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)

A clinicopathological study of 206 Indian children with nephrotic syndrome showed a primary renal cause in 195 (96%), of which 77% were boys. In 126 children (96 boys, 30 girls) onset of the disorder occurred before the age of 5 years. Renal biopsy showed minimal lesions in 150 patients (77%); in 85 of these biopsy was done 3 months to 16 years after onset of the nephrotic syndrome. Significant renal histological abnormalities in 45 cases were labelled as mesangiocapillary 8, mesangioproliferative 4, proliferative with extensive crescents 2, membranous 3, focal segmental glomerulosclerosis 9, focal global glomerulosclerosis 2, advanced nonspecific 8, and mild proliferative 9. Nephritic manifestations were mainly associated with significant renal lesions, which were more frequently encountered when the onset of disease was after the age of 5 years. Clearance of proteinuria with corticosteroid therapy was practically confined to patients with minimal or mild renal histological changes. Our findings suggest that the pattern of idiopathic nephrotic syndrome in Indian children is similar to that reported from Western countries.
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PMID:Nephrotic syndrome in indian children. 0 Sep 73

Heroin addiction is associated with several severe and occasionally fatal renal complications. Acute renal failure consequent to rhabdomyolysis and myoglobinuria, when treated supportively, carries a good prognosis. Staphylococcal or other bacterial septicemia may in itself prove fatal and is associated with a proliferative immune complex, acute glomerulonephritis, which generally follows the course and prognosis of septicemia. The necrotizing angiitis reported in heroin addicts still is largely undefined. Focal and segmental glomerular sclerosis is the most common pathologic finding in the syndrome of heroin-associated nephropathy (HAN). Typically, HAN presents with massive proteinuria and progresses rapidly to renal failure. Presumptive evidence supports the premise that heroin or its vehicles elicits immunologically mediated renal damage. The antigen still is unidentified. Removing the antigenic challenge by stopping heroin injection apparently interdicts the progression of renal disease. Renal transplantation can be effectively accomplished in patients with HAN without early recurrence if patients discontinue the use of heroin.
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PMID:Renal consequences of narcotic abuse. 2 85

We wish to determine what cellular and functional alterations are associated with the development of glomeruloscierosis when rats with one kidney are fed an excess of salt or protein. Rats with one kidney are more likely to develop pronteinuria and glomerulosclerosis than control animals. Blood pressure recordings indicate that proteinuria and glomerulosclerosis occur before hypertension is evident. Fluorescent antibody studies disclose that albumin accumulates in the epithelial cells of glomeruli and tubules. Ultrastructural examination shows that vacuolozation of epithelial cells and basement membrane thickening precede the sclerotic collapse of capillary loops. Increased concentrations of sodium or urea that are found in urines of these rats favor the point of view that an elevation of solute load when combined with a reduction of renal mass will on some unknown manner accelerate the deterioration of glomeruli.
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PMID:Protein overload nephropathy in rats with unilateral nephrectomy. A correlative light immunogluorescence and electron microscopical analysis. 4 49

Samples of renal tissue from 373 patients were examined for the presence of immunoglobulin E (IgE) by immunofluorescent techniques. Only trace to ++ amounts ( on a scale of ++++) were found in 20 patients: 4/9 with post-streptococcal acute glomerulonephritis (GN), 5/30 with GN associated with systemic lupus erythematosus, 3/20 with membranous GN, 1/4 with Goodpasture's syndrome, 2/18 with recurrent microhematuria and focal GN, 1/5 with hemolytic anemia and uremia, 3/73 with renal homografts, and 1/5 with dermatomyositis. No IgE was found in 18 patients with lipoid nephrosis, 8 of whom were being treated with prednisone, nor in 5 patients with focal glomerular sclerosis and the nephrotic syndrome. Serum IgE was measured in 9 of the 20 patients with glomerular deposits of this globulin. With one exception, levels of IgE were within the range generally considered to be normal. However, they were greater than the mean of this range in all but two and near the highest limits of normal in most. Neither the amounts of serum IgE nor the degree of proteinuria could be related to the intensity of stain for IgE in the glomeruli of these patients.
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PMID:Immunoglobulin E in renal disease. 5 86

