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Query: UMLS:C0033687 (proteinuria)
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Among the varied and biochemically diverse group of protein folding disorders that are collectively known as the amyloidoses, AL-amyloidosis where deposits are derived from the immunoglobulin light chain fragments, is the most prevalent systemic form of the disease found in the western world. In contrast, AH-amyloidosis, resulting from the deposition of immunoglobulin heavy chains, is a rare disease with very few cases thus far reported. Both diseases primarily affect older individuals and are always associated with some form of plasma cell/B cell lymphoproliferative process. The overwhelming majority of monoclonal light chains are nephrotoxic leading to frequent renal involvement, although a wide variety of other organ systems may be involved. The most common clinical presentation is proteinuria and the disease is often diagnosed by renal biopsy. The kidneys are the most frequent site of amyloid fibril deposition in AL and light microscopic examination of Congo red stained sections is the prime means of detection. Electron microscopy may be helpful in the detection of small deposits and in the differentiation of amyloid from other types of renal fibrillar deposits. Current treatment of systemic amyloidoses depends upon the type of amyloid deposits; thus, accurate typing, using a panel of antibodies, is of paramount importance. While the differential diagnosis of amyloidoses continues to expand with increased awareness of hereditary types, currently, the main challenge is diagnosis of AL/AH with confidence. Future goals include the development of more precise and sensitive diagnostic tools. This chapter presents the pathology of AL/AH, current standards of diagnosis and the differential diagnosis. Whenever possible, the most recent references, considered as being particularly useful to clinicians and pathologists serving patients with renal amyloidosis, have been selected.
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PMID:Immunoglobulin light and heavy chain amyloidosis AL/AH: renal pathology and differential diagnosis. 1707 28

The development of clinical treatment protocols usually relies on evidence-based guidelines that focus on randomized, controlled trials. For rare renal diseases, such stringent requirements can represent a significant challenge. Dense deposit disease (DDD; also known as membranoproliferative glomerulonephritis type II) is a prototypical rare disease. It affects only two to three people per million and leads to renal failure within 10 yr in 50% of affected children. On the basis of pathophysiology, this article presents a diagnostic and treatment algorithm for patients with DDD. Diagnostic tests should assess the alternative pathway of complement for abnormalities. Treatment options include aggressive BP control and reduction of proteinuria, and on the basis of pathophysiology, animal data, and human studies, plasma infusion or exchange, rituximab, sulodexide, and eculizumab are additional options. Criteria for treatment success should be prevention of progression as determined by maintenance or improvement in renal function. A secondary criterion should be normalization of activity levels of the alternative complement pathway as measured by C3/C3d ratios and C3NeF levels. Outcomes should be reported to a central repository that is now accessible to all clinicians. As the understanding of DDD increases, novel therapies should be integrated into existing protocols for DDD and evaluated using an open-label Bayesian study design.
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PMID:New approaches to the treatment of dense deposit disease. 1767 65

Idiopathic nodular glomerulosclerosis is an enigmatic condition closely resembling diabetic nodular glomerulosclerosis without evidence of diabetic mellitus or other specific disease. Idiopathic nodular glomerulosclerosis remains a rare disease entity with an unclear pathogenesis. Clinicopathologic features of 15 patients with idiopathic nodular glomerulosclerosis were evaluated in a retrospective review of renal biopsies between 1998 and 2007. Our study cohort consisted predominantly of older (mean age, 64.2 years) white (73%) women (67%). Fourteen patients (93%) had a history of hypertension, and 10 (67%) were active smokers at the time of biopsy. Nine patients (60%) were obese (body mass index, >30 kg/m(2)) and 4 (27%) were overweight (body mass index, 25-29.9 kg/m(2)). Fourteen patients (93%) presented with renal insufficiency with mean serum creatinine level of 2.8 mg/dL. All 15 patients presented with proteinuria (mean urinary protein excretion, 5.6 g/24 h). Eleven patients (73%) presented with nephrotic-range proteinuria and 8 (53%) with nephrotic syndrome. Histopathologic findings showed nodular glomerulosclerosis (100%), moderate to severe arterio-arteriolosclerosis (100%), and glomerular basement membrane thickening (100%). Immunofluorescence and electron microscopy studies had no other specific findings. Our results confirm previous studies of a close association of hypertension and smoking with idiopathic nodular glomerulosclerosis. A significantly higher incidence of obesity and overweight in patients with idiopathic nodular glomerulosclerosis suggests that increased body mass index may also contribute to the development and progression of idiopathic nodular glomerulosclerosis.
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PMID:Idiopathic nodular glomerulosclerosis: a clinicopathologic study of 15 cases. 1870 Nov 35

