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 61-year-old male patient had secondary polycythemia associated with idiopathic nephrotic syndrome. Renal biopsy revealed membranous nephropathy. Polycythemia did not change in spite of partial remission of proteinuria. Serum erythropoietin determined by an enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay was 7.2 mU/ml. His serum erythropoietin maintained at a constant level during polycythemia was higher than it was before the appearance of renal ischemia, so he was kept in a polycythemic state. Whether decreasing proteinuria can improve renal ischemia requires future study. We must observe the patient for the occurrence of thromboembolism. Renal ischemia possibly induced by nephrotic syndrome is likely to cause secondary polycythemia.
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PMID:Secondary polycythemia associated with membranous nephropathy. 218 32

The administration of the aminonucleoside of puromycin (PAN) to rats causes the nephrotic syndrome that is associated with an acute decline in renal function, and an interstitial infiltrate. We examined whether essential fatty acid deficiency (EFAD), which inhibits macrophage infiltration in glomerulonephritis, affects PAN-induced renal dysfunction. Both control and EFAD rats developed proteinuria that resolved over 28 d. After PAN administration, there was a prominent infiltration of macrophages in rats fed a normal diet. The infiltrate was prevented by the EFAD diet. The absence of a macrophage interstitial infiltrate was associated with a significantly higher Cin in the EFAD rats than in controls at 7 d (5.21 +/- 1.19 versus 0.39 +/- 0.08, P less than 0.002 ml/min/kg BW). In addition, CPAH fell to less than 10 ml/min/kg BW by day 7 in controls, but remained the same as normal in the EFAD. After administration of PAN to control rats, there was no increase in urinary thromboxane excretion or an increase in glomerular thromboxane production. Furthermore, the effect of EFAD could not be mimicked by the administration of a thromboxane synthase inhibitor. Irradiation-induced leukopenia in rats on a normal diet markedly improved glomerular filtration and renal blood flow in acutely nephrotic rats. EFAD prevents the interstitial cellular infiltrate and the renal ischemia associated with experimental nephrosis. The recruitment of mononuclear cells into the kidney following PAN directly contributes to the decline in renal function.
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PMID:Essential fatty acid deficiency ameliorates acute renal dysfunction in the rat after the administration of the aminonucleoside of puromycin. 221 2

The platelet-activating factor (PAF) is a molecule produced by several types of cells (monocytes, platelets, polynuclears, eosinophils and endothelial cells) and by different organs (lungs, heart, kidney). Its action concerns many inflammatory phenomena such as allergy, cerebral, cardiac or renal ischemia. The discovery of specific antagonists helped us to understand the pathophysiological effects of PAF in man. As PAF is involved in the mechanism of proteinuria and many other nephropathies, the use of antagonists for the treatment of such disorders seems valuable.
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PMID:[Renal diseases and platelet activating factor]. 274 Jan 84

The authors studied clinical and biological data occurring in 165 patients observed during 23 years and afflicted with polyarteritis nodosa. Hypertension was present in 52 patients (31.5%) and seven of them suffered from malignant hypertension (4%). Mean age of patients (6 male, 1 female), with malignant hypertension was 38 +/- years old. Mean follow up was 49 +/- 28 months including 26 +/- 21 months after discontinuation of treatment of polyarteritis nodosa. Malignant hypertension occurred during the first year of evolution of polyarteritis nodosa. Renal insufficiency was present in 5 of 7 patients. Proteinuria was greater than 1 gr/d in 4 cases. Renal arteriography was performed in 6 patients and showed in every case renal ischemia and microaneurysms in five. In 4 patients measurements of plasma renin activity and of aldosterone were obtained. A stimulation of those hormones was demonstrated. Some symptoms of polyarteritis nodosa were present with a high incidence in case of malignant hypertension: digestive signs (6/7), orchitis (3/6). HBs antigen was present in 6 cases and hepatitis in 5. Captopril was effective in every case, alone or associated with other treatments. Follow up of hypertension went from 8 months to 4 years. At present time 6 patients are alive and one is lost of follow up. A treatment is necessary in 6 of 7 patients. Creatininemia is greater than 300 micromol/l in 4 patients. A successful kidney transplantation was performed in one case. Our study shows a close relation between malignant hypertension observed in polyarteritis nodosa, vascular nephropathy, digestive and urologic signs. Hepatitis B virus could be responsible of those manifestations.
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PMID:[Malignant arterial hypertension in periarteritis nodosa. Incidence, clinicobiologic parameters and prognosis based on a series of 165 cases]. 287 20

