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)

Juvenile chronic arthritis (JCA) was diagnosed in 2 young girls. In one of them, antinuclear antibodies (ANA) were strongly positive during the course of erosive polyarthritis. After 5 years followup, severe renal insufficiency occurred. Antineutrophil cytoplasmic antibodies (ANCA) were positive with a perinuclear pattern on indirect immunofluorescence (IIF) and antimyeloperoxidase (MPO) specificity. Renal biopsy showed severe crescentic glomerulonephritis without significant deposits on IIF. Treatment consisted of prednisone and monthly intravenous cyclophosphamide pulse. Renal failure worsened and hemodialysis was necessary. A 2nd patient was referred for polyarthritis with positive rheumatoid factors without positive ANA. The presence of microscopic hematuria led to the discovery of crescentic glomerulonephritis with positive ANCA of anti-MPO specificity. At latest examination, after prednisone for 10 months and azathioprine for 6 months, the patient had moderate proteinuria with normal renal function. These observations emphasize that in juvenile onset chronic polyarthritis, renal microscopic angiitis with ANCA of anti-MPO specificity may occur.
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PMID:Crescentic glomerulonephritis in juvenile chronic arthritis. 887 38

A 68-year-old male patient suffering from dizziness, gait instability, deafness, and visual loss showed proteinuria, hematuria, reduced creatinine clearance, and a monoclonal IgA lambda component. Renal biopsy revealed crescentic glomerulonephritis. Serum antibodies against myeloperoxidase were identified. These antibodies were IgG, not related to the IgA monoclonal component. This clinical description adds new information to the spectrum of diseases associated with glomerulonephritis and antimyeloperoxidase antibodies and illustrates that a monoclonal component cannot be directly implicated in the pathogenesis of a vasculitic process associated with antineutrophil cytoplasm antibodies.
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PMID:Monoclonal gammopathy associated with crescentic glomerulonephritis and antimyeloperoxidase antibodies. 890 65

Autoantibodies to myeloperoxidase (MPO) are present in sera from patients with various forms of vasculitis-associated glomerulonephritis. Evidence for a pathogenic role of anti-MPO antibodies has been provided mainly by in vitro studies. We studied the pathogenic role of autoantibodies to MPO in a rat model of mild immune-mediated glomerular injury. Brown Norway rats were immunized with human MPO in complete Freund's adjuvant or with complete Freund's adjuvant alone. At 2 weeks after immunization, rats had developed antibodies to human and rat MPO as detected by indirect immunofluorescence, enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay, and immunoprecipitation. At this time point, rats were intravenously injected with a subnephritogenic dose of 150 micrograms of rabbit anti-rat GBM. Rats were sacrificed at 4 hours, 24 hours, 4 days, and 10 days after antibody administration. Control immunized rats developed mild glomerulonephritis characterized by slight proteinuria at day 10 (14.8 +/- 8.1 mg/24 hours) and moderate intraglomerular accumulation of ED1+ macrophages. Crescent formation, tuft necrosis, and tubular atrophy were not observed in those rats. In contrast, rats immunized with MPO developed severe glomerulonephritis characterized by the early occurrence of severe hematuria, marked proteinuria at day 10 (76.2 +/- 18.2 mg/24 hours), and massive glomerular deposition of fibrin. Complement and rat IgG were present in insudative lesions, but no linear pattern along the glomerular capillary wall was observed. By light microscopy, severe glomerular lesions were found at day 10 consisting of crescent formation and fibrinoid necrosis of capillary loops. In the interstitium, tubular necrosis and atrophy and marked interstitial mononuclear infiltration were found in conclusion, autoantibodies to MPO severely aggravate subclinical anti-GBM disease demonstrating their in vivo pathogenic potential.
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PMID:Autoantibodies to myeloperoxidase aggravate mild anti-glomerular-basement-membrane-mediated glomerular injury in the rat. 890 58

