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 have presented a review of literature and their own data on acute tubulointerstitial nephritis combined with uveitis in a patient aged 47. In foreign literature this combination is defined as a separate syndrome (TIN-uveitis or TINU). The development of nonspecific symptoms (fatigue, weakness, nausea, loss of body mass, pains in the joints, skin rash) was characterized by change in some laboratory indices (raised ESP, anemia, eosinophilia, hyperproteinemia, hypergammaglobulinemia) and nephropathy. The signs of nephropathy were polyuria, a decrease in relative urine density, proteinuria of tubular genesis, renal glucosuria and aminoaciduria. A decrease in glomerular filtration and an increase in the level of blood serum creatinine were noted in most of the cases. In spite of the development of renal failure TINU prognosis is favorable: renal function gets back to normal by itself or after corticosteroid therapy. Uveitis shows a tendency to recurrence. The immune genesis of the TINU syndrome is assumed.
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PMID:[Acute tubulo-interstitial nephritis combined with uveitis (clinical case and review of the literature)]. 353 15

Antibiotics are the principal cause of drug-associated nephropathy. They are responsible for acute interstitial nephropathy (AIN) or acute tubulo-interstitial nephropathy (ATIN) due to two different pathophysiologic mechanisms: a drug-induced immunologic process and direct action due to drug accumulation. 1) Ain of immunologic origin. These are rare and are induced either by beta-lactamines or by rifampicin. Among the beta-lactamines, methicillin is the most often responsible, while penicillin and ampicillin are less often, and only rarely are carbenicillin, oxacillin, nafcillin, cephalothin and cephalexin. Macroscopic hematuria occurring 10 to 15 days after initiation of treatment usually reveals the renal involvement. It is associated with or preceded by fever, skin eruption and blood eosinophilia. Renal insufficiency (RI) is not severe and rarely requires hemodialysis (HD). The course is usually favorable. Rifampicin-induced AIN is observed in two circumstances, either during intermittent treatment or when previous treatment is resumed. Macroscopic hematuria is rare and RI often severe. Anti-rifampicin anti-bodies are usually found. 2) ATIN due to direct toxicity. Several classes of antibiotics may be responsible: cephalosporins, polymyxins or cyclins, but it is usually observed with aminoglycosides (AG). The incidence of renal involvement due to the latter group is estimated to be 4 to 10%. Nephrotoxicity is initially reflected by polyuria, tubular proteinuria and increased enzymuria, followed by cylindruria and reduced glomerular filtration. HD is rarely required. The proximal tubule is predominantly affected; pathological findings are disappearance of the brush border and tubular necrosis. Electronic microscopy shows lysosomal alterations with numerous myelinic bodies. Tubular regeneration occurs within 15 to 30 days.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Antibiotic nephrotoxicity. 610 Jan 74

Calves (n = 4) were given neomycin (2.25 or 4.5 mg/kg) twice daily IM and were compared with 2 calves given penicillin IM. The 2 hallmarks of aminoglycoside toxicosis, nephrotoxicosis and ototoxicosis, were seen with both dosages of parenterally administered neomycin. Nephrotoxicosis was confirmed by abnormal findings in urinalysis (granular casts, proteinuria, low specific gravity), renal biopsy results (tubular degeneration and necrosis), and increased 24-hour amounts of urinary enzymes (alanine aminopeptidase and gamma-glutamyltranspeptidase). Azotemia, decreased creatinine clearance, polyuria, and polydipsia also were documented in calves given neomycin. Clinically, deafness was suspected in 2 calves and was documented by electrical auditory-evoked response tests. Abnormalities in partial thromboplastin times and renal residues of neomycin were seen in all 4 calves that were given neomycin, but not in calves that were given penicillin.
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PMID:Neomycin toxicosis in calves. 611 66

