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Query: UMLS:C0033687 (
proteinuria
)
24,015
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Light and electron microscopic studies were performed on renal glomeruli of diabetic mutant and age-matched normal mice and correlated with alterations in urinary excretion. The glomeruli of young (prediabetic) mutants and their normal littermates were normal and identical. With increasing age, the glomeruli of normal control mice were characterized by mesangial prominence and increased thickness and nodular densities of the peripheral basal lamina. These alterations were also observed in the diabetic mutant mice but more frequently and to a greatly exaggerated degree. The diabetic mutants were polyuric and excreted a quantity of protein identified by agarose and inmunoelectrophoresis as a
serum protein
. The excretion of this protein preceded the recognition of the morphologic alterations and did not increase in magnitude with the progression of glomerular changes. This report challenges the theoretic concept of genetically controlled diabetic glomerular lesions and discusses possible relationships between the glomerular alterations, the presence of
proteinuria
and the presence of hyperglycemia.
...
PMID:Studies in the diabetic mutant mouse. VI. Evolution of glomerular lesions and associated proteinuria. 500 70
The Wiskott-Aldrich syndrome is an immune deficiency disorder with an impairment of both humoral and cellular immune responses. Metabolic turnover studies of IgG, IgA, IgM, and albumin were conducted in seven patients with the Wiskott-Aldrich syndrome using purified radioiodinated proteins. The survival of each of the proteins studied was significantly shortened with a half-time of 7.5 days for IgG (normal 22.9 +/-4 SD), 3.0 days for IgA (normal 5.8 +/-1), 5.0 days for IgM (normal 10.1 +/-2.1), and 8.6 days for albumin (normal 17, range 13-20); the fractional catabolic rates were correspondingly elevated and the distribution of protein among the body compartments was normal. For three of the four proteins. IgG, IgA, and albumin, the steady-state synthetic rates were generally elevated leading to normal or even elevated serum proteins levels. Thus, in the case of IgA, the synthetic rate averaged five times normal while the fractional degradative rate was twice normal. The resulting serum concentration was, therefore, significantly elevated, IgM represented an exception to this pattern in that the increased rate of degradation was not counterbalanced by an increased synthetic rate and, therefore, the serum levels were low. Albumin clearance studies using albumin-(51)Cr showed gastrointestinal protein loss in these patients to be slightly greater than normal, but this could account for only a small fraction of the hypercatabolism observed. There was no
proteinuria
or abnormalities of thyroid, adrenal, renal, or liver function. Thus, none of the previously recognized causes of increased
serum protein
catabolism were present. Patients with the Wiskott-Aldrich syndrome, therefore, have a unique disorder of
serum protein
metabolism characterized by endogenous hypercatabolism of at least four major serum proteins. This phenomenon may be related to reticuloendothelial hyperfunction since the Wiskott-Aldrich syndrome is associated with reticuloendothelial hyperplasia and accelerated clearance of colloidal materials from the plasma.
...
PMID:Hypercatabolism of IgG, IgA, IgM, and albumin in the Wiskott-Aldrich syndrome. A unique disorder of serum protein metabolism. 509 17
The pathophysiology, histology and immunohistology of acute and chronic heterologous immune complex glomerulonephritis were investigated in a long-term study in male Wistar rats. The glomerulonephritis showed 3 phases: an initial nephrotic syndrome, a latent phase with stable
proteinuria
(40 mg/24 h), and a terminal phase with increasing
proteinuria
and blood pressure, and declining
serum protein
concentration and creatinine clearance. Antiserum doses of 1.0, 1.5 and 2.0 ml induced maximal
proteinuria
(112, 257 and 272 mg/24 h respectively) after 14 days whereas normal rabbit serum and 0.5 ml antiserum gave no
proteinuria
. After 100 days, the rats injected with 1.0 ml of antiserum did not show physiological signs of renal disease; in the rats injected with 1.5 ml of antiserum the disease run a chronic course. Equal amounts of rabbit IgG, rat IgG and rat C3 were found in 10 glomeruli from rats 100 days after injection of 0.5, 1.0 and 2.0 ml (p greater than 0.10). Intramembranous deposits and spike formation were observed in all groups. All changes increased with greater antiserum doses. Chronically diseased animals observed from 500 to 750 days showed deposits of rabbit IgG in the basement membrane, and in most animals small amounts of rat IgG and rat C3 were also observed. This is compatible with a sustained stimulus for antibody formation throughout the course of this type of glomerulonephritis.