We report here a case of Cogan's syndrome associated with systemic vasculitis as well as myeloperoxidase-specific antineutrophil cytoplasmic antibody (MPO-ANCA)-related glomerulonephritis. A 71-year-old woman with the diagnosis of aortitis syndrome and pulmonary fibrosis for 7 years, complained of vertigo and hearing impairment. A diagnosis of serous otitis media was made. Although steroid therapy was effective, the symptoms relapsed several times. Seven months after the first manifestation of aural symptoms, she developed painful red eyes bilaterally and proteinuria. On admission, perinuclear ANCA without cytoplasmic ANCA was detected by indirect immunofluorescence assay and MOP-ANCA was detected by enzyme linked immunosorbent assay using the 363 ELISA Unit. Renal biopsy showed necrotizing crescentic glomerulonephritis without immune deposits. A diagnosis of atypical Cogan's syndrome with systemic vasculitis and pulmonary fibrosis was made from the clinical and histological findings. As nephrotic syndrome progressed after admission, she was started on high-dose corticosteroid administration. Urinary protein and other symptoms, except for hearing acuity, improved in parallel with a decrease in the MPO-ANCA titer to normal values. While tapering the dose of corticosteroid, the MPO-ANCA titer increased again and dyspnea occurred. Although pulse methylpredonisolone therapy was performed, the patient died of respiratory failure complicated with sepsis. Postmortem lung biopsy showed pulmonary fibrosis and massive alveolar hemorrhage. The findings of this case study suggest that MPO-ANCA may be closely related to the pathogenesis of Cogan's syndrome.
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PMID:[A case of myeloperoxidase-specific antineutrophil cytoplasmic antibody (MPO-ANCA)-related glomerulonephritis associated with Cogan's syndrome]. 891 96

We report here a 15-year-old girl with myeloperoxidase anti-neutrophil cytoplasmic antibodies (MPO-ANCA)-associated crescentic glomerulonephritis (CreGN) and subclinical autoimmune thyroiditis. She was found to have proteinuria and hematuria by a school mass-screening a year before the first visit to the hospital, where a routine examination revealed blood urea nitrogen (BUN) 36.8 mg/dl and serum creatinine concentration of 1.63 mg/dl, although she had no apparent disabilities. On admission, the additional laboratory findings showed proteinuria of 1.06 g/day, hematuria of 3+, and a creatinine clearance of 30.1 ml/min. Hypocomplementemia was not observed. A renal biopsy revealed pauci-immune CreGN with 95% fibrocellular crescents, 84% sclerosis and/or hyalinosis and a massive cellular infiltration in the interstitium. She had MPO-ANCA of 865 EU/ml and an anti-thyroid microsome antibody titer of 1:1,600 without the detection of anti-glomerular basement membrane antibodies. Laboratory tests and scintigraphies for the thyroid gland did not show any abnormalities. Under the diagnosis of MPO-ANCA-associated CreGN, cocktail therapy consisting of prednisolone, cyclophosphamide, dilazep hydrochloride and warfarin was started. Improvement of urinary abnormalities and suppression of further deterioration of renal function were observed. Serial renal biopsy 6 months after the initiation of therapy showed decrement of interstitial cell infiltration and no generation of other crescentic glomeruli. The patient's serum titer of anti-thyroid microsome antibody was not affected by the adsorption of MPO-reacted IgG, suggesting that MPO-ANCA was not cross-reactive to thyroid microsome antigen.
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PMID:An adolescent case of anti-neutrophil cytoplasmic autoantibodies-associated crescentic glomerulonephritis complicated with subclinical autoimmune thyroiditis. 894 Aug 29

