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)

The kidney is one of the target organs involved as a consequence of the systemic complications seen in drug abusers. This may manifest itself in one of the following forms: acute hepatitis with modest proteinuria (less than 2 Gm. per day); bacterial endocarditis with hematuria, azotemia, and a focal or diffuse glomerulonephritis; the nephrotic syndrome with focal mesangial sclerosis and diffuse interstitial nephritis often pursuing a fulminant course terminating in uremia; acute renal failure secondary to rhabdomyolysis and myoglobinuria; polyarteritis nodosa with renal involvement; and obstructive uropathy secondary to fungus ball in the urinary tract.
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PMID:Renal complications of drug addiction. 1 1

The clinical and pathologic findings of 2 infants and 7 older children with polyarteritis nodosa who were autopsied are reported. The most frequent clinical features included prolonged high fever, skin rash, abdominal symptoms, leukocytosis, proteinuria, and signs of either cardiac or renal failure. The 2 infants died of cardiac arrest, whereas renal or neurologic involvement was the most common cause of death in the older children. A consistent finding at autopsy was arteritis of the epicardial coronary arteries.
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PMID:Polyarteritis nodosa in childhood a clinical pathologic study. 3 42

Eleven patients with a diagnosis of polyarteritis nodosa were seen over an 8-year period in Cape Town, and evaluated as to clinical presentation, the most effective diagnostic approach, and the response to therapy. The major features of fever, abdominal pain, peripheral neuritis, myalgia/arthralgia, weight loss, proteinuria, positive urinary sediment and high white blood cell count should readily lead to the diagnosis which can be confirmed by multiple muscle biopsies. At the same time an ellipse of skin and subcutaneous fat can be taken. If the diagnosis is made early enough, an aggressive approach to therapy with steroid and immunosuppressive drugs can induce a response even in those patients who already have renal failure.
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PMID:Diagnostic and therapeutic problems of polyarteritis nodosa. 4 56

We report a case of microscopic polyarteritis nodosa associated with myeloperoxidase-antineutrophil cytoplasmic autoantibodies (MPO-ANCA). A 38 year-old female was admitted to our hospital, because of proteinuria, recurrent pyrexia, polyarthralgia, abdominal pain and purpura. She had a history of severe pulmonary hemorrhage and 4 kg weight loss for 8 months. On admission perinuclear ANCA without cytoplasmic ANCA was detected by indirect immunofluorescence assay and MPO-ANCA was detected by enzyme linked immunosorbent assay. But anti-nuclear antibodies, immune complexes and anti-glomerular basement membrane antibodies were not detected. Renal biopsy showed necrotizing crescentic glomerulonephritis without immune deposits. Skin biopsy revealed leukocytoclastic vasculitis. Diagnosis of microscopic polyarteritis nodosa was made by these clinical and histological evidence of vasculitis. As renal failure progressed after admission, corticosteroid and cyclophosphamide administration were started. Renal function and other symptoms improved paralleled with decreased MPO-ANCA titer to normal values. It is suggested that MPO-ANCA may be closely related to the pathogenesis of microscopic polyarteritis nodosa and it may be a good serological marker for diagnosis and disease activity of this disease.
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PMID:[A case of microscopic polyarteritis nodosa associated with myeloperoxidase-antineutrophil cytoplasmic autoantibodies (MPO-ANCA)]. 136 30

A 51-year-old woman had been suffering from blood-stained purulent sinusitis and antibiotic-resistant bouts of fever for 4 months. She had microhematuria and serological evidence of inflammation (erythrocyte sedimentation rate [ESR] 92/135 mm, C-reactive protein 5.0 mg/dl). When she was admitted to hospital suspected of having postinfectious glomerulonephritis she complained of spontaneous colic-like pains in the left flank. Within one day the haemoglobin concentration fell from 10 to 6.5 g/dl. Ultrasound and computed tomography demonstrated a large space-occupying lesion around the left kidney. At operation this was found to be a rupture of the kidney with perirenal bleeding which was treated without removing the kidney. No biopsy was taken, but serological tests showed antineutrophil cytoplasmatic antibodies (cANCA), indicating Wegener's granulomatosis as the cause of the compensated renal insufficiency and spontaneous renal rupture. Under immunosuppressive treatment the inflammatory signs (ESR 18/44 mm), fever, chronic maxillary sinusitis, raised serum creatinine concentration and the ANCA titre all regressed, while proteinuria of about 4 g/24 h persisted. There was no recurrence during a follow-up period of 15 months. Serological signs of marked inflammatory activity, urinary sediments of nephritis and spontaneous retroperitoneal bleeding should suggest that, in addition to lupus erythematodes and panarteritis nodosa, Wegener's granulomatosis be included in the differential diagnosis.
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PMID:[Spontaneous kidney rupture as an early complication of Wegener's granulomatosis]. 154 1

