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 authors deal with the clinicopathology of the renal, alterations in light-chain disease in connection with 6 cases. The disease was recognized by the monotype (in 5 cases kappa, in 1 case lambda) immunoreactivity of the light-chain paraprotein deposited in the basal membranes of the renal tissue. Electron microscopic examinations proved the fine-granulated, electrodense character of the paraprotein. Multiple myeloma was found in 3 cases and plasma cell dyscrasia of non-tumorous characteristic in 3 cases in the background of the deposition. The renal involvement appeared clinically in the picture of proteinuria without nephrosis syndrome and in progressing azotemia. Chronic renal insufficiency developed during some months in 5 patients. Morphologically renal impairment manifested in interstitial fibrosis, tubular atrophy and ateriolar hyalinosis was seen. These were associated with different glomerular alterations, for instance in 3 cases with nodular glomerulosclerosis. In 1 patient with plasma cell dyscrasia of non-tumorous characteristic nodular glomerulosclerosis and semilunar formation was observed in 56% of the glomeruli. In an other patient with myeloma the simultaneous existence of cylinder nephropathy and light-chain nephropathy was demonstrated. Both observations are unusual phenomena in plasma cell dyscrasia.
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PMID:[Light-chain nephropathy]. 211 26

Autosomal dominant polycystic kidney disease (ADPKD) is the commonest hereditary nephropathy. We collected 92 cases in VGH. Diagnosis was confirmed by intravenous pyelogram, renal sonogram, or renal CAT scan. The incidence of having positive family history was just only 28.3%. Patients were diagnosed at the mean age of 54 +/- 11 years (26-74 years). The common clinical findings were hypertension (73.9%), abdominal mass, proteinuria, anemia, azotemia, abdominal or back pain and pyuria in orders. Hypertension might present in the early stage with normal renal function (near 40%). Polycystic liver was the major extrarenal lesion (57.6%), but the incidence of abnormal liver function was only 10.1%. Enlarged kidneys were not always palpable, even at end stage of renal function (mean age 56 +/- 9 years, 89.4% kidney palpable). Patient's urine amount was usually nonoliguric, even in uremic stage (82.9%). Sepsis was the first cause of death. Cardiovascular disease and uremia were followed in sequence. Their expired mean age was 61 +/- 7 years (53-74 years).
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PMID:[Autosomal dominant polycystic kidney disease clinical analysis in VGH--Taipei]. 217 45

Angiotensin-converting enzyme inhibitory therapy is widely used to treat hypertension. With long-term use, it is now being shown to have a beneficial effect on renal function and proteinuria in patients with renal insufficiency. When hypertensive patients with renal insufficiency are treated with enalapril, glomerular filtration rate is maintained, effective renal plasma flow is increased, and microalbuminuria and gross proteinuria are reduced. These beneficial renal changes with enalapril therapy differ from those of most other conventional antihypertensive medications. Clinical awareness of potential problems with hyperkalemia and increasing azotemia, particularly in the setting of salt/volume depletion, is important to assure optimal patient management. When these problems occur, they are nearly always reversible by correcting salt/volume status and/or interrupting enalapril therapy.
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PMID:Long-term renal effects of enalapril therapy in patients with renal insufficiency. 218 74

Reported was an aged woman (80-year-old) of minimal change nephrotic syndrome which was complicated with reversible oliguric acute renal failure. The patient presented massive proteinuria, anasarca, and severe azotemia. She recovered conservatively from the acute renal failure and subsequently remitted from the nephrotic syndrome after the treatment which comprised albumin infusion, diuretics, adrenocorticosteroid hormones (including the pulse therapy), antiplatelet drug, and anticoagulants. The histopathologic findings of renal biopsy were compatible with minor glomerular abnormalities and acute tubular necrosis with many tubular casts. The previously reported cases older than 80-year-old which remitted from minimal change nephrotic syndrome complicated with reversible acute renal failure, were very rare. The present case was the second case among the literatures.
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PMID:[An aged woman with minimal change nephrotic syndrome complicated with reversible acute renal failure]. 219 Nov 62

