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)

Type 2 mixed cryoglobulinemia is a relatively common although rarely recognized consequence of chronic hepatitis C virus infection. Its detection should be pursued in individuals with lower extremity vasculitis which occurs in association with other signs of systemic disease such as proteinuria or a peripheral neuropathy. Importantly, HCV-associated cryoglobulinemia can occur in individuals with clinical evidence for cryoglobulinemia but without any evidence of detectable liver injury. Two cases recently seen in Oklahoma demonstrating these points are reported.
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PMID:Type 2 cryoglobulinemia and hepatitis C virus: its recognition and treatment. 779 10

Brucellosis is an anthropozoonosis caused by a Gram negative bacillus of the Brucella gender. Skin manifestations have been reported in 1.5 to 11 p. 100 of the cases. Allergic vasculitis is rare. Recently a 24-year-old man was hospitalized for signs of infection. He had been treated with tetracycline. The clinical picture was suggestive of brucellosis and the Wright test was positive at 1/1,280. There were violet and purpuric papulae on the limbs, arthritis of the knee and ankle joints and renal involvement (haematuria, proteinuria). Histology revealed fibrinoid and leukocytoclastic vasculitis of the small veinules of the subpapillary plexus. Outcome was favourable with rifampicin, doxycycline and adjuvant dapsone, together with bed rest. Several types of skin manifestations have been reported in brucellosis although cases of allergic vasculitis are rare.
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PMID:[Allergic vasculitis in brucellosis]. 783 53

We examined histopathological changes of the kidney in patients with mixed connective tissue disease (MCTD) including those of glomeruli, arteries and interstitium by morphometric method. All specimens examined were collected from 25 autopsy cases diagnosed as MCTD according to the criteria for this disease proposed by the MCTD committee sponsored by the Japanese government. Clinical evidence of renal dysfunction such as proteinuria was present in 16 out of 25 cases (64%). Histopathologically, membranous type glomerular lesion was found most frequently (40%), followed by membrano-proliferative (6.7%) and mesangioproliferative types (6.7%). Nine cases had no glomerular lesion. Severe arterial lesion such as necrotizing angiitis was not found in our kidney specimens. However, morphometry revealed a high incidence of intimal thickening in the renal arteries of these patients as compared to control cases, showing this to be one of the most common features of MCTD with clinical importance. This type of arterial lesion, also seen in kidneys in other types of collagen diseases, may suggest an etiology common to them. The severity of the renal interstitial lesion in MCTD was intermediate between that of systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE) and progressive systemic sclerosis (PSS), poly-or dermatomyositis (PM/DM).
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PMID:Morphometric analysis of the kidney lesions in mixed connective tissue disease (MCTD). 790 Jan 53

Rapidly progressive glomerulonephritis (RPGN) is rarely associated with macroscopic polyarteritis nodosa (PAN), as seen in this series of 7 out of 235 patients. The clinical symptoms of PAN were as follows: myalgias 6; fever 1; arthralgias and mononeuropathy multiplex 5; cutaneous vasculitis 3; arterial hypertension 4, 3 of which were malignant. The mean proteinuria was 2.7 g/24 h; creatininemia 458 microM/l; microscopic hematuria was present in 4 of the 7 patients; only 1 patient was anuric. Markers of hepatitis B virus were absent in all cases. Arteriography revealed microaneurysms and renal infarcts in 6 patients and distal arterial stenosis in one. Renal biopsies from all 7 patients demonstrated extracapillary glomerulonephritis, which was associated with tubulointerstitial fibrosis in one. Necrotizing vasculitis lesions were associated in 5 cases. Immunofluorescence was positive in 5 cases. The association of RPGN and PAN exists and may be underestimated due to the lack of systematic angiographic examinations during RPGN and renal biopsies in PAN patients with renal involvement.
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PMID:[Rapidly progressive glomerulonephritis in macroscopic periarteritis nodosa. 7 cases]. 790 9

The authors present a case report of a 62-year old woman, with hypertension for many years. She suffered from weakness, anorexia and weight loss in the last 6 months. On admission, anemia, elevated ESR, haematuria, proteinuria and renal failure were present. Renal biopsy was compatible with chronic glomerulonephritis. The clinical picture and positivity for P-ANCA suggested systemic vasculitis. Later evidence of maxillary sinusitis and nasal mucosae ulcers as well as pneumonitis, although biopsy did not reveal granulomas, suggested the diagnosis of Wegener Vasculitis. Medicated with Cyclophosphamide and Prednisolone, for a year, with improvement. The authors make a brief discussion of the clinical criteria for classification of ANCA-associated systemic vasculitis.
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PMID:[Vasculitis associated with ANCA]. 794 37

