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Query: UMLS:C0033687 (
proteinuria
)
24,015
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Trichosporonosis due to Trichosporon beigelii or T. capitatum is an infrequent but potentially fatal invasive fungal infection in cancer patients. We studied epidemiologic, clinical, pathologic, and microbiologic features of this infection during a 7-year period at the University of Maryland Cancer Center. Fifteen patients with involvement by Trichosporon were identified: 5 were infected, 5 were possibly infected, and 5 were colonized but not infected by Trichosporon. Four of the infected patients had trichosporonemia and/or positive skin biopsy cultures as the first evidence of infection. The fifth infected patient had positive marrow and skin biopsy cultures. Serial surveillance cultures of infected patients showed preceding Trichosporon colonization in only 1 of 5 cases. Pulmonary infiltrates in 3 infected patients correlated at postmortem examination with Trichosporon pneumonia. Renal dysfunction marked by
proteinuria
, hematuria, red blood cell casts and
azotemia
correlated with widespread glomerular infiltration with the fungus. The five infected patients died of their infection, whereas the 2 possibly infected patients who died succumbed to their underlying illness. Trichosporonemia may have been averted in possibly infected patients because of a shorter median duration of profound (less than 100/microliter) neutropenia (5 days) when compared to that of infected patients (20 days). No environmental source of Trichosporon was found in environmental surveillance cultures of food, air, or inanimate surfaces. In vitro studies of three pathogenic strains showed resistance to 5-fluorocytosine but susceptibility to amphotericin B, ketoconazole, and miconazole. Norfloxacin augmented the in-vitro antifungal activity of amphotericin B. Trichosporon must be considered an opportunistic pathogen that can cause serious infections among patients with cancer.
...
PMID:Trichosporonosis in patients with neoplastic disease. 352 14
In a 10-year retrospective study, we evaluated the clinicopathologic features and renal immunofluorescence patterns of glomerulonephritis in 41 dogs. On the basis of results of histologic examinations, the dogs were segregated into 3 groups, including membranous (n = 12), mesangioproliferative (n = 15), or membranoproliferative glomerulonephritis (n = 14). No significant differences existed among groups in regard to age or duration of illness. Most dogs had been ill for one month or longer. The proportion of dogs with
azotemia
, anemia, and hyperphosphatemia were not different among the disease groups. Proportion of dogs with hypoalbuminemia and the severity of hypoalbuminemia were not different among groups. Highest urine protein losses and 24-hour urine protein/creatinine ratios developed in dogs with membranous glomerulonephritis. Although hypoalbuminemia and hypercholesterolemia were common (49%), the formation of edema or ascites was not (15%) and, therefore, few dogs had all of the classic features of the nephrotic syndrome. Few dogs suffered thromboembolic complications. Antinuclear antibody titers developed in 11 dogs, the highest titers developing in dogs with polyarthritis and systemic lupus erythematosis. Cellulose acetate electrophoresis detected alpha 2 and beta 1 globulin spikes in most dogs (87%). Results of renal immunofluorescence testing were positive in 36 dogs, using polyvalent antisera for immunoglobulins (Ig)G, IgA, IgM, and/or antisera for complement factor C3. When monovalent antisera for IgG, IgA, and IgM, and fibrinogen were used, immunofluorescence was not observed as often. The major fluorescent pattern was discrete multifocal segmental granular glomerular fluorescence, consistent with immune-complex deposition. Two dogs had linear glomerular staining patterns; however, antibodies directed against normal glomerular basement membrane were not found via elution studies. A high prevalence of glucocorticoid excess (treatment with glucocorticoids and spontaneous hyperadrenocorticism) (34%), chronic inflammatory skin disease (27%), neoplasia (17%), polyarthritis (12%), and systemic lupus erythematosis (7%) were observed as clinical problems concurrent with glomerulonephritis. In 5 dogs, treatment of glomerulonephritis with prednisolone (0.5 to 1.1 mg/kg) did not result in beneficial effects and in fact appeared to be detrimental, leading to
azotemia
and worsening
proteinuria
and physical condition in some of the dogs.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
...