The authors studied clinical and biological data occurring in 165 patients observed during 23 years and afflicted with polyarteritis nodosa. Hypertension was present in 52 patients (31.5%) and seven of them suffered from malignant hypertension (4%). Mean age of patients (6 male, 1 female), with malignant hypertension was 38 +/- years old. Mean follow up was 49 +/- 28 months including 26 +/- 21 months after discontinuation of treatment of polyarteritis nodosa. Malignant hypertension occurred during the first year of evolution of polyarteritis nodosa. Renal insufficiency was present in 5 of 7 patients. Proteinuria was greater than 1 gr/d in 4 cases. Renal arteriography was performed in 6 patients and showed in every case renal ischemia and microaneurysms in five. In 4 patients measurements of plasma renin activity and of aldosterone were obtained. A stimulation of those hormones was demonstrated. Some symptoms of polyarteritis nodosa were present with a high incidence in case of malignant hypertension: digestive signs (6/7), orchitis (3/6). HBs antigen was present in 6 cases and hepatitis in 5. Captopril was effective in every case, alone or associated with other treatments. Follow up of hypertension went from 8 months to 4 years. At present time 6 patients are alive and one is lost of follow up. A treatment is necessary in 6 of 7 patients. Creatininemia is greater than 300 micromol/l in 4 patients. A successful kidney transplantation was performed in one case. Our study shows a close relation between malignant hypertension observed in polyarteritis nodosa, vascular nephropathy, digestive and urologic signs. Hepatitis B virus could be responsible of those manifestations.
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PMID:[Malignant arterial hypertension in periarteritis nodosa. Incidence, clinicobiologic parameters and prognosis based on a series of 165 cases]. 287 20

This study supports the concept that primary necrotizing and crescentic glomerulonephritis is a kidney-limited form of polyarteritis nodosa. Thirty-four patients with necrotizing and crescentic glomerulonephritis were divided into three groups based on the presence or absence of systemic vasculitis as determined by clinical or histologic criteria. Laboratory studies demonstrated elevated erythrocyte sedimentation rates, anemia, mild eosinophilia, hematuria, and proteinuria in patients in each group; there were no significant differences in these data between the groups, however. Complement levels and antinuclear antibody screens were normal. Mean serum creatinine levels were markedly elevated but fell by a factor of two following therapy. There was a higher morbidity in the patients with kidney-limited disease. This was attributable to a higher percentage of these patients' having no symptoms and presenting for medical care only after they were in chronic renal failure. Most patients not experiencing chronic renal failure were treated with cyclophosphamide and prednisone, which seemed effective in this retrospective study.
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PMID:Clinical and pathologic features of polyarteritis nodosa and its renal-limited variant: primary crescentic and necrotizing glomerulonephritis. 288 Jul 91

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 fawn-hooded (FH) rat develops hypertension spontaneously. Systolic blood pressure is already elevated at 5 weeks of age, increases with age, and the final range is 180-240 mmHg at the age of 1 year. Concomitantly with the rise in blood pressure proteinuria occurs and increases with age. Fawn-hooded rats reaching the accelerated phase of the hypertension are characterized by blood pressure values exceeding 220 mmHg, heavy proteinuria and increased heart, kidney, liver, adrenal and spleen weights. Those prone to malignant hypertensive disease show a period of increased water turnover for several weeks after weaning; during this period, they do not show the pronounced decrease in water intake upon fasting for 24 h as observed in FH rats of the same age prone to a milder form of hypertension, i.e. diuresis and drinking continue even when no food is consumed. The major cause of death for FH rats is malignant nephrosclerosis with the nephrotic syndrome and/or cardiac failure with chronic pulmonary congestion. Some animals die of bleeding from mesenteric vessels with periarteritis nodosa. In FH rats with malignant hypertension, heart, kidney, liver and spleen weights are significantly increased compared with FH rats of the same age with mild hypertension. Histopathology shows myocardial fibrosis and myocardial infarctions. Generalized arteriolosclerosis is common, sometimes accompanied with local fibrinoid degeneration and (peri)arteritis. Some major arteries show intimal proliferation. It is concluded that the FH rat provides an interesting model for the study of hypertension and its consequences.
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PMID:Spontaneous hypertension in the fawn-hooded rat: a cardiovascular disease model. 346 7

A longitudinal study of circulating immune complexes (CIC) was performed in 121 patients with biopsy verified glomerulonephritis (GN). 1286 blood samples were obtained during a mean observation period of 21 months. Two methods for detection of CIC were used, the Clq-binding activity and a PEG precipitation test. CIC were detected by both tests in 21% of all blood samples and detected in at least one blood sample from 57 patients. The presence of CIC was found to be either transient (34 patients), intermittent (11 patients) or permanent (12 patients). CIC were found transiently at the time of renal biopsy and disappeared within months in patients with idiopathic extracapillary GN (7 of 9 patients), endocapillary GN (2/2) and GN associated with polyarteritis nodosa (5/6), Wegener's granulomatosis (3/3) and Henoch-Schoenlein syndrome (3/6). CIC were detected either transiently, intermittently or permanently for years after renal biopsy in patients with SLE (12/14) and membranoproliferative GN type I (7/12). CIC were only occasionally detected in patients with minor change nephropathy (1/9), membranoproliferative GN type II (0/2), IgA nephropathy (6/17), focal segmental sclerosis (1/8) and membranous GN (2/11). In these patients CIC were often transiently present without apparent relationship to time since renal biopsy. Overall, a relationship was found between the presence of CIC and decreasing serum creatinine, but there was no correlation with changes in proteinuria or with increasing blood pressure. Serial measurements of CIC showed correlations with clinical events only in individual patients, but not in the population as a whole.
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PMID:Circulating immune complexes in glomerulonephritis: a longitudinal study. 613 94


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