The aetiology of the primary systemic vasculitides remains obscure. Recent years have seen significant advances in our understanding of inflammation and in particular the role of and interaction between the vascular endothelium, mediators and immune effector cells. This has helped to further elucidate those specific processes relevant to vasculitis which result in endothelial cell damage. In Wegener's granulomatosis and microscopic polyarteritis the evidence favours an autoimmune inflammatory response characterised by specific mediators in which the endothelium is both target and active participant. Current treatment of these disorders with combinations of corticosteroids and cytotoxics is highly effective in inducing remission. However, long-term use of this therapy is potentially toxic and there remains also a significant risk of relapse. It is hoped that increased understanding of the pathogenesis of systemic vasculitis will enable more specific, less toxic and more effective therapies to be defined. Jayne et al. have suggested a beneficial effect of intravenous pooled normal human immunoglobulin (IVIG) in patients with ANCA-positive vasculitis. In vitro studies have shown that IVIG contains antiidiotypic antibodies to ANCA and AECA, capable of inhibiting the binding of these autoantibodies to their autoantigens. In vivo, IVIG may also provide the immunoregulatory elements needed for the idiotype network and control of the autoimmune repertoire. Mathieson et al. successfully used monoclonal antibodies to T cells (Campath-H directed against CDw52) in a patient with ANCA-negative dermal lymphocytic vasculitis. Monoclonal antibodies to CAMs have been used in human renal transplant rejection and reduced the inflammation and proteinuria in animal models of anti-glomerular basement membrane disease. In vasculitis, the therapeutic use of specific anti-CAM antibodies may result from further definition of the role of CAMs. Increased understanding of the pathogenesis of systemic vasculitis is likely to provide the basis for the use of more specific immunotherapies in the future.
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PMID:Mechanisms of endothelial cell injury in vasculitis. 799 43

A 59-year-old man with end-stage renal failure from systemic vasculitis developed de novo immunotactoid glomerulopathy of the renal allograft, with clinical evidence of hematuria, proteinuria, and acute renal failure 6 weeks after cadaveric renal transplantation. The morphologic lesion of immunotactoid glomerulopathy and the clinical renal disease resolved during the following 2 weeks. The disease had not recurred in the subsequent 20 months of posttransplant follow-up. During the same period, the patient also developed systemic cytomegalovirus (CMV) infection with viremia, acute hepatitis, and bone marrow suppression. The clinical manifestations of CMV illness and the renal disease have subsided following the withdrawal of immunosuppressive agents and simultaneous treatment with ganciclovir. Although there is no direct proof that CMV infection was responsible for the development of immunotactoid glomerulopathy, the circumstantial evidence in this patient strongly suggests that these two disease were temporally linked. To our knowledge, the association between CMV infection and immunotactoid glomerulopathy has not been documented previously.
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PMID:De novo immunotactoid glomerulopathy of the renal allograft: possible association with cytomegalovirus infection. 802 32

Monthly intravenous cyclophosphamide (IVCY) has been a recommended therapy for severe lupus nephritis or neurological flare-ups in lupus patients. But the optimal treatment regimen and duration remains unknown. We report our experience in an open study of 37 patients treated with monthly IVCY. Thirty-four women and 3 men, mean age 35.5 with a mean disease duration of 59 months, with a mean 5.7 ACR criteria for SLE were analysed. 27 (group I) had lupus nephritis (OMS Class III or IV) and 10 had neurological involvement (group II). In group I, after six months of IVCY, a significant improvement was noticed in the UCH-Middlesex clinical index (2.9 pts vs 7.8), the proteinuria (3.12 g/d vs 5.4), complement and split fractions (CH50 98.4 vs 48.9%; C3 877 vs 600 mg/l; C4 177 vs 128 mg/l), the level of anti-DNA antibodies (67.5 vs 775 UI/ml) and the daily dose of steroids (22 vs 44 mg/d). Kidney biopsies showed a reduction of the activity index despite a slight increase of the chronicity index (4.1 vs 6.3 pts and 5.5 vs 3.6 pts). Those results were not maintained at medium and long term. Moreover five patients presented with worsening of renal function during IVCY treatment and two patients relapsed after the end of the treatment. In group II significant improvement was noticed at six months concerning the clinical index (1.77 pts vs 7.17) and the daily dose of steroids, 3 patients died because of cerebral vasculitis refractory to IVCY. Adverse effects are frequent: infectious (25 among 20 patients), hemorrhagic cystitis (2 events in 1 patient), gastrointestinal side effects were common (12/37 patients). Were also noticed: neutropenia (5/37), transient amenorrhea (4/28), drug induced menopausis (2/28). Overall mortality is important (7/37), uneffectiveness of IVCY was noticed in 5 patients, flares occurred in 8 patient during or after stopping treatment. IVCY seems efficacious if given at the very beginning of the flare. Its usefulness is obvious at six months among clinical and biological data in patients with severe lupus nephritis or neurological flare. It seems that long term outcome on the renal function is not modified.
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PMID:[Treatment of acute systemic lupus erythematosus with intravenous infusions of cyclophosphamide. Value and limitations]. 802 84