The purpose of this study was to measure components of the renin angiotensin system in patients with type 1 diabetes mellitus, with and without nephropathy, to study the renal sensitivity to angiotensin II in uncomplicated type 1 diabetes and to investigate the short and long-term renal effects of angiotensin II reduction with angiotensin converting enzyme inhibitors in patients with diabetic nephropathy. In patients with type 1 diabetes without complications, plasma renin activity, angiotensin II and aldosterone levels were normal. In patients with diabetic nephropathy, renin levels were elevated, probably partly as a result of diuretic treatment. However, renin levels were also elevated compared to patients with other renal diseases who had similar treatment and degree of azotemia. The renal sensitivity to angiotensin II was normal in patients with uncomplicated diabetes. The reduction in glomerular filtration rate and renal plasma flow and increases in filtration fraction during A II infusion were equal to those in healthy controls. Nine days' captopril treatment in 15 patients with diabetic nephropathy induced an increase in renal plasma flow and a decrease in filtration fraction. The glomerular filtration rate remained unchanged. During 8 weeks' randomised enalapril or metoprolol treatment in 40 patients with diabetic nephropathy, enalapril treatment reduced proteinuria to half the initial value. Metoprolol treatment had no effect on proteinuria. Furosemide was also used and the dosage was adjusted to give equally effective blood-pressure control in both groups. During long-term treatment with captopril in patients with diabetic nephropathy, the rate of decline in kidney function over time was reduced to one-fourth the initial value even though the blood pressure was only slightly reduced. The renin angiotensin system appears to be functionally intact in diabetes mellitus and interruption by ACE inhibition reduces proteinuria both by blood pressure reduction and by an effect independent of systemic blood pressure. Long-term treatment might protect kidney function in diabetic nephropathy to a greater extent than would be expected from the blood-pressure-lowering effect alone.
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PMID:The renin angiotensin system in diabetes mellitus. A physiological and therapeutic study. 219 80

Renal amyloidosis was diagnosed in 14 young Chinese Shar Pei dogs, all of which were related. Clinical signs were those of renal failure and included vomiting, anorexia, lethargy, polydipsia, polyuria, weight loss, and dehydration. Some dogs had a history of intermittent fever and joint swelling. Laboratory findings also were compatible with renal failure and included azotemia, hyperphosphatemia, low total CO2 content in serum, isosthenuria, proteinuria, and hypercholesterolemia. All dogs had medullary deposition of amyloid, and 9 of 14 (64%) had glomerular involvement. The remaining renal lesions were typical of end-stage renal disease. In some dogs, amyloid deposits were found in other tissues (eg, liver, spleen, stomach, small intestine, myocardium, lymph node, prostate gland, thyroid gland, and pancreas). Amyloid deposits were sensitive to potassium permanganate oxidation, suggesting the presence of amyloid protein AA.
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PMID:Familial renal amyloidosis in Chinese Shar Pei dogs. 221 Dec 93

The pathophysiology of the nephrotic syndrome (NS), characterized by protenuria, edema, sodium retention and hyperlipidemia, is not clear. We studied the role of some systemic factors on sodium retention in an experimental model of NS. NS was induced in rats by a single subcutaneous injection of puromycin aminonucleoside (PA) (15 mg/100 g); control animals received vehicle. All rats were kept in metabolic cages for 24 days (3 days before and 21 days after PA-injection). Urine was collected daily. Blood samples were obtained every day until day 10, and then every other day up to the end of the study. The rats showed the following alterations after PA injection: a) a rise in serum angiotensin converting enzyme activity (ACEA) and plasma aldosterone (PAldo) at day 1; b) a rise in urinary aldosterone (UAaldoV), azotemia and sodium retention at day 2; c) massive proteinuria (UProt) and decrease in plasma angiotensinogen concentration (PAC) at day 4; d) increases in plasma renin activity (PRA), plasma renin concentration (PRC) and serum creatinine as well as hypoproteinemia, hypercholesterolemia, hypertriglyceridemia, ascitis and edema at day 5; e) increase in urine volume at day 6. PAldo became normal at day 7; urine sodium (UNaV), PRA and PRC at day 8; UAldoV at day 9; serum urea and ACEA at day 10; urinary volume at day 11; PAC, serum total protein and creatinine at day 12. The edema disappeared at day 11. UProt, hypercholesterolemia and hypertriglyceridemia persisted, though they decreased substantially by the end of the study (day 21). Light microscopy studies revealed normal glomerular morphology, but electron microscopy showed fusion of podocytes before proteinuria. These data suggest that: a) sodium retention was not a consequence of proteinuria or hypoproteinemia; b) sodium retention seems non-related to renin secretion, but may be partially mediated by a fall in glomerular filtration rate or by an increased tubular resabsorption secondary to other factors; c) the increase in PAldo, UAldoV and ACEA are non-related to renin secretion: all occurred before PRA rose; d) water retention, increase in PRA and PRC, hypercholesterolemia and hypertriglyceridemia are secondary to the hypoproteinemia.
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PMID:Pathophysiology of experimental nephrotic syndrome induced by puromycin aminonucleoside in rats. I. The role of proteinuria, hypoproteinemia, and renin-angiotensin-aldosterone system on sodium retention. 223 72