Vesicoureteral reflux (VUR) is mainly a primary phenomenon due to incompetence of the ureterovesical junction, mostly affecting a pediatric population. During micturition cystourethrography (MCU) reflux into the kidney--intrarenal reflux (IRR)--is occasionally seen. In areas with IRR the kidney surface may subsequently be depressed and the papillae retracted (reflux nephropathy (RN]. VUR may lead to hypertension and/or end-stage renal failure. Most commonly, VUR is discovered during evaluation for urinary tract infection, but it may also be present in patients with hypertension, toxemia of pregnancy, chronic renal failure and proteinuria, and it may be found in siblings of patients with VUR. For the time being VUR is demonstrated at radiographic MCU, whereas RN is diagnosed by demonstration of focal scars and of abnormal parenchymal thickness at urography. In children with VUR and no abnormalities of calyces or parenchymal defects standardized measurement of the parenchymal thickness at three sites may identify kidneys which are likely to develop focal scars. Quantitation of focal scarring should be performed in connection with a measure of the overall kidney size. The occurrence of IRR is dependent of the papillary morphology, intrapelvic pressure and urine flow. There may be an important relationship between renal ischemia and IRR in producing a 'vicious circle of deleterious effects' which, combined with parenchymal extravasation, may lead to RN. Treatment of VUR includes medical and surgical management. Since renal scarring may occur in infancy, prevention should focus on infants and young children. Infants and young children with severe VUR may have normal urograms. Therefore a MCU should also be performed, preferably with the recommended standardized technique.
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PMID:Vesicoureteral reflux and reflux nephropathy. 388 98

To determine whether preexistent glomerular injury and the nephrotic syndrome increase renal susceptibility to ischemic renal injury, normal rats and rats with either experimental minimal-change disease (Adriamycin nephropathy) (AN) or membranous nephropathy (passive Heymann nephritis) (PHN) underwent renal functional and histologic studies under either basal conditions or 18 h after bilateral renal artery occlusion (over 30 min). Prior to renal ischemia AN and PHN rats had minimally depressed glomerular filtration rate (GFR), normal (AN) or increased (PHN) renal blood flow (RBF), heavy proteinuria, hypoalbuminemia, decreased urine sodium excretion, extensive glomerular foot process fusion, and intratubular hyalin cast formation. Losses of GFR in response to ischemia were comparable among the three groups of rats (controls, 0.29; AN, 0.28; PHN, 0.25 ml X min-1 X 100 g body wt-1) despite prevailing differences in postischemic hemodynamics. Neither light nor transmission electron microscopy showed any differences in the degree of ischemic renal injury. These results suggest that 1) glomerulopathy and the nephrotic syndrome do not significantly increase renal susceptibility to ischemic renal injury; 2) the syndrome of acute renal failure that occurs in patients with minimal-change glomerulopathy is not due to a marked susceptibility of these kidneys to clinically occult ischemic events; and 3) foot process fusion is probably not a pathophysiologically significant lesion in ischemic acute renal failure, as previously suggested.
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PMID:Glomerulopathy does not increase renal susceptibility to acute ischemic injury. 670 61