The pathogenesis of focal glomerular sclerosis (FGS) and its relation to proteinuria and idiopathic nephrotic syndrome are unknown. Urine protein excretion in Sprague-Dawley rats increased with age. Fifty per cent of 12-month and 90 per cent of 24-month-old animals were proteinuric (greater than 20 mg. per day). Heavily proteinuric old rats manifested biochemical changes characteristic of nephrotic syndrome without significant loss of renal function. Three-month, 6-month, and nonproteinuric 12-month-old animals had mesangial deposits of IgM in occasional lobules of some glomeruli and slight mesangial hyperplasia. Four proteinuric 12-month-old rats had diffuse 4+ deposits of IgM in the mesangium of most glomeruli, basement membrane thickening and epithelial cell foot process fusion without FGS. The mesangial IgM deposits eluted in acid buffer and did not fix complement. Six proteinuric 12-month-old rats had focal and segmental areas of glomerular sclerosis with adhesions to Bowman's capsule, foamy cells, intraluminal eosinophilic deposits and capillary wall wrinkling and collapse. These lesions were more advanced in 24-month-old animals. Nonproteinuric 24-month-old rats did not have detectable FGS. Mesangial uptake of colloidal carbon was normal in proteinuric and nonproteinuric animals without FGS. Mesangial uptake of colloidal carbon was normal in proteinuric and nonproteinuric animals without FGS and reduced in proteinuric animals with FGS. In the aging rat the development of proteinuria and mesangial IgM deposition apparently precede development of a focal sclerotic glomerular lesion with histologic and ultrastructural features similar to FGS in man. The generalized impairment of mesangial phagocytic function in proteinuric rats with FGS suggests that this lesion may result from mesangial overload and dysfunction consequent to the persistent increase in glomerular permeability and proteinuria.
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PMID:Mesangial lesions and focal glomerular sclerosis in the aging rat. 12 75

Focal glomerular sclerosis was diagnosed in nine patients by renal biopsy. Proteinuria, hematuria, hypertension, and slowly progressive renal insufficiency unresponsive to corticosteroid and immunosuppressive therapy were consistent clinical findings. Focal, segmental, and global glomerular sclerosis with intraluminal deposits of hypereosinophilic and strongly PAS-positive material, intracapillary foam cells, and moderate interstitial involvement were consistent morphologic findings. The importance of this clinicopathologic entity in the spectrum of renal diseases has only recently been appreciated.
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PMID:Focal glomerular sclerosis. 18 92

Forty-one renal biopsies from 34 patients presenting over a 7-year period with the nephrotic syndrome or significant proteinuria and considered initially to be cases of lipoid nephrosis have been reviewed, and the results correlated with clinical findings. Lipoid nephrosis was confirmed in 25 of the patients (20 males, 5 females) 6 of whom showed a small proportion of completely sclerosed glomeruli. Twenty-two of these patients were in remission at the time of review. Nine of the patients (4 males, 5 females) showed features typical of focal glomerulosclerosis; only 4 of these were in remission, 4 showed continuing proteinuria, and one had died. The study emphasizes the importance and problems of distinguishing lipoid nephrosis from focal glomerulosclerosis.
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PMID:Lipoid nephrosis and focal glomerulosclerosis. 35 87

Renal disease, particularly glomerulosclerosis, is a major cause of morbidity and mortality in patients with juvenile-onset diabetes mellitus. Signaled by the onset of proteinuria after 15 or more years of insulin therapy, progressive renal insufficiency due to glomerulosclerosis terminates in uremia within five years. Although some patients have benefited from chronic dialysis programs, the outcome in uremic diabetics has been considerably better if successful renal transplantation can be accomplished. Extrarenal complications of diabetes mellitus and recurrence of diabetic lesions in transplanted kidneys have hampered the recovery and rehabilitation of transplant recipients. Other renal diseases encountered in juvenile diabetics are reviewed.
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PMID:Grand rounds: Nashville VA Hospital--Vanderbilt University. Saturday conference: renal disease in the juvenile diabetic. 37 Oct 5