Whether the serum levels of endothelin, a vasoconstrictive peptide produced in the endothelial cell, increase in preeclamptic patients is still controversial. We performed immunohistochemical studies to observe the changes in endothelin-1 (ET-1) in preeclamptic kidney tissues. The monoclonal anti-human ET-1 antibody (Yamasa, Japan) and anti-von Willebrand factor (vWF, Dako, Denmark), a marker of endothelial cells, were used for the studies by the strepto-avidin-biotin peroxidase method (ABC-POD Kit, Wako, Japan). Twenty-nine patients and 12 normal controls were divided into four groups. The preeclamptic group included 14 patients diagnosed with preeclampsia by clinical symptoms of hypertension, proteinuria, and edema occurring in late pregnancy and as having preeclamptic nephropathy. They underwent renal biopsy 16.7 +/- 1.0 (mean +/- SEM) days after delivery. The nephrotic group comprised 10 normotensive nonpregnant patients with nephrotic-range proteinuria examined through biopsy before treatment (six cases of minimal change, two of focal segmental glomerulosclerosis, one of membranous nephropathy, and one of IgA nephropathy). The pregnant women with preexisting glomerular disease group included five pregnant women with normal renal function who were normotensive and had no increase in the amount of proteinuria throughout pregnancy. They underwent renal biopsy 10.8 +/- 2.9 days after delivery (two cases of membranous nephropathy, one of focal segmental glomerulosclerosis, one of thin basement membrane disease, and one of non-IgA mesangioproliferative glomerulonephritis). The normal kidney group comprised 12 healthy tissue samples taken from nephrectomized kidneys (five cases of renal cell carcinoma, one case of lipofibrosarcoma, and six cases of kidney transplant donors). In these four groups, ET-1 and vWF showed equally positive staining in small arteries. VWF also showed positive staining in arterioles and peritubular capillaries in all groups. Although the glomeruli showed positive staining with ET-1 along the capillary walls in the normal group and the nonpregnant nephrotic group, they showed very weak or negative results in the preeclamptic group. Moreover, gravida with underlying glomerular disease without superimposed preeclampsia also showed negative findings of ET-1 in the glomeruli. The glomeruli in the four groups showed positive findings, with vWF readings the same as in the controls. These results indicate that the production of ET-1 in the glomerular endothelial cells decreases in cases of both preeclampsia and normal pregnancy, and the condition may be caused by pregnancy itself.
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PMID:Immunohistochemical study of endothelin-1 in preeclamptic nephropathy. 904 Dec 9

We encountered two patients with pulmonary hemorrhage who had high levels of myeloperoxidase-antineutrophil cytoplasmic antibody (MPO-ANCA). Patient 1 was a 69-year-old woman. Both were admitted to our hospital complaining of hemoptysis. Microscopic hematuria was detected in patient 1, and proteinuria and renal insufficiency were detected in patient 2. Chest X-ray films showed bilateral patchy infiltrates in patient 1, and right middle-lower infiltrates in patient 2. In both patients the levels of MPO-ANCA were high and the results of tests for anti-basement membrane antibodies were negative. These patients were suspected to have pulmonary-renal vasculitic syndrome with a high level of MPO-ANCA. In patient 1, because the level of MPO-ANCA decreased after treatment with steroid therapy, we believe that measuring the level of MPO-ANCA was useful in the management of the disease. Rapidly progressive glomerulonephritis developed in patient 2, and was exacerbated despite hemodialysis, steroid therapy, and plasma exchange therapy. Use of the term microscopic polyangiitis (MPA) was first proposed by yhe Chapel Hill Consensus Conference in 1993. MPA, which was formerly called microscopic polyarteritis nodosa, connotes pauci-immune necrotizing vasculitis affecting arterioles, venules, or capillaries, and this condition is strongly associated with ANCA. Patients with pulmonary-renal vasculitic syndrome who have MPO-ANCA may be given a diagnosis of MPA. Therefore, we diagnosed MPA in these two patients. Testing for ANCA may be useful in patients with pulmonary hemorrhage and renal involvement.
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PMID:[Two patients with pulmonary hemorrhage associated with myeloperoxidase-antineutrophil cytoplasmic antibody]. 907 Nov 67