...
PMID:The heterologous immune complex glomerulonephritis. A dose dependent glomerulonephritis with acute, latent and chronic phases in a long-term study. 621 19
The first two cases outlined above with intractable massive
proteinuria
and uremia, were followed and treated with standard medical therapy and dialysis. After a period of study and demonstration of clinical deterioration both patients were given solutions containing sodium mercaptomerin. Within days there was a decline in urine protein excretion and a variable increase in
serum protein
concentration. The patients demonstrated an increase in blood pressure, which made hemodialysis treatment possible. No deleterious effects from the mercury salts were noted. These observations suggest that in selected cases nephrotoxic agents may be of value in decreasing massive
proteinuria
, and improving protein homeostasis in uremic patients. The ideal agent should be non-toxic to other organs and produce selective renal ablation (15). Although mercury is not the ideal agent, in these cases it did not produce observable side effects. This new method, applicable to dialysis patients with massive
proteinuria
, and of help in the control of uncontrollable hypertension in uremia, is an interesting new approach for our therapeutic armamentarium.
...
PMID:Medical nephrectomy: the use of metallic salts for treatment of end stage massive proteinuria and renal hypertension. 633 53
We have measured plasma von Willebrand factor (VWF) as the factor VIII-related antigen, plasma fibronectin, and two of the serum somatomedins, insulin-like growth factor I (IGF I) and IGF II, in 51 diabetic patients and 25 nondiabetic control subjects. VWF was significantly higher in the diabetic group than in the controls (173 +/- 9% SEM versus 101 +/- 9%, P less than 0.001), as has been reported by others. However, within the diabetic group there was no significant difference in VWF between those patients without retinopathy, those with background or proliferative retinopathy, or those with macular edema. There was also no difference in VWF between the diabetic subjects with and those without
proteinuria
. These results rule against a previously advanced hypothesis that the increase in VWF in patients with diabetes is secondary to microangiopathy. No significant difference was observed in fibronectin, IGF I, or IGF II between the diabetic and control groups, between the diabetic group without retinopathy and the retinopathic subgroups, and between the diabetic subjects with and without
proteinuria
. In the diabetic patients, there was no correlation between diabetic control as assessed by glycosylated hemoglobin and glycosylated
serum protein
, and the plasma levels of VWF, fibronectin, IGF I, or IGF II. The results of this study strongly suggest that neither plasma VWF, fibronectin, IGF I, nor IGF II plays an important primary role in the pathogenesis of diabetic microvascular disease, although one or more of these factors might play a permissive role.
...
PMID:Von Willebrand factor (VIII R:Ag), fibronectin, and insulin-like growth factors I and II in diabetic retinopathy and nephropathy. 636 66
A 55-year-old man presented with nerve compression and examination of tissue removed by laminectomy, and bone marrow aspiration was diagnostic of multiple myeloma. Protein studies showed a total
serum protein
of 5.7 g/dL, with a M-component in the fast beta region. The abnormal protein reacted only with anti-lambda antisera but not with antisera from multiple sources in four different laboratories, against known heavy chain and kappa-chain determinants. A marked difference in potency of commercial anti-lambda antisera was noted. The reaction was primarily demonstrable in serum and present only in 100-times concentrated urine. Gel filtration disclosed a molecular weight of 84,000. The patient has been followed for the past four years and has not demonstrated significant
proteinuria
. The English and Japanese literature records seven cases of tetrameric Bence Jones multiple myeloma or plasma cell dyscrasia. This case appears to be the eighth recorded cases of tetrameric Bence Jones proteinemia, the fifth case without
proteinuria
, and the fifth case involving lambda light chains.
...
