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)

Twenty-one children with idiopathic nephrotic syndrome and minimal changes on renal biopsy were followed during all the disease. The average of follow-up was 37 months, with a range from 12 to 124 months. Recurrent proteinuria was the most important feature during the follow-up; 14 out of the patients showed frequent relapses, but only 2 patients showed major complication (peritonitis, septicemia) during relapses. Frequent relapses appeared most frequently in patients who began the disease before their fourth birthday, showed allergic history, had hypertension and red blood cells in urine, or had recurrent infections and finally, in those where proteinuria reappeared soon after prednisone therapy was ended. Prednisone alone was successful to induce remission, but it did not prevent frequent relapses. The association clorambucil-prednisone allowed lengthening of the period of remission and possibly for this reason the rate of relapses fell during the first 37 months of the follow-up. There are no signs which permit to predict the length of the disease and the frequent relapses can occur even after many years from the beginning of the disease. Special care of these patients avoids major complications.
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PMID:[Longitudinal study in children with the nephrotic syndrome and minimal glomerular lesion]. 75 27

Twenty-eight patients with SLE and distinct, well-defined renal morphologic lesions of membranous nephropathy were followed up for 4 years. These patients comprised approximately 8% of the patients evaluated for SLE during a 12-year period. The patients with membranous lupus nephropathy had typical systemic features of SLE, and most of them had positive LE cell tests and ANA, low serum complement concentrations, and mildly elevated serum antinative DNA levels. Proteniuria and microscopic hematuria were usually discovered years after systemic symptoms of SLE had developed, Only two patients had slowly progressive renal failure, and most patients continued to have proteinuria. Prednisone treatment did not influence either proteinuria or renal function. In only one patient, the renal character of the disease changed drastically, demonstrating membranoproliferative glomerulonephritis. Six patients died (21%); most of these died of cardiovascular illnesses. The relatively benign and stable renal course of membranous lupus nephropathy in patients with otherwise typical SLE suggests that the renal pathogenesis is different from that of proliferative lupus nephritis.
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PMID:Membranous lupus nephropathy: a clinicopathologic study. 91 91

We describe a case of membranous nephropathy in a patient with pulmonary, splenic and hepatic sarcoidosis. The patient was asymptomatic, and edema was absent notwithstanding the proteinuria (over 8.0 gm/100 ml daily). Prednisone cleared the pulmonary and splenic complications, but the proteinuria, although diminished, persisted. Adjunctive therapy with cyclophosphamide caused further diminishment of the proteinuria. We have reviewed the relationship between the nephropathy and the sarcoidosis and suggest that a causal relationship exists between the two diseases.
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PMID:Membranous glomerulopathy in a patient with sarcoidosis. 110 20

The course of eight pregnancies in seven renal transplant patients was analyzed. Immunosuppression consisted of Azathioprine and Prednisone. Pregnancy lasted from 32 to 39 weeks and the fetal development corresponded to the gestational age in every case. There were three cases which had complications during the pregnancy. One case had severe arterial hypertension, proteinuria and pedal edema, which was thought to be due to pre-eclampsia. Another patient had cholestatic jaundice and premature fissure of membranes and the third patient also had this last complication. Four patients had vaginal deliveries and in four cesarean section was performed. Renal function did not deteriorate during any of the pregnancies nor during the follow-up period, but the expected increase in creatinine clearance was not found. Clinical evaluation of the children, 4 months to 8 years of age, did not disclose any abnormalities.
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PMID:[Pregnancy in renal transplant recipients. Long-term evaluation of their children]. 145 32