To elucidate the significance of hypertension associated with cerebrovascular lesions (CVL), renal perfusion pressure (RPP) was controlled by aortic clips of two different sizes in stroke-prone spontaneously hypertensive rats kept under normal or salt-loaded conditions. Tail and femoral arterial pressures (RPPs) in the mildly and severely clamped animals were reduced in proportion to the severity of the clamping. In contrast, carotid pressures in both clamped groups were significantly higher than that in the controls. Proteinuria and hyperreninemia accompanied by arteriolar changes in the renal cortex were observed in the controls prior to the onset of CVL. The renal changes were inhibited by both types of clamping. The onset of CVL was delayed by the mild clamping in salt-loaded animals, but accelerated by the severe clamping in both the normal and salt-loaded animals. Renal cortical blood flow was decreased only by the severe clamping. The results suggest that reduction in RPP and/or renal ischemia, which seems to be due to the hypertensive arteriolar changes in the renal cortex, may be related to the pathogenesis of CVL in the stroke-prone rats with or without hyperreninemia.
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PMID:Implication of renal perfusion pressure in stroke of spontaneously hypertensive rats. 736 76

We report a case of hyponatremia, polyuria-polydipsia, hypokalemia, nephrotic syndrome, and hypertension caused by unilateral renal ischemia, and the resolution after nephrectomy of the ischemic kidney. The renin-angiotensin-aldosterone axis seems to play an essential role in the pathogenesis of these features. Mechanisms by which angiotensin II, hypokalemia, and proteinuria can affect salt and water balances, and the role of angiotensin II as a cause of heavy proteinuria are discussed. Renovascular hypertension should be considered in the differential diagnosis of hyponatremia, hypokalemia, and polyuria-polydipsia.
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PMID:Multiple manifestations of renovascular hypertension. 820 70

Administration of losartan (L), an angiotensin II receptor antagonist, at a daily dose of 3 mg/kg body wt, lowered systolic blood pressure (SBP) in both the Prague hypertensive rat and the Prague normotensive rat (PNR). Proteinuria was markedly reduced in both strains by L. Seven days after kidney ischemia due to bilateral clamping of both renal arteries for 45 minutes, the renal function (endogenous creatinine clearance, sodium, potassium, and urea excretion rates) was completely normal in L-treated PHR and PNR, whereas distinct deterioration was observed in untreated animals. The survival rate after kidney ischemia was significantly improved by L in both PHR and PNR. Thus, L had a significant blood pressure-lowering action in both strains and exerted a distinct renal protective effect from kidney ischemia.
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PMID:Losartan protects the rat kidney from ischemic injury. 874 28

Little attention has been paid to nephropathies and proteinuria in renovascular hypertension (RVH). Recently there has been a growing interest in the conditions induced by RVH. 10 cases of RVH were diagnosed by angiography and renin sampling from renal veins in the last 6 years in our hospital. The patients were all male and mean age was 64 +/- 8 (SD) years. Data were as follow: protein excretion was 3.8 +/- 2.2 g/day (> or = 3.5 g/day in 8 patients), sBP 202 +/- 24 mmHg, dBP 113 +/- 17 mmHg, serum renin concentration 64 +/- 45 pg/ml, and ipsilateral/contralateral renal vein renin ratio 3.3 +/- 1.0. RVH was treated by nephrectomy in 3 patients, percutaneous transluminal renal angioplasty (PTA) in 2, and angiotensin converting enzyme inhibitors (ACE-I) administration in 8. Biopsies were performed on contralateral kidney in 4 patients. Focal segmental glomerulosclerosis (FGS) was found in 3 patients, and nephrosclerosis in 1, whereas only nephrosclerosis was found in nephrectomized kidneys in all 3 patients. After nephrectomy, PTA and the treatment by ACE-I, not only blood pressure but also proteinuria was markedly reduced. These findings suggest that severe stenosis of the renal artery led to renal ischemia, which activated renin excretion, to cause glomerular hyperfiltration through vasoconstriction of the efferent arterioles in the contralateral kidney. FGS-like lesion thus induced appeared to have caused massive proteinuria.
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PMID:Renovascular hypertension may cause nephrotic range proteinuria and focal glomerulosclerosis in contralateral kidney. 935 55


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