Acute zinc toxicosis from the ingestion of pennies was diagnosed in a dog with Heinz body hemolytic anemia (PCV = 14%), leukocytosis (51,000 cells/ml) with a left shift (3,060 band neutrophils; 37,740 segmented neutrophils) and monocytosis (4,080 cells/ml), azotemia (BUN = 60 mg/dl), bilirubinemia (total bilirubin = 5.3 mg/dl), hypokalemia (3.0 mEq/L), high serum alkaline phosphatase activity (691 U/L), high total plasma solids (8.1 g/dl), hemoglobinuria, and proteinuria. Despite aggressive medical treatment, renal failure ensued, and the dog died of cardiac arrest. The clinical signs, clinical course, and laboratory findings in this dog were similar to what has been reported in other cases of acute zinc toxicosis in dogs, with the exception of a history of generalized seizures and the findings of Heinz bodies. Although a causative relationship between plasma zinc values and Heinz body formation cannot be proven, their association suggests that oxidative damage to erythrocyte hemoglobin and cell membrane proteins may be involved in the pathogenesis of zinc-induced hemolysis.
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PMID:Heinz body hemolytic anemia associated with high plasma zinc concentration in a dog. 226 50

Twenty-two patients with definite or classical rheumatoid arthritis (RA) who were diagnosed as amyloidosis by biopsy or at autopsy were investigated. The average duration of RA prior to the diagnosis of amyloidosis was 16.5 +/- 12.5 years. The symptoms that led to the diagnosis of amyloidosis were renal symptoms in 11 cases and gastrointestinal symptoms in 5 cases. Urinary protein was positive in 16 cases (73%). The degree of proteinuria varied in each case. Nephrotic syndrome was observed in 5 cases. Azotemia (Cr greater than 1.5 mg/dl) was present in 18 cases (82%). The period from the diagnosis of amyloidosis to death was 3.0 +/- 2.2 years. The causes of death were uremia in 10 cases, heart failure in 2 cases, malignancy in 2 cases, sepsis in 2 cases and others in 2 cases. Thirteen patients were autopsied and the frequency of amyloidosis complicated with RA was 22.0% in autopsied rheumatoid patients. Although nephropathy was present in most cases of amyloidosis complicated with RA, proteinuria and azotemia greatly varied in both degree and course.
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PMID:Clinical studies on amyloidosis complicated with rheumatoid arthritis--with particular reference to nephropathy. 227 6

Chronic renal failure developed in 5 patients who were taking germanium dioxide (GeO2)-containing compounds. Renal functional deterioration was slow but progressive and dialysis treatment was necessitated temporarily in 2 patients. After the discontinuation of GeO2, the impaired renal function tended to improve but remained abnormal for an observation period of 10-40 months. The lack of proteinuria and hematuria was characterized as the clinical manifestations. Renal biopsy specimens revealed the tubular epithelial cell degeneration containing hematoxylin-positive fine granules on light microscopy, and electron-dense inclusions in the swollen mitochondria on electron microscopy. These findings localized mainly in distal segment of the tubules. In the rats given GeO2 orally for 10 weeks, similar histological lesions were evident, as manifested by marked weight loss, anemia, azotemia, and negative proteinuria. In the rats given carboxyethylgermanium sesquioxide, these changes were not observed and Ge concentration of kidney was significantly lower than in the rats given GeO2. The present study indicates that chronic GeO2 intake causes progressive renal dysfunction characterized by the degeneration of distal tubules.
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PMID:Germanium dioxide-induced nephropathy: a new type of renal disease. 229 45


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