A 43-year-old black male was brought to hospital with complaints of confusion and fever. He was noted to have petechial lesions, thrombocytopenia (platelet count 7,200/ml), schistocytes on peripheral smear, and serum creatinine 1.7 mg/dl (150.28 micromol/L). He was diagnosed to have thrombotic thrombocytopenic purpura (TTP) and started on high dose IV steroids and plasmapheresis. Attempts at steroid withdrawal following plasmapheresis were unsuccessful as his platelet count started to decrease. He subsequently was started on rituximab given as 4 weekly infusions. The platelet count normalized after 2 doses of rituximab. A kidney biopsy performed to evaluate proteinuria (10.24 gms/24 hr) revealed membranous nephropathy (MN), with organized obliterative arteriopathy consistent with thrombotic microangiopathy. Upon completion of the treatment, proteinuria decreased to 1.67 gm/24hr. Recent studies indicate that patients with TTP have an inhibitory (auto) antibody to von Willibrand factor cleaving protease (ADAMTS 13). Considerable evidence also exists that idiopathic membranous nephropathy is an autoimmune disease. Rituximab, a monoclonal chimeric antibody directed against CD20 antigen present on B cells, selectively depletes B cells and has been used with success in both diseases. Though evidence for a direct pathogenetic relationship between TTP and MN is lacking, the two entities are more likely related to autoantibodies induced by activation of B cells. For our patient with this rare disease combination rituximab therapy was one treatment solution to two diseases.
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PMID:Membranous nephropathy and thrombotic thrombocytopenic purpura treated with rituximab. 1966 13

Type B insulin resistance syndrome is a rare disease. Auto-antibodies to the insulin receptor frequently appear in the case of systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE). We report herein a case of a 56-year-old man who had presented discoid skin lesions since 1990. He was admitted to the hospital because of unconsciousness and severe hypoglycemia in 2006, and was diagnosed as having Type B insulin resistance syndrome with the presence of insulin receptor antibody. He had frequently repeated hypoglycemic and hyperglycemic episodes in spite of treatment with prednisolone (5 - 10 mg/day), and mild proteinuria of 1.5 g/day was observed. His laboratory findings on admission revealed pancytopenia and positive titer for antinuclear antibody (ANA). From these findings and his past history of skin lesions, we diagnosed him as SLE. We performed renal biopsy and his histological diagnosis was lupus nephritis Class 5 with the findings of podocytic shedding. Prednisolone dosage was increased from 10 to 60 mg/day. Thereafter, his glucose metabolism improved and proteinuria disappeared. The dose of prednisolone was tapered to 30 mg/day without recurrence of hypoglycemia and proteinuria. Early treatment with prednisolone might ameliorate proteinuria and insulin resistance. We experienced a rare case of Type B insulin resistance syndrome with increased activity of SLE, complicated with lupus nephritis. It appears that Type B insulin resistance syndrome should be suspected in differential diagnosis of hypoglycemia in SLE patients.
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PMID:Type B insulin resistance syndrome with systemic lupus erythematosus. 2012 24

A 38-year-old man was admitted to the hospital for the evaluation of proteinuria, microscopic hematuria, and monoclonal IgA-kappa gammopathy. The initial renal pathological findings showed mesangial proliferative glomerulonephritis with endocapillary proliferation, a necrotizing lesion, and cellular crescent formation accompanied by IgA1-kappa deposition in the mesangium. Neither typical immune-complex deposits nor organized-structure deposits were detected. We diagnosed the patient with monoclonal immunoglobulin deposition disease (MIDD) associated with monoclonal IgA (mIgA). After the initiation of a monthly treatment with melphalan and predonisolone (MP therapy), the patient's serum IgA levels declined, and clinical remission was ultimately achieved. The follow-up renal biopsy showed reduced IgA-kappa staining, and both the endocapillary proliferation and the necrotizing lesion had disappeared. To elucidate the mechanism of IgA deposition, we investigated the glycan profile of the patient's serum mIgA using a mass spectrometry technique. The results revealed an unusual N-glycan profile compared to that of another patient with circulating mIgA lacking renal involvement and that of a healthy control. mIgA deposition in the mesangial area is a rare disease, and the glycan profiling of MIDD with renal involvement has not been reported previously. Thus, the present case suggests that any variation in Ig glycosylation may be a step in the pathogenesis of MIDD with renal involvement and/or contribute to some cases of IgA nephropathy.
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PMID:Renal involvement of monoclonal immunoglobulin deposition disease associated with an unusual monoclonal immunoglobulin A glycan profile. 2045 25

