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)

Idiopathic hypercalciuria (IH) in adults is recognized as a cause of urolithiasis. If IH is symptomatic, the symptoms are hematuria, renal colic, or obstructive uropathy with or without infection. In children, IH has been linked to the spectrum of urinary symptoms including hematuria, pyuria, dysuria, recurrent urinary infections, abdominal or suprapubic pain, proteinuria, and the frequency-urgency syndrome. Hematuria may appear prior to the appearance of stones, and thiazide therapy appears to prevent stone formation by decreasing urinary calcium excretion. This report describes an older adolescent with hematuria and flank pain. His urinary chemistry values were not consistently typical of IH, but a thiazide trial with withdrawal challenge was diagnostic. His case is remarkable because, though essentially an adult, his disease was typical of prepubertal disease. Adolescents with unexplained urinary symptoms should be evaluated for IH. The urinary calcium-creatinine ratio may not be elevated, and timed urinary calcium may be equivocal. In some cases a thiazide trial may be valuable and cost effective.
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PMID:Atypical idiopathic hypercalciuria in an adolescent. 318 67

Idiopathic hypercalciuria is a cause of a variety of urinary tract complaints in clinical pediatrics. These include gross or microscopic hematuria, enuresis, urinary frequency or urgency, dysuria, sterile pyuria, and proteinuria in addition to renal calculi. A random urine calcium-creatinine concentration ratio can be used to initially screen for hypercalciuria. Patients with indeterminate results should have the test repeated, while those with abnormal values should receive a complete metabolic workup to determine the cause of hypercalciuria. Identifiable causes of hypercalciuria should be treated specifically, and thiazide diuretics are the preferred treatment for uncomplicated renal calculi. Pharmacotherapy in children with idiopathic hypercalciuria and symptomatology other than renal stones is controversial and should be limited to patients with severe clinical manifestations.
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PMID:Hypercalciuria in clinical pediatrics. A review. 636 1