It has been claimed that long-term prednisone treatment ameliorates the course of children with mesangiocapillary glomerulonephritis (MCGN). The International Study of Kidney Disease in Children conducted a randomized, double-blinded, placebo-controlled clinical trial in 80 children with idiopathic MCGN, including 42 patients with type I disease, 14 with type II disease, 17 with type III disease, and 7 with nontypable disease. Criteria for admission included heavy proteinuria and a glomerular filtration rate of greater than or equal to 70 ml/min per 1.73 m2. Prednisone or lactose, 40 mg/m2, was given every other day as a single morning dose. The mean duration of treatment was 41 months, renal failure being the most common reason for termination of therapy. Treatment failure was defined as an increase from baseline of 30% or more in serum creatinine, or more than 35 mumol/l. Overall, treatment failure occurred in 55% of patients treated with lactose, compared with 40% in the prednisone group. Life-table analysis showed a renal survival rate (i.e., stable renal function) at 130 months of 61% among patients receiving prednisone and 12% among patients receiving lactose (P = 0.07). Of patients with type I or III MCGN, 33% treated with prednisone were treatment failures, compared with 58% in the lactose group. Long-term treatment with prednisone appears to improve the outcome of children with MCGN.
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PMID:Treatment of mesangiocapillary glomerulonephritis with alternate-day prednisone--a report of the International Study of Kidney Disease in Children. 157 Dec 5

We report a transient neonatal nephrotic syndrome in two infants born to a mother with idiopathic nephrotic syndromes (INS). The mother, born in Mali in 1966, had a normal first pregnancy, with a normal live child. Six months later a nephrotic syndrome appeared with normal renal function; renal biopsy disclosed slight lesions of focal and segmental glomerulosclerosis. Prednisone and ciclosporin were totally ineffective. In 1986 and 1988 two pregnancies occurred with normal gestation outcome; however, the two births were premature (35 weeks) with hypotrophic infantas (2.160 and 2.080 kg). In both cases urine analysis revealed neonatal heavy proteinuria, with low serum protein and hypoalbuminemia; proteinuria decreased and disappeared within 2 and 3 weeks respectively; simultaneously protidemia and albuminemia were normalized. Thus, a transitory nephrotic syndrome, resolving spontaneously, occurred in two successive offsprings of a patient with INS. These cases are in keeping with the hypothesis that heavy proteinuria in nephrotic syndrome might be linked to a circulating humoral factor and that INS is a disorder linked to T-lymphocyte function with enhanced production of a lymphokine acting on vascular permeability.
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PMID:[Transmission of nephrotic syndrome to two neonates. Spontaneous regression]. 182 64

We report here the cases of 15 children in whom nephrotic syndrome developed, from among 164 children (55% male, 90% black) followed in our acquired immunodeficiency syndrome clinic from 1984 through 1990. Mean age at onset of nephrotic syndrome was 4.9 +/- 2.6 years. Fourteen patients were black and one was Hispanic. Seventy-three percent of our patients with nephrotic syndrome were girls. The mean duration of clinical acquired immunodeficiency syndrome before development of nephrotic syndrome was 1.7 +/- 1.1 years. In eight patients, nephrotic syndrome appeared between 3 and 11 months after intravenous infusions of immune globulin or albumin were administered as part of a research protocol; this incidence (8/47) was higher than the incidence of nephrotic syndrome among those who did not receive intravenous infusions (7/117, p less than 0.05). Tissue for histologic examination was available for 80% of the patients, and histologic examination demonstrated mesangial hypercellularity (5 patients), focal segmental glomerulosclerosis (4 patients), minimal change disease (2 patients), and IgM nephropathy (1 patient). Deposition of one or more immunoglobulins was noted in all but one patient studied with immunofluorescence. Corresponding electron-dense deposits were seen by electron microscopy in 78% of specimens. Prednisone did not induce a remission of nephrotic syndrome in the 13 patients treated, whereas cyclosporine did so in the 3 patients to whom it was administered. Five patients were in the end stage of renal disease within 8 months. Successful maintenance peritoneal dialysis was performed in three patients, but 80% of patients have died of human immunodeficiency virus-related complications; one patient was lost to follow-up. We conclude that immune-complex deposition is consistently seen in children with human immunodeficiency virus-associated nephrotic syndrome. This nephrotic syndrome is resistant to steroid therapy, but we observed a remission of the proteinuria with cyclosporine therapy in three patients. For patients with end-stage renal disease, maintenance peritoneal dialysis may improve the quality of life.
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PMID:Nephrotic syndrome associated with acquired immunodeficiency syndrome in children. 194 75