PMID:Clinicopathologic, renal immunofluorescent, and light microscopic features of glomerulonephritis in the dog: 41 cases (1975-1985). 354 34
Between January 1982 and December 1986, among the 750 patients with the acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS) who were treated at two adjacent hospitals in New York City, 78 (10.4 percent) needed evaluation for renal disorders. Reversible acute renal failure due to nephrotoxic injury, ischemic injury, or both was present in 23 patients (30 percent) (Group I). The remaining 55 (70 percent) had massive
proteinuria
,
azotemia
, or both (AIDS-associated nephropathy; Group II), and irreversible uremia developed in 43. In an additional 18 patients, all of whom had a history of intravenous narcotic drug use, AIDS was diagnosed after the initiation of maintenance hemodialysis for chronic renal failure (Group III). Survival for more than six months after the onset of chronic uremia occurred in only two subjects in Group II; all patients in Group III died within three months of the diagnosis of AIDS. Death in the patients in Groups II and III followed a syndrome of "failure to thrive" characterized by inanition unresponsive to intensive nutritional support and hemodialysis. In contrast, 8 of 17 patients with acute renal failure (Group I) and a serum creatinine concentration above 6 mg per deciliter regained renal function (serum creatinine level, less than 2.0 mg per deciliter). Four of the seven lived for 10 to 24 months, whereas the other four died of sepsis within a month. Our observations suggest that maintenance hemodialysis is not effective in prolonging life either in patients with AIDS-associated nephropathy and uremia or in patients with end-stage renal failure in whom AIDS develops during the course of maintenance dialysis. Hemodialysis may be useful in the management of potentially reversible acute renal failure in patients with AIDS.
...
PMID:The types of renal disease in the acquired immunodeficiency syndrome. 356 58
The predictive value of a number of clinical and laboratory variables for the mortality of 148 patients with systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE) with a mean observation period of 8 years and a 10-year-survival of 80 per cent was calculated by means of differentiated survival rate analyses and stepwise regression analyses. The predictive power of several variables increased if the calculations were based on deaths caused by SLE rather than on the total mortality rate. The survival rate decreased after 1973 because a diagnosis of SLE was made in some patients with terminal disease who would have remained without a diagnosis before that time. The causes of death and the treatment were identical before and after 1973. The presence of a high number of diagnostic ARA criteria within the first year of observation was a predictor of decreased survival. Severe but non-fatal infections (meningitis, septicemia, pneumonia) significantly reduced the survival rate. Patients with
proteinuria
and
azotemia
, within the first 2 years of observation, had a 10-year-survival of 70 per cent. The survival of patients with CNS manifestations was not significantly reduced. The butterfly rash and the presence of lymphopenia were predictors of decreased survival, whereas the presence of DNA antibodies had no predictive value for survival.
...
PMID:Systemic lupus erythematosus. Follow-up study of 148 patients. II: Predictive factors of importance for course and outcome. 358 95
High doses of intravenously and intramuscularly administered oxytetracycline were believed to be responsible for acute renal failure in a dehydrated cow. Signs of renal disease included oliguria, perirenal edema, marked
azotemia
, moderate
proteinuria
, tubular casts in urinary sediment, and inability to concentrate urine. Concurrent intravenous administration of fluids and diuretics (mannitol and furosemide) resulted in reestablishment of normal urine production. Because of its nephrotoxic potential, oxytetracycline should be used cautiously and at recommended dosages in ruminants that have prerenal
azotemia
or otherwise reduced renal function.
...
