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)

Big renin, a relatively inactive renin which possesses a molecular weight larger than that of normal plasma or renal renin, has been demonstrated by gel filtration in certain human plasma, tumor extracts, and amniotic fluid. Big renin was not present in normal plasma or kidney extracts. Plasma from 3 hypertensive patients with nephropathy contained chiefly big renin. Varying proportions of both big and normal renin activity were present in plasma of other patients with hypertension and proteinuria. The renin present in amniotic fluid, which increased in activity following exposure to acid pH, was shown to be big renin in two patients. Large amounts of circulating big renin apparently can cause hypertension in patients with Wilms' tumors. Furthermore, the relatively inactive big renin may replace normal plasma renin in some patients, resulting in low plasma renin activity.
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PMID:Occurrence of big renin in human plasma, amniotic fluid and kidney extracts. 16 87

Seventeen hypertensive patients were treated with captopril, an orally active inhibitor of converting-enzyme. All patients showed a fall in blood pressure (BP), although in some patients only after the addition of diuretics. In 2 patients a skin rash developed. One patient developed proteinuria. A renal biopsy revealed membranous glomerulopathy. Correlations were found between pretreatment plasma renin activity (PRA) and the decrease in BP, and between pretreatment PRA and the decrease in plasma aldosterone concentration (PAC). Filtration fraction (FF) fell, indicating a decrease in renal vascular resistance. Captopril decreased the sensitivity to exogenous angiotensin I (AI), dependent on the captopril dose used. The sensitivity to exogenous bradykinin increased impressively even on the lowest dose of the drug. These observations suggest extrapulmonary conversion of AI to angiotensin II (AII).
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PMID:Treatment of moderate to severe hypertensive patients with an orally active converting-enzyme inhibitor. 23 14

Experimental toxemia of pregnancy was induced in 8 pregnant monkeys (Macacamulatta) by reducing the abdomiinal aorta to one-third of its original diameter during the last month of gestation. It was characterized by hypertension and proteinuria. In the kidney, light and electron microscopy and immunofluorescence revealed findings similar to those in human toxemia. Focal necrosis in the liver and diffuse hemorrhagic infarctions in the placenta were also observed. Plasma renin activity and aldosterone levels, as determined in blood from the uterine vein, were elevated. None of these changes were found in 4 control animals.
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PMID:Experimental toxemia of pregnancy in the monkey, with a preliminary report on renin and aldosterone. 40 16

The development of malignant hypertension was studied in stroke-prone spontaneously hypertensive rats (SHR) kept on 1% NaCl as drinking water. Along with salt-loading, blood pressure gradually increased and reached a severe hypertensive level (greater than 230 mmHg), which was followed by increases in urinary protein (greater than 100 (mg/250 g body wt)/day) and plasma renin concentration (PRC, from 18.9 +/- 0.1 to 51.2 +/- 19.4 (ng/ml)/h, mean +/- SD). At this stage, renal small arteries and arterioles showed severe sclerosis and fibrinoid necrosis. Stroke was observed within a week after the onset of these renal abnormalities. The dose of exogenous angiotensin II (AII) producing 30 mmHg rise in blood pressure increased with the elevation of PRC, from 22 +/- 12 to 75 +/- 36 ng/kg, which was comparable to that in rats on water. The fall of blood pressure due to an AII inhibitor, [1-sarcosine, 8-alanine]AII (10(microgram/kg)/min for 40 min) became more prominent with the increase in PRC in salt-loaded rats, but was not detected in rats on water. These findings suggest that the activation of renin-angiotensin system participates in malignant hypertension of salt-loaded stroke-prone SHR rats that show stroke signs, proteinuria, hyperreninemia, and renovascular changes.
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PMID:Renin-angiotensin system in stroke-prone spontaneously hypertensive rats. 42 75

Plasma renin activity (P.R.A.) and plasma aldosterone (P.A.) were studied basally and after various stimuli in eight diabetic subjects with orthostatic hypotension and autonomic neuropathy. Five of them had chronic renal failure and proteinuria. On a diet containing 100 mEq Na/24 H, mean P.R.A. was 0,80 +/- 0,32 ng/ml/h in the supine position and 0,95 +/- 0,43 ng/ml/h in the upright position (N.S.); mean P.A. was 111 +/- 77 pg/ml in the supine position and 234 pg/ml in the upright position (p less than 0,01). On a diet containing 10 mEq Na/24 H, mean P.R.A. was 1,54 +/- 0,76 ng/ml/h in the supine position and 2,44 +/- 1,53 ng/ml/h in the upright position (N.S.). There was little stimulation of P. R. A. by low sodium intakes. After furosemide (n = 6), epinephrine + norepinephrine (n = 4) or diazoxide (n = 2), there was no stimulation of P.R.A. and P.A. Thus in diabetic patients with orthostatic hypotension and autonomic neuropathy basal values of P.R.A. and P.A. are in the normal range but there is dysregulation of renin-angiotensin-aldosterone system.
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PMID:[Orthostatic hypotension in complicated diabetes mellitus: study of the renin-angiotensin-aldosterone system (author's transl)]. 44 29