We have previously described a significant increase in 35sulfate uptake in rat glomerular basement membrane (GBM) when glomeruli were cocultured with peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMC) from patients with idiopathic minimal-lesion nephrotic syndrome (IMLNS) in relapse, but not with PBMC of IMLNS patients in remission. In the present study we examined the effect of prednisone therapy on the PBMC-mediated increase in 35sulfate GBM uptake. The GBM 35sulfate uptake after rat glomeruli were cocultured with PBMC from 11 IMLNS patients in relapse (geometric mean 437 cpm/mg dry glomerular weight) was significantly higher than the incorporation observed in glomeruli cultured alone (geometric mean 229 cpm/mg dry glomerular weight; p less than 0.01). However, no significant differences in 35sulfate uptake were seen between glomeruli cultured alone and glomeruli cocultured with PBMC from IMLNS patients when PBMC were obtained from the 11 patients on treatment with prednisone (2 mg/kg/day) or the same patients in remission and off prednisone therapy. Prednisone therapy abolished the PBMC-mediated increased 35sulfate uptake by rat GBM. GBM sulfated compounds seem to play a role in glomerular permeability. The temporal relationship between inhibition of GBM sulfate incorporation by prednisone and resolution of the proteinuria support the hypothesis that PBMC from IMLNS patients in relapse could secrete a lymphokine which by altering the metabolism of the GBM sulfated compounds may subsequently increase glomerular permeability to plasma proteins.
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PMID:Effect of prednisone on nephrotic peripheral blood mononuclear cell mediated increase in 35sulfate uptake in rat glomerular basement membrane. 279 47

We report five cases of crescentic IgA nephropathy. All are males, 16-60 years of age. One case each came to medical attention with uremia, nephrotic syndrome, and gross hematuria; two cases presented with microhematuria and proteinuria on routine urinalysis. All had hypertension, azotemia (serum creatinine 1.6-9.4 mg/dl), proteinuria (greater than 6 g/24 hr in four cases), hypoalbuminemia (less than 3 g/dl), and hematuria (gross in two cases). All progressed to end-stage renal failure renal failure ending in dialysis (three cases) or death from unrelated causes (two cases). Prednisone, 60 mg/day for 1 month in two patients (with two 1-g doses of iv methylprednisolone in 1 case) did not improve the serum creatinine level, but one patient subsequently experienced a less rapid fall in renal function. A crescentic glomerulonephritis was present in all biopsies (crescents in 31-80% of glomeruli; mean, 50%). The size and stage of the crescents were variable. Numerous glomeruli had focal or diffuse sclerosis. In all cases, there was a 3 or 4+ deposition of IgA. Low-intensity staining for IgG and IgM was noted in four and three patients, respectively. On electron microscopy, dense granular mesangial deposits were noted in all cases and in four patients capillary subepithelial deposits were also observed. This form of IgA nephropathy is not common, but some studies indicate that it may occur in about 5% of patients with IgA nephropathy.
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PMID:Crescentic IgA nephropathy. 639 83

A case of nephrotic syndrome due to minimal lesion glomerulonephritis associated with Hodgkins disease is described. The course of the nephrotic syndrome was relapsing, preceeding the development of lymphoma by eighteen months. Treatment of this nephrotic syndrome with repeated courses of Prednisone and Cyclophosphamide resulted only in partial improvement of his proteinuria. However, complete absence of proteinuria only occurred with successful therapy of Hodgkins disease.
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PMID:Nephrotic syndrome in Hodgkins disease. 685 40


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