37%, and
neoplasia
in 20%. Laboratory indicators of renal function correlated poorly with histologic lesions, with the exception of glomerular amyloid deposition and "chronic renal disease" index with endogenous creatinine clearance.
...
PMID:Clinicopathologic findings in dogs with renal amyloidosis: 59 cases (1976-1986). 276 63
A case of female with a large cystic
tumor
in her infrascapular region is reported. The
tumor
was 8 cm x 7 cm in size. Histologically, it was a pseudocyst with calcification. The patient showed no abnormal renal functions other than
proteinuria
. Because she had suffered from overlap syndromes of systemic lupus erythematosus, progressive systemic sclerosis, and suspected dermatomyositis, we diagnosed this a unique case of dystrophic calcinosis. There have been several reports of cases with connective tissue diseases showing subcutaneous calcification, but to our knowledge no such giant calcifying pseudocyst has ever been reported.
...
PMID:A giant calcifying pseudocyst seen in a patient with overlap syndrome. 277 90
Monoclonal antibody 791T/36, recognizing a Mr 72,000 antigen on the surface of colon carcinoma cells, has been used to construct an immunotoxin by conjugating to it the ribosomal inhibitor protein, ricin toxin A chain. The antibody 791T/36 has been shown to bind to membranes of freshly disaggregated
tumor
cells from human colon tumors, and to localize in tumors in vivo. Subacute toxicology testing in rats receiving immunotoxin i.v. showed, at highest doses, weight loss, decreased serum albumin, and hepatocyte vacuolization without elevation in liver function tests. A Phase I dose escalation study was carried out in which 17 patients with metastatic colorectal cancer were treated with doses of immunotoxin ranging from 0.02 to 0.2 mg/kg/day in 1-h i.v. infusions for a 5-day course. Side-effects included a composite of signs and symptoms thought to be generic to ricin A chain immunotoxins, including decreased serum albumin, mild fever, and flu-like symptoms, all being reversible. Two additional findings, reversible
proteinuria
and mental status changes, were also noted which may be characteristic of this immunotoxin. By 10-20 days after therapy, most patients developed IgM and IgG antibodies against both the ricin toxin A chain and the immunoglobulin portion of the immunotoxin, which were asymptomatic. A strong anticombining site antibody response was seen. Biological activity manifest as mixed
tumor
regression was seen in five patients.
...
PMID:Phase I study of monoclonal antibody-ricin A chain immunotoxin XomaZyme-791 in patients with metastatic colon cancer. 279 Aug 28
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