The role played by the macrophage in the development of injury in rabbit nephrotoxic nephritis (NTN) has been assessed by electron microscopy and glomerular culture of renal tissue obtained by several biopsies during the course of the disease. These observations have been correlated with the other immune, cellular, and biochemical events occurring in the glomerulus, ie, deposition of immunoglobulin and complement, proteinuria, polymorphonuclear leukocyte (PMN) exudation, fibrin deposition, crescent formation, and renal failure. A biphasic macrophage accumulation was detected, corresponding to the heterologous and autologous phases of the disease. In the autologous or crescentic phase, macrophages accumulated within the glomerular tuft from Day 5; their appearance coincided with the accumulation of PMN and development of proteinuria. Fibrin deposition in Bowman's space, which commenced on Days 6 and 7, was rapidly followed by the migration of macrophages from the glomeruli into Bowman's space. Within Bowman's space, macrophages were observed to phagocytose fibrin, transform into epithelioid and giant cells, and accumulate to form a substantial proportion of the cells forming the crescent. The inflammatory process of PMN exudation, macrophage accumulation, fibrin deposition, and crescent formation and the degree of renal failure reached a maximum by Days 12 to 14. Thereafter, resolution of the inflammatory process occurred so that by Day 40 macrophages had disappeared from the glomeruli. However, varying degrees of glomerular damage and renal failure persisted, occurring largely as a result of glomerulosclerosis and sclerosis of crescents. The tissue culture studies also demonstrated mesangial cell proliferation during the inflammatory process but did not show any abnormality of epithelial cell activity. This study demonstrates that the macrophages participate in NTN by accumulating in damaged glomeruli then migrating into Bowman's space (probably in response to fibrin deposition) where they undergo granulomatous transformation and accumulate, contributing to crescent formation.
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PMID:The macrophage in the development of experimental crescentic glomerulonephritis. Studies using tissue culture and electron microscopy. 37 9

The wide utilization of renal biopsy and the introduction of electron microscopic and immunohistologic methods has allowed better definition of the clinico-pathological conditions associated with the nephrotic syndrome (NS). Two major categories of facts can be differentiated. In the first one, diffuse lesions of glomeruli, either secondary to specific diseases, or apparently primary diseases such as membranous or membrano-proliferative glomerulonephropathy (GN) are responsible for the increased permeability of the glomerular capillaries. In most of these, there is evidence that immunological mechanisms play a role in the injury of the glomerular capillary. Any of the following clinical symptoms are suggestive of this category of NS: an acute nephritic onset, a moderate NS, macroscopic hematuria, marked hypertension and/or renal insufficiency, poorly selective proteinuria and decreased plasma C3 levels. Patients affected with any of these glomerulopathies usually do not respond to steroids. In the second one, usually referred to as the idiopathic nephrotic syndrome (INS) the mechanism of glomerular capillary alteration is unknown and the nephrotic syndrome is more marked. Minimal change NS (MCNS) accounts for the great majority of INS and is characterized in most cases by a selective proteinuria, the absence of hematuria, a good response to steroids and a good prognosis. However, in some instances, renal biopsy reveals either diffuse mesangial proliferation (DMP) or focal glomerular sclerosis (which may be superimposed on MCNS or on DMP). In both instances, hematuria may be present and 50--75% of patients do not respond to steroids and have a poor prognosis. There is still considerable controversy about the exact relationship between these 3 patterns. We believe that they are not distinct entities but represent variants of the same disease. In addition to these 2 major categories of NS, there are, in infancy, 2 conditions associated with a NS of poor prognosis: congenital NS of Finnish type and infantile mesangial sclerosis. Since steroid-sensitive nephrosis is by far the commonest cause of NS especially in young children up to 8 years, a renal biopsy should be performed only in 2 instances: (a) when the clinical symptoms suggest diffuse glomerular lesions, and (b) when steroid resistance has been demonstrated.
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PMID:Clinicopathologic correlations in the nephrotic syndrome. 39 6


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