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)

Amelioration or cure of hypertension, hypercortisolism, diarrhea with steatorrhea, and massive proteinuria resulted from excision of a pheochromocytoma that contained immunoreactive ACTH, VIP, and somatostatin. Ectopic ACTH production by the tumor was clearly the cause of the hypercortisolism, and the possible involvement of VIP and somatostatin in the diarrhea and steatorrhea was considered. The response to tumor removal suggested that the mesangioproliferative glomerulonephritis shown on renal biopsy was also a paraneoplastic phenomenon.
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PMID:Hypercortisolism, diarrhea with steatorrhea, and massive proteinuria due to pheochromocytoma. 286 63

It had been previously thought that protein excretion in hypertensive nephrosclerosis was less than 0.5 to 1.0 g/24 h. Furthermore, it was believed that proteinuria in the nephrotic range associated with hypertension was probably due to primary renal disease, malignant hypertension, renal artery stenosis, or pheochromocytoma. We report eight patients with biopsy-proven hypertensive nephropathy and heavy proteinuria in the absence of malignant hypertension or renal artery stenosis. The 24-hour protein excretion ranged from 2.7 to 4.3 g. All patients had renal insufficiency, with serum creatinine ranging from 2.0 (176.8) to 7.8 mg/dL (689.5 mumol/L). Renal function worsened in most patients during the follow-up period despite adequate control of the hypertension, and three patients had to be started on hemodialysis. Three patients died during the follow-up period. We conclude that hypertensive nephrosclerosis must be included in the differential diagnosis of marked proteinuria in patients with essential hypertension and that heavy proteinuria, along with renal insufficiency, are poor prognostic indicators in such patients.
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PMID:Proteinuria in hypertension. 368 33

The authors provide a clinical example illustrating difficulties in the diagnosis of pheochromocytoma in a patient with infarction-like lesions in the heart, marked proteinuria, and diverse symptomatics due to excess catecholamine secretion by the tumor.
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PMID:[Pheochromocytoma with infarction-like changes in the heart and marked proteinuria]. 371 32

Severe renal impairment and massive proteinuria are rare in pheochromocytoma. We report the case of a patient with pheochromocytoma who repeatedly developed episodes of acute renal deterioration and transient, massive proteinuria. Each episodes followed hypotensive periods, two of which seemed to be induced by administration of metoclopramide. The pathogenetic mechanisms of acute renal deterioration and proteinuria are discussed.
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PMID:Acute renal failure and transient, massive proteinuria in a case of pheochromocytoma. 401 98

A 22-year-old male patient with focal segmental glomerulosclerosis(FSGS) associated with a pheochromocytoma is reported. Immunofluorescence study of the kidney biopsy specimen demonstrated segmental depositions of IgM, C3 and fibrinogen. Alteration of glomerular basement membrane(GBM) with fibrin strands and platelet aggregates was observed by electron microscopic examination. Administration of prednisolone had no effect on massive proteinuria, but surgical removal of the tumor promptly reduced proteinuria. It was suggested that FSGS can develop in patients with pheochromocytomas, and local hypercoagulation might be responsible for the development of this lesion.
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PMID:Focal segmental glomerulosclerosis associated with a pheochromocytoma. 653 66

In clinical practice, the coincidence of nephrotic syndrome with pheochromocytoma is very rare. The case is described of a 23-year-old woman who in June 1988 presented with recurrent hypertensive crises, severe asthenia, abundant sweats, orthostatic hypertension and massive proteinuria. Diagnostic tests performed (abdominal ultrasound and CT, urinalysis, renal function tests, plasma levels of metanephrine and normetanephrine, as well as urinary VMA determination) revealed the presence of a pheochromocytoma of the left adrenal gland combined with nephrotic syndrome. Surgical removal of the left adrenal led to immediate normalization of blood pressure and absence of urinary abnormalities. The authors therefore suggest either an immunological pathogenesis or one due to glomerular hyperfiltration.
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PMID:[The nephrotic syndrome and pheochromocytoma. A report of a rare clinical case]. 781 65

Nephrotoxic potential of laboratory cultures of freshwater cyanobacterium (blue-green alga) Microcystis aeruginosa PCC 7806 (Pasteur Institute) was assessed in male rats. The animals were injected intraperitoneally with 0.5, 1.0 and 2.0 LD50 doses of lyophilized cell extract. Elevated plasma urea and creatinine levels were accompanied by decrease in protein and albumin levels, followed by hematuria, proteinuria and bilirubinuria. Also decrease in kidney lactate dehydrogenase and glutamic oxaloacetic transaminase indicated possible nephrotoxic potential of the cyanobacteria. The extract also produced various hematological changes associated with stagnant type of hypoxia. High performance liquid chromatography of the culture identified the active principle (toxin) as Microcystin-LR.
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PMID:Toxicity evaluation of freshwater cyanobacterium Microcystis aeruginosa PCC 7806: II. Nephrotoxicity in rats. 909 31