We describe the clinical case of 80 years, caucasian woman, with personal history of osteoporosis and chronic normochromic normocytic anemia (NN). She had a three month history of myalgias of the girdle, stiffness in the morning, exceeding 1 hour, associated with inflammatory arthralgia of the small joints of hands and feet. Complementary exams showed normocytic normochromic anemia with Hg 9.8 g/dL; ESR 44 mm/h; CRP 7 mg/dL. Given the profile suggestive of Polymyalgia Rheumatica started prednisolone 10 mg/day with favorable clinical response. Four months after treatment she started paresthesias of right hand and foot, polaquiuria, petequial lesions in lower limbs and inability to walk; there was worsening of anemia and elevation of the biological parameters of inflammation, beginning of renal insufficiency with creatinine clearance 22 ml/min, proteinuria and eritrocituria. Renal biopsy was compatible with Wegener's granulomatosis/microscopic poliangeite. Vasculitis is a rare disease of the elderly and its clinical presentation is varied. The arteritis of giant cells and Polymyalgia Rheumatica are more common in the elderly. It is not often Polymyalgia-like presentation in cases of Wegener's granulomatosis/microscopic polyangitis.
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PMID:[Myalgia of the girdle in the elderly: an uncommon etiology]. 2050 32

Obesity-related glomerulopathy (ORG) is morphologically defined as focal segmental glomerulosclerosis and glomerulomegaly. Podocyte hypertrophy and reduced density are related to proteinuria which in a portion of patients is in the nephrotic range and evolvs towards renal failure. This article reviews the pathogenetic mechanisms of podocyte injury or dysfunction and lists new possible antiproteinuric strategies based on pharmaceutical targeting of the reported pathogenetic mechanisms. The pathogenetic mechnisms discussed include: renin angiotensin system, plasminogen activation inhibitor-1 (PAI-1), lipid metabolism, adiponectin, macrophages and proinflammatory cytokines, oxidative stress. The proposed antiproteinuric strategies include: AT2 receptor blockers; adipokine complement C19 TNF-related protein-1 blocker; selective PAI-1 inhibitor; farnesoid x receptor activation; increase of circulating adiponectin; selective antiinflammatory drugs; more potent antioxidants (Heme oxigenase, NOX4 inhibitors). However, because ORG is a rare disease, the need for a long term pharmaceutical approach in obese proteinuric patients should be carefully evaluated and limited to the cases with progressive loss of renal function.
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PMID:Obesity-related glomerulopathy and podocyte injury: a mini review. 2220 36

Acute tubulointerstitial nephritis and uveitis (TINU) syndrome is a rare disease usually having a good prognosis. But the recurrence of uveitis and the chronic progression of kidney injury are still main problems. We report a 15-year-old girl with TINU who showed proteinuria, pathological renal change, multiple organ dysfunction, and immune disorders. After 2 months of 1 mg/kg/day corticosteroid therapy, 24-h urine protein, liver function tests, and creatine kinase returned to normal level. In spite of this, steroid was tapered off slowly and small dose of steroid maintenance therapy lasted for 1 year. Her kidney and ocular symptoms did not recur during 5 years of follow-up. We suggest low-dose steroid maintenance therapy to decrease the recurrence of the TINU syndrome.
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PMID:Excellent outcome of tubulointerstitial nephritis and uveitis: case report and five-year follow-up. 2268 Nov 93

Churg-Strauss syndrome (CSS), or allergic granulomatosis, is a rare disease manifested by tissue infiltration, hypereosinophilia and vasculitis. Renal involvement may be seen in up to 50% of cases. We report the case of a 25-year old man who presented with a history of fever for two months, tingling, numbness, and paraesthesia of the upper limbs and left lower limb, along with diarrhoea for one month and an inability to walk for the past seven days. Serial laboratory investigations helped to reach the final diagnosis of CSS with mononeuritis multiplex, and skin, pulmonary and gastrointestinal involvement with hypertension. This is due to renal involvement in the form of focal segmental glomerulosclerosis without any nephrotic range proteinuria, which is a very rare clinical entity. The patient's symptoms were relieved after the administration of an unconventional mode of therapy.
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PMID:Churg-Strauss syndrome presenting with focal segmental glomerulosclerosis without proteinuria: response to unconventional therapy. 2333 24


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