The chronic administration of captopril to Sprague-Dawley rats was performed under the barrier system by feeding ad libitum with mixed diet in various concentrations of captopril with 3 months recovery period. The number of animals was 180 female and 180 male including 5 groups of control, 30, 100, 300 and 900 mg/kg/day. The maximum nontoxic dose was estimated as about 30 mg/kg/day for male but a little more than this for female rats. Body weight increase was significantly reduced in male but for the first 3 months in female rats. No death was ascribed to the toxic effect of captopril. Polydipsia and polyuria in male, and the significant increase in values of BUN and inorganic phosphate in both sexes were observed. The reduction in erythrocyte count, values of hemoglobin and hematocrit, hemosiderosis in reticulum cells of the spleen and Kupffer cells in the liver and the increase of erythropoieses indicated hemolytic anemia. Heart weight reduced while kidney weight increased. Pathological examination revealed hypertrophia and hyperplasia of JG cells and thickening of walls of afferent arterioles with hyperplasia of vascular smooth muscle cells and increase of collagen fibers. Thickening of walls extended to walls of the interlobular arteries which remained after withdrawal of captopril for 3 months though JG granules attenuated. The age-related increases of incidences of proteinuria and myocardial fibrosis were attenuated dose-dependently which are probably due to hypotension induced by captopril.
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PMID:[Twelve month studies on the chronic toxicity of captopril in rats]. 627 84

The nephrotoxic properties of the chemical N-(3,5-dichlorophenyl)-succinimide were investigated in rats with a view to establishing the usefulness of this chemically-induced nephritis as a model of chronic interstitial renal fibrosis. The compound was synthesized and given daily by gastric intubation as a suspension in arachis oil B.P. to male WAG-strain rats, for periods of up to 108 days. Polydipsia and polyuria resulted rapidly in all treated animals and persisted for the duration of the experiment. There was a progressive increase in the extent of proteinuria in all treated animals and, by the end of the experiment, there was an increase in the plasma levels of urea and creatinine. Short term treatment (up to 3 days) resulted in focal areas of necrosis of some proximal convoluted tubules. Treatment for 28 days resulted in patchy but severe tubular interstitial nephritis with which was associated a moderate interstitial fibrosis. By 108 days, the nephritis was more widespread and the interstitial fibrosis was severe. The activity of proline hydroxylase, a part of the intracellular sequence of collagen synthesis, showed progressive increase in the renal cortex throughout the experiment and there was an associated increase in the cortical hydroxyproline content, a measure of the amount of collagen present. Associated with this biochemical evidence of an active, chronic fibrosis, was an increased water content of the cortical tissue. The results indicate that this chemically-induced, tubular interstitial nephritis is indeed a good and reliable model of interstitial renal fibrosis.
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PMID:Experimental interstitial renal fibrosis in rats: nephritis induced by N-(3,5-dichlorophenyl)succinimide. 631 Dec 37

A 45-year-old male was admitted to the hospital because of polyuria and polydipsia. After admission, proteinuria and hematuria were found. The kidney function deteriorated and necessitated the initiation of chronic hemodialysis. Examination of the bone marrow revealed multiple myeloma and kappa light chains were found in the urine. The kidney biopsy showed membranoproliferative glomerulonephritis with dense deposits in the glomerular basement membrane.
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PMID:Multiple myeloma presenting as dense deposit disease. Light chain nephropathy. 640 20

The nephrotoxicity of hydroxygentamicin and amikacin was examined in young adult Fischer 344 rats. Serum creatinine (SCr) and urea nitrogen (BUN) levels were not significantly affected following sc injection of 80 or 160 mg/kg/day of hydroxygentamicin for 15 days. However, 250 mg/kg of amikacin produced significant increases in both parameters and in kidney/body weight ratios. The ratios were also significantly increased after 80 or 160 mg/kg of hydroxygentamicin, but kidneys of rats receiving amikacin were considerably heavier than those of rats treated with hydroxygentamicin. The antibacterial potency of 250 mg/kg of amikacin is comparable to that of 100 mg/kg of hydroxygentamicin. Additional studies, directly comparing hydroxygentamicin, a mutational biosynthetic, with gentamicin or netilmicin, all at 40, 80, and 160 mg base/kg, and incorporating renal function parameters as well as SCr, BUN, organ weight, tissue concentration, and kidney histopathology, revealed a characteristic pattern typical of aminoglycoside nephrotoxicity in mature adult male rats. In most parameters, values in rats given hydroxygentamicin or netilmicin were normal and comparable to those in controls, but kidney/body weight ratios were significantly increased at high doses. However, kidneys of rats medicated with gentamicin at comparable doses were considerably heavier than those of hydroxygentamicin-treated rats. Significant nephrotoxicity also was seen in rats given low doses of gentamicin or netilmicin. Eosinophilic granulation and vacuolization of renal proximal tubular epithelium, interstitial inflammation, and tubular dilation were observed microscopically with all three drugs in the following descending order of severity: gentamicin greater than netilmicin greater than hydroxygentamicin. The effects on proximal tubular epithelial cells following treatment with amikacin, netilmicin, or hydroxygentamicin correlated reasonably well with renal drug concentrations, but drug concentrations of gentamicin, which produced the most extensive kidney injury, were lower than those of the other three aminoglycosides. Elevated SCr or BUN were indicative of the presence of nephrosis, but early stages of tubular epithelial degeneration were not predicted by increases in BUN or SCr. Although minimal or mild nephrosis was seldom predicted by polyuria, proteinuria, or changes in osmolality, effects observed in renal function parameters usually correlated well with renal histopathology. However, a decrease in osmolality correlated best with enlarged kidneys and changes in renal morphology.
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PMID:Comparative nephrotoxicity of hydroxygentamicin and other aminoglycosides in rats. 647 1