Chronic allograft rejection very probably results from the interactions between allogeneic immune injury, tissue reactions in response to injury, and local intragraft hemodynamic adaptations to the progressive loss of functioning organ mass. We examined each of these components in a rat model of chronic renal allograft rejection. Although immunofluorescence studies of renal allografts with chronic rejection usually reveal nondiagnostic patterns of immunoglobulin deposits, we found, using Western blot analysis, donor-directed antibodies against novel glomerular basement membrane antigens in the sera of animals with chronic rejection-associated transplant glomerulopathy. Stop-flow micropuncture studies have shown that the glomerular capillary pressure in transplanted kidneys resembles that of the donor strain kidney in response to renal ablation. Northern blots for growth factor transcripts showed induced expression of mRNA levels for various growth factors in long-surviving renal transplants. Reduction in intraglomerular pressure was associated with increased recipient survival, preservation of renal function, decreased amounts of proteinuria, and less severe structural lesions in the glomeruli. We conclude that the glomerular lesions of chronic rejection may arise from a combination of antiglomerular (allo) antibodies in conjunction with increased intraglomerular pressures and local production of growth factors. The vascular lesions and interstitial scarring of chronic rejection may arise from previous episodes of graft vasculitis and interstitial inflammation, respectively.
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PMID:Functional and histologic characteristics of chronic renal allograft rejection. 806 73

We report a case of hypocomplementemic urticarial vasculitis syndrome (HUVS) with membranous glomerulopathy in a 62-year-old man who had a 2-month history of secondary iritis. He was transferred to our hospital because of uncontrollable edema and respiratory dysfunction. Physical examination revealed anasarca, pulmonary edema, hypertension and urticaria-like eruption on his arms. Urinalysis, blood chemistry and serological studies showed massive proteinuria (10.5g/day) with numerous granular casts, hypoalbuminemia (1.5g/dl), renal dysfunction (creatinine; 1.6mg/dl, BUN; 86mg/dl), hypercholesterolemia (total cholesterol; 455mg/dl), positive results for antinuclear factor, microsome test, thyroid test, lupus anticoaglant, antithyroglobulin test and rheumatoid factor, but LE cell or double-strand anti DNA antibody was negative. Serum complement levels were persistently low as CH50 of 13 U/ml and Clq of 6.0 micrograms/dl. The patient serum precipitated with normal human Clq by immunodiffusion analysis, indicating the presence of anti-Clq antibody. Renal biopsy revealed membranous glomerulopathy with prominent fine granular deposition of Clq along the glomerular basement membrane by immunofluorescent study and subepithelial dense deposit by electron microscopy. Corticosteroid treatment was ineffective for hypocomplementemia and nephrotic syndrome. Acute subendocardial infarction occurred on the 25th hospital day and he died of acute respiratory distress syndrome on the 45th hospital day. Autopsy revealed leucocytoclastic vasculitis in the alveolar wall. HUVS was confirmed by clinical symptoms, such as iritis and urticaria-like eruption, serum anti-Clq antibody, the absence of any specific autoantibody for systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE) and leucocytoclastic vasculitis in the alveolar wall.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:[Nephrotic syndrome due to membranous glomerulopathy in hypocomplementemic urticarial vasculitis syndrome;--a case report]. 807 26


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