PMID:Polymeric (presumed tetrameric) lambda Bence Jones proteinemia without proteinuria in a patient with multiple myeloma. 643 10
Isolated and purified glomerular basement membranes (GBM) of normal and aminonucleoside (PAN) nephrosis rats were observed by electron microscopy after negative staining. Although GBM of normal rats appeared as a molecular sieve with uniform pores, GBM of nephrotic rats showed enlargement and elongation of the pores. For an average of fifty pores, the long dimension was 40.4+/-10.7 A and the short dimension 13.8+/-3.6 A in nephrosis whereas the long dimension was 12.3+/-2.5 A and the short dimension 8.4+/-1.0 A in normal rats. Changes in the pores in GBM were thought to result in increased permeability of
serum protein
and hence
proteinuria
.
...
PMID:Changes in the molecular sieve of glomerular basement membrane in rats with aminonucleoside nephrosis. 644 42
We measured plasma fibronectin levels in 21 patients with severe
proteinuria
secondary to primary renal disorders and compared those results with values obtained in 77 healthy volunteers and 15 patients with chronic renal disease but minimal
proteinuria
. Seventeen of the 21 patients with
proteinuria
(81%) demonstrated plasma fibronectin concentrations greater than 2 SDs above control values. Fibronectin levels in the group with chronic renal disease did not differ from normal values. In the group with
proteinuria
, plasma fibronectin levels were inversely correlated with total
serum protein
and serum albumin concentrations but were not correlated with the degree of
proteinuria
, serum creatinine level, or histologic diagnosis of kidney disease. The possible relevance of these findings to the hypercoagulable state of the nephrotic syndrome is discussed.
...
PMID:Abnormal plasma fibronectin levels in patients with proteinuria. 650 99
Six male and 6 female Beagles, 6 to 7 months old, were allotted to 2 groups: group I--inoculated subcutaneously with 30 Dipetalonema reconditum infective larvae/dog, and group II--noninoculated controls. Group comparisons were made in regard to hematologic values, Knott test results, body weights, blood urea nitrogen, total
serum protein
, serum albumin and alanine aminotransferase and creatine kinase activities. Routine urinalysis data were compared at 1 week before and at 28 weeks after the inoculations. Mean total leukocyte counts were significantly (P less than 0.05) greater in group I dogs than in group II dogs at postinoculation weeks (PIW) 4, 5, and 7 to 12, and mean eosinophil counts were significantly greater in group I dogs at PIW 3 to 11, 13 to 15, 20, and 23 to 24. Microfilariae were detected as early as the 10th week and sporadically thereafter. Only 1 D reconditum adult worm was recovered from all of the inoculated dogs. Five other dogs (group III) with chronic, patient experimentally induced dipetalonemiasis, were evaluated with the same tests at PIW 70 to 89. Eosinophilia (greater than 750 cells/microliter) was present in 4 of 5 dogs; lymphocytosis (greater than 4,800 cells/microliter) was evident in 1 dog.
Proteinuria
(greater than or equal to 30 mg/dl) was detected in 3 of 4 dogs with chronic dipetalonemiasis.
...
PMID:Clinical responses of dogs to experimentally induced Dipetalonema reconditum infection. 668 83
Lipids of the blood serum were studied in 29 patients with untreated nephrotic syndrome (NS) and in 28 patients treated with corticosteroids or nonsteroid drugs. None of the patients had evidence of renal failure, either acute or chronic. The patients with untreated NS showed massive
proteinuria
, marked hypoproteinemia, considerable hypertriglyceridemia and hypercholesterolemia. Serum high-density lipoprotein cholesterol (HDL cholesterol) concentrations were lower in these patients than in the control group, including 35 normal subjects, and correlated with the total
serum protein
(r = 0.46, p less than 0.05) and serum albumin (r = 0.46, p less than 0.05). An inverse correlation was observed between HDL cholesterol and serum triglyceride levels (r = -0.58, p less than 0.01). In the treated patients the laboratory indices of NS were less pronounced. HDL cholesterol levels were within normal limits in 14 patients with NS treated mostly with nonsteroid drugs, while in the patients receiving the corticosteroids (14 subjects) they were significantly higher than in the control group.
...
PMID:High-density lipoprotein cholesterol in patients with untreated and treated nephrotic syndrome. 671 5
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