Oligomeganephronia (OMN) is characterized by a reduced number of nephrons, with compensatory hypertrophy of the remaining glomeruli and tubules. The clinico-pathological features of six cases seen at The Hospital for Sick Children, Toronto were reviewed. One patient presented in infancy (10 days of age), the others between 12.8 and 14.5 years (mean 13.7 years), with long-standing polydipsia and polyuria, enuresis, and growth retardation. All patients had proteinuria which tended to increase as the disease progressed. At renal biopsy, four patients showed significant proteinuria (greater than 1.3 g/24 hr). Biopsies from these patients showed focal segmental glomerulosclerosis (FSGS) and all have rapidly progressed to dialysis/transplantation. The two remaining patients had lesser degrees of proteinuria (less than 0.3 g/24 hr) and no evidence of FSGS on biopsy; however, they are currently in chronic renal failure (mean serum creatinine 2.8 mg/dl). We conclude that increasing proteinuria in patients with OMN heralds the development of FSGS, presumably due to functional overload of the reduced nephron number. This is associated with a rapid decline in renal function.
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PMID:The significance of focal segmental glomerulosclerosis in oligomeganephronia. 649 Mar 19

Ochratoxin A was isolated from a culture of Aspergillus ochraceus grown on a cornmeal substrate. The mycotoxin was added to a grower ration for 14 kg young pigs at 2, 4, 8 and 16 mg/kg and fed to groups of 3 for periods ranging from 6 to 20 days. The highest dose rate group only became sick, with loss of appetite, weight loss, polydipsia, polyuria, proteinuria, glucosuria, elevation of serum creatinine, pale swollen kidneys, renal tubular degeneration and cortical fibrosis. The pigs on the 2 mg toxin/kg of diet appeared unaffected with only slight renal tubular degeneration present in one animal. Feeding diet contaminated with the intermediate doses of 4 and 8 mg toxin/kg diet lead to reduction of weight gain and/or reduced feed intake and feed conversion efficiency as well as mild renal lesions. Ochratoxin A has recently been reported on mould-affected grain in Queensland and some local strains of A. ochraceus in culture have been shown to be able to produce levels of ochratoxin A of up to 4000 mg/kg of substrate. Rare episodes of nephrotoxicity in pigs seen at slaughter in Queensland may thus be due to prior contamination of the diet with ochratoxin A.
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PMID:Experimental ochratoxicosis A in pigs. 649 7

The cause of the morphological changes and functional defects in the renal tubule seen in patients with severe potassium depletion is unknown. In man and animals potassium status is a major factor regulating ammonia synthesis in the kidney and urinary ammonium excretion. A primary effect of potassium depletion is to cause an increase in ammoniagenesis by the renal tubular cells. It is proposed that the vacuolation of the renal tubular cells and the functional defects of tubular proteinuria, polyuria, resistance to arginine vasopressin, renal resistance to the action of parathyroid hormone, and increased urinary excretion of N-acetyl-beta-glucosaminidase found in potassium depletion are secondary effects caused by high concentrations of ammonia in the renal tubular cells.
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PMID:Increased ammoniagenesis and the renal tubular effects of potassium depletion. 651 81


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