PMID:Acute renal failure associated with administration of excessive amounts of tetracycline in a cow. 369 19
A retrospective review of the records of 15 patients with thrombotic thrombocytopenic purpura (TTP) was performed to determine the spectrum of renal involvement that occurs in this disease. All cases exhibited some evidence of renal involvement, the most common manifestation of which was an abnormal urinalysis. Twelve cases (80%) had some degree of elevation of the serum urea nitrogen (SUN) or creatinine level at some time during the course of their disease. Renal involvement could be categorized into three types depending on the severity of TTP. In those cases presenting as an acute devastating illness, renal insufficiency, when present, was severe and a dominant component of the disease. In those that pursued a more protracted course, with subsequent acute exacerbations of TTP, renal insufficiency was variable and less severe than in the first group. In those presenting with a mild form of TTP, renal involvement consisted primarily of an abnormal urine sediment and
azotemia
that corrected rapidly following fluid replacement. A review of the literature beginning with 1966, when renal disease was established as part of the features that characterize TTP, provided 216 cases in whom sufficient data on renal involvement were recorded. Of the 168 cases where urinalysis was reported, hematuria was noted in 78% of the cases,
proteinuria
in 75, pyuria in 31, and cylindriuria in 24%. Of the 181 cases where the admission SUN was reported, it was higher than 20 mg/dl in 69% and greater than 60 mg/dl in 17% of the cases. The level of SUN was a significant determinant of the final prognosis of these patients.
...
PMID:Renal involvement in patients with thrombotic thrombocytopenic purpura. 370 16
Sheep were drenched with a single toxic dose of dried and milled Isotropis forrestii in water. Intoxication resulted in early onset of glycosuria, enzymuria and
proteinuria
. Terminal gross lesions included pale kidneys and perirenal oedema. Histologically and ultrastructurally the renal lesions were typical of primary nephrotoxicosis, with extensive proximal tubular epithelial necrosis. The tubular damage was sufficient to cause acute primary renal failure, characterised by oliguria,
azotemia
and failure of urinary concentrating mechanisms.
...
PMID:The nephrotoxicity of Isotropis forrestii in sheep. 376 96
Renal involvement in legionnaires' disease is a well-known, yet incompletely understood, complication. Manifestations of renal involvement include
proteinuria
, hematuria, pyuria, cylindruria, and
azotemia
. Previous cases of legionnaires' disease with renal involvement have shown pathophysiologic changes consistent with acute tubulointerstitial nephritis or acute tubular necrosis. A toxic metabolite produced by Legionella pneumophila has been theorized to produce a vasoconstrictive effect on the renal microvasculature, leading to ischemia and renal dysfunction. The case reported here is unique in that the patient presented with interstitial nephritis in the absence of pulmonary signs or symptoms.
...
PMID:Interstitial nephritis in a patient with Legionnaires' disease. 380 71
Membranous nephropathy, a disease syndrome characterized by severe
proteinuria
and often accompanied by the nephrotic syndrome, was identified in 29% of a population of 46 proteinuric dogs. Renal lesions were characterized by the presence of subepithelial immunoglobulin deposits distributed diffusely along the glomerular capillary wall. Advanced stages were associated with progressive thickening of capillary basement membranes and incorporation of the immune deposits. These changes were followed by either glomerulosclerosis or recovery. Characteristic morphologic stages were correlated with clinical pathologic findings which showed that the level of
proteinuria
, hypoalbuminemia, and consequent nephrotic syndrome was most severe in the initial stages of membranous nephropathy while the level of
azotemia
increased in the more advanced stages of the syndrome.
...
PMID:Membranous nephropathy in the dog. 381 Nov 37
Renal involvement is a well described complication of Legionnaires' disease and is often manifested as mild, transient
azotemia
, hematuria,
proteinuria
, pyuria or cylinduria. Acute renal failure complicating Legionnaires' disease has also been described, and some patients have required hemodialysis. Renal morphology has only been described in a few cases. We report two cases of Legionnaires' disease who developed acute renal failure. The serotype of the Legionella pneumophilia isolated from one of the patients had never been isolated from humans before. This patient expired and at autopsy the kidney revealed acute tubular necrosis, but there was no evidence for interstitial or glomerular disease. Renal morphology in six previously reported cases revealed acute tubulointerstitial nephritis in three cases and acute tubular necrosis in the other three. We conclude that acute renal failure may accompany severe Legionnaires' disease, and the development of the renal failure is not related to hemodynamic factors, while nephrotoxic antibiotics may be a contributing factor.
...
PMID:Legionnaires' disease associated with acute renal failure: a report of two cases and review of the literature. 388 29
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