A 30 year old man developed renovascular hypertension and extreme elevation of plasma renin activity. Daily proteinuria ranged from 13 to 31 g. There were no criteria for the diagnosis of malignant hypertension. A primary glomerulopathy was excluded by a basically normal renal biopsy from the unprotected kidney. On electron microscopy the epithelial cell foot processes were not fused, thus ruling out simultaneous lipoid nephrosis. The source of renin was removed by means of a left nephrectomy. Following the procedure the patient became normotensive, the renin values normalized and the proteinuria disappeared. The results suggest that renin can cause significant proteinuria in man.
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PMID:Renin-induced massive proteinuria in man. 45 23

Adrenalectomy is known to prevent the proteinuria induced by renin or angiotensin, but it is not clear whether the loss of glucocorticoids or mineralocorticoids is responsible. The problem was reinvestigated using dexamethasone and aldosterone, essentially pure glucocorticoid and mineralocorticoid, respectively. Dexamethasone treatment for 2--5 days completely restored the protein-uric response to angiotensin II or norepinephrine, but aldosterone did not, even though the dose and treatment were sufficient to induce changes in electrolyte excretion. Fractional sodium excretion was also increased by angiotensin II and norepinephrine in the dexamethasone-treated rats, but not in the aldosterone-treated rats. Both dexamethasone and aldosterone treatments restored the increase in filtration fraction, but the increase was not associated with proteinuria in some groups, and it is concluded that there is no causal relationship between increased filtration fraction and proteinuria. Reasons for considering binding of norepinephrine and angiotensin to the glomerular basement membrane as causal for the proteinuria and the hormonal requirements for such binding are discussed.
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PMID:Corticoid effects on angiotensin- and norepinephrine-induced proteinuria in rats. 46 98

In order to study the role of the renin-angiotensin system in patients with diabetic nephropathy, renin release and the juxtaglomerular apparatus were studied in 17 diabetic patients with proteinuria and in 23 without proteinuria; 8 normal subjects were used for conctrls. Despite hypertension and marked arteriosclerosis, plasma renin activity (supine posture) was normal; however, the renin response to salt restriction and upright posture was less in the diabetic patients with proteinuria than in the controls. Renal renin content, determined at autopsy, was also normal. Examination of the juxtaglomerular apparatus in the diabetic patients with proteinuria revealed hyalinization of the afferent and efferent arterioles in most of the glomeruli and various degrees of destruction of the juxtaglomerular cells. The findings suggest that renin production is not increased in diabetic patients with proteinuria plus marked vascular damage, and that the renin-angiotensin system in patients with diabetic nephropathy apparently does not play an important role in the exacerbation of hypertension or the degree of vascular damage.
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PMID:Renin and the juxtaglomerular apparatus in diabetic nephropathy. 61 49

The renin-angiotensin system has been implicated in the genesis of pre-eclampsia. To avoid fetal toxicity, five women were studied who developed hypertension, proteinuria, and edema in the last trimester of pregnancy and whose BP elevation persisted immediately postpartum. At about 6 hours after delivery the CE enzyme inhibitor (SQ 20,881) was given in incremental doses ranging from 0.25 to 3.0 mg. per kilogram intravenously, before and after diuresis with furosemide, 40 mg. intravenously. BP was measure every 2 minutes and PRA and angiotensin II concentration before treatment, 30 minutes after 0.25 to 0.30 mg. per kilogram, and 30 minutes after 2.0 to 3.0 mg. per kilogram. Echocardiographic assessment of CI and PVR was performed before treatment and after a maximum dose in three patients. Before diuresis, CE blockade had no effect on heart rate, BP, CI, PVR, or PRA, regardless of whether the patient was in positive or negative fluid balance or was sodium loaded or restricted over the preceding 24 hours. Angiotensin II fell by 77 and 10 per cent, respectively, after 0.25 mg. per kilogram was given to two patients, but rose slightly in the other three patients, then fell an average of 46 per cent after 1.0 to 3.0 mg. per kilogram were given. After diuresis, 1.0 mg. per kilogram resulted in a 24 per cent fall in BP which persisted for 3 hours in two patients and a 14 per cent fall which lasted for 30 minutes after 1.0 or 3.0 mg. per kilogram in a third patient. It is concluded that the BP elevation which persists after delivery in certain patients with pre-eclampsia is not angiotensin II dependent.
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PMID:SQ 20,881: effect on eclamptic--pre-eclamptic women with postpartum hypertension. 68 62

In 25 patients with nephrotic syndromes of different origin, indomethacin caused an immediate decrease in glomerular filtration rate (GFR) and urinary protein excretion. This effect of indomethacin on GFR and proteinuria was more pronounced when the renin-angiotensin system was stimulated by a low-sodium diet and 50 mg hydrochlorothiazide daily, and resulted in a significant rise in serum albumin. Withdrawal of indomethacin after 1--3 years of administration was followed by an increase in proteinuria to pretreatment levels in 9 out of 15 patients. A harmful renal effect of long-term indomethacin administration was found to be unlikely. The results suggest that the steroid-resistant nephrotic syndrome can be treated symptomatically by indomethacin.
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PMID:Treatment of the nephrotic syndrome with indomethacin. 74 Jan


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