To investigate changes in preoperative clinical features and the long-term outcome of tumor recurrence, mortality, and morbidity in patients with pheochromocytoma, we retrospectively examined changes in the clinical features by comparing 49 patients from 1957 to 1985 (group I) with 46 patients from 1986 to December 1995 (group II). In addition in these 95 patients (excluding 2 who had died before operation), we evaluated long-term postoperative outcome from the initial operation to August 1996 (909 patient-years). The mean age in group II was older than that of group I. The percentage of patients having proteinuria or hypertensive retinopathy in group II was less than that in group I. Of 20 patients with incidentally discovered pheochromocytoma, 7 (35%) were > or =60 years old, 7 asymptomatic, and 11 (55%) normotensive. Plasma and urinary catecholamines in these patients were significantly (P < .01) lower than in patients with pheochromocytoma having typical clinical features. Long-term cohort study showed 14 deaths. Relative survival rates were 91% at 5 years and 83% at 10 years and unchanged thereafter. The Kaplan-Meier estimate of pheochromocytoma-free survival was shorter in patients with a larger-than-median (60 g) tumor weight. Six patients had malignant recurrence 3 to 101 months (median, 45 months) after the initial operation. Of 65 patients confirmed alive at follow-up, 11 were hypertensive. In the Cox model, hypertension-free survival was not associated with age, a family history of hypertension, duration of hypertension, or creatinine clearance. Pheochromocytoma should be diagnosed from a wide spectrum of clinical features including those that are not generally suspected of resulting from excess catecholamines or hypertension, and after surgery, patients with this disease should be followed-up carefully for a long period (at least 10 years) because of the risk of tumor recurrence and the high prevalence of disease.
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PMID:Changes in clinical features and long-term prognosis in patients with pheochromocytoma. 1067 69

Nitric oxide (NO) serves many functions within the kidney, and recent evidence suggests that NO contributes to glomerular injury. Adrenomedullin (AM) is a novel hypotensive peptide originally isolated from human pheochromocytoma. Recent studies showed that plasma AM concentrations correlated with the extent of proteinuria. We have examined the possible role of these two agents by studying plasma and urinary total nitrite (NO-2 + NO-3) and AM levels in children with minimal change nephrotic syndrome (MCNS). In comparison with healthy controls, children with MCNS had increased urinary nitrite excretion (micromol/mg urinary creatinine), irrespective of whether the disease was in relapse or remission (3.2+/-0.2 in relapse, n=13; 1.9+/-0.3 in remission, n=12; 1.0+/-0.2 in controls, n=10, P<0.05). Plasma nitrite levels (micromol/l) were high in relapse compared with controls (53.2+/-8.7 vs. 32+/-4.0, P<0.05). Plasma AM levels (pmol/ml) were decreased in relapse (27.6+/-1.4 in relapse, 43.3+/-1.2 in remission, 41.5+/-1.6 in controls, P<0.05). Urinary AM levels (pmol/mg urinary creatinine) were significantly higher in relapse than in remission and in controls (156+/-43 in relapse, 56+/-18 in remission, 36+/-16 in controls, P<0.05). Our data indicate that NO may play a role in mediating the clinical manifestations of MCNS in children. However, changes in AM levels may be the result of heavy proteinuria.
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PMID:Adrenomedullin and nitrite levels in children with minimal change nephrotic syndrome. 1109 16

In patients with hypertension and chronic renal parenchymal disease, BP should be controlled to 130/85 mmHg or lower (125/75 mmHg) in patients with proteinuria in excess of 1 g/day. Reducing dietary sodium (< 7 g/day) and protein (< 0.6-0.7 g/kg) helps control high BP and renal function in patients with renal insufficiency. As first antihypertensive drug, ACE inhibitors or long-acting Ca antagonists are recommended. In patients with renovascular hypertension, angioplasty is the first choice increasingly to be accompanied by stenting, and surgical revascularization is the next choice. As antihypertensive drugs, beta blockers, ACE inhibitors, and AII-receptor blockers are recommended. Hypertension accompanied by endocrine disease with adenoma or tumor is almost cured or improved by surgical removal. Spironolactone and Ca antagonists are used in patients with idiopathic aldosteronism (bilateral hyperplasia). Alpha and beta blockers are used in patients with pheochromocytoma during preoperative period.
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PMID:[Secondary hypertension]. 1139 95


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