A 52-year-old man was admitted to our hospital in July 1995, because of intermittent claudication, paresthesia on foot and gross hematuria. Chest radiograph in 1988 revealed bilateral interstitial shadows and proteinuria had been pointed out since 1992. On admission, chest X-ray and computed tomography showed diffuse interstitial shadow, however it had not been changed for several years. Laboratory tests revealed elevated level of erythrocyte sedimentation rate, C-reactive protein, immunoglobulin, rheumatoid factor, IgG-rheumatoid factor, and immune complex. Serum MPO-ANCA were positive. Although serum creatinine level and renal function test were normal, renal biopsy demonstrated crescentic formation and necrotizing vasculitis. Immunofluorescence and electron microscopy demonstrated no remarkable deposit in glomerulus. A diagnosis of microscopic polyarteritis necrotizing and crescentic glomerulonephritis (NCGN) was made. Treatment was initiated with 30 mg of prednisolone, followed by marked improvement of intermittent claudication, and decreased titer of serum MPO-ANCA. Previous reports have demonstrated the association of MPO-ANCA with rapidly progressive NCGN, microscopic polyarteritis, and occasionally pulmonary hemorrhage recognized as pulmonary-renal syndrome. However, the present case suggests the possibility that another disease subset may also be associated with MPO-ANCA, which is characterized by interstitial pneumonitis and slowly progressive glomerulonephritis.
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PMID:[Case of MPO-ANCA positive interstitial pneumonitis and necrotizing, crescentic glomerulonephritis]. 912 27

A 68-year-old man who developed MPO-ANCA-associated glomerulonephritis during propylthiouracil (PTU) treatment is reported. In 1986, he was diagnosed as having interstitial pneumonitis. Although he tested positive for antinuclear antibody and rheumatoid factor, he had no symptoms and was followed up without therapy. Five years later, the diagnosis of Graves's disease was made after complaints of body weight loss, diplopia and exophthalmos. Tests showed positivity for anti-thyroid stimulating hormone (TSH) receptor antibody, antithyroidperoxidase antibody and antithyroglobulin antibody. He was treated with PTU and prednisolone for four years. In November 1995, hematuria and proteinuria developed, and renal function deteriorated rapidly. A renal biopsy revealed crescentic glomerulonephritis and the serum titer of MPO-ANCA was markedly elevated. He was treated with a high dose of prednisolone and cyclophosphamide. Although the serum creatinine level gradually decreased, irreversible renal dysfunction persisted. In this patient, the presence of various autoantibodies had been recognized for several years before MPO-ANCA-associated glomerulonephritis developed. Polyclonal B-cell activation and PTU treatment may have played a role in the pathogenesis of MPO-ANCA-associated glomerulonephritis.
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PMID:[A case of Grave's disease with MPO-ANCA-associated glomerulonephritis during propylthiouracil (PTU) therapy following interstitial pneumonitis]. 913 35

This report describes a 50-year-old female with necrotizing crescentic glomerulonephritis (NCGN), associated with antineutrophil cytoplasmic antibodies (ANCA) recognizing various neutrophil cytoplasmic constituents. The patient was admitted to our hospital because of proteinuria. She had been well until seven months before admission, when she experienced fever and arthralgia. Tests for ANCA showed a p-ANCA pattern in indirect immunofluorescence, and high positivity for ANCA against myeloperoxidase (MPO) and lactoferrin in ELISAs. The renal biopsy on admission revealed crescentic glomerulonephritis with segmental necrosis. Therefore, we made the diagnosis of NCGN secondary to ANCA-associated renal disease. The second renal biopsy obtained after a period of 70 days with prednisolone and cyclophosphamide therapy displayed marked improvement indicating the disappearance of cellular crescents and necrosis lesions. Moreover, the levels of MPO-ANCA were correlated with the disease activity. We considered this patient to be a rare case of NCGN with ANCA recognizing various antigens. MPO-ANCA in this case might have been directly associated with the pathogenesis of NCGN.
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PMID:[A case of necrotizing crescentic glomerulonephritis in which myeloperoxidase antineutrophil cytoplasmic antibodies (ANCA) reflect the disease activity and recognize various neutrophil cytoplasmic constituents]. 913 36


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