Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
Pivot Concepts:   Target Concepts:
Query: UMLS:C0033687 (proteinuria)
24,015 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Dahl hypertension-resistant (R) and hypertension-sensitive (S) rats were used to determine whether cadmium-induced hypertension is dependent on genetic predisposition. In experiment I, 16 wk-old R and S rats of both sexes were injected with two doses of cadmium (1 and 2 mg/kg body wt, ip), whereas the controls received the same volumes of saline. Hypertension and renal vascular changes were observed in cadmium-injected S rats but not in R rats. The S females appeared more sensitive than S males to the hypertensinogenic effect of cadmium. In experiment II, groups of weanling female R and S rats were given 0, 1, 2.5, 5, or 10 mg cadmium/liter drinking water and fed either a low-salt (0.4% NaCl) or a high-salt (4% NaCl) diet for 28 wk. Cadmium produced cardiac hypertrophy (1 mg cadmium/liter) and hypertension associated with renal vascular changes (1--5 mg cadmium/ liter), and it enhanced proteinuria (1-10 mg cadmium/liter) in S rats on a low-salt diet. Also, the development of salt-induced hypertension was accelerated in cadmium-fed (1 and 2.5 mg/liter) S rats. These adverse effects of cadmium were not detected in R rats on either salt diet. In experiments I and II, cadmium concentrations in the kidneys and liver of S rats were higher (P less than 0.001) than in those of R rats. These data indicate that genetic differences influence the pathogenesis of cadmium-induced hypertension.
...
PMID:Genetic influence on cadmium-induced hypertension. 15 9

Female wistar rats, 170--190 g, were exposed for 90 days to cadmium oxide aerosols containing 25 and 50 microgram Cd/m3 and for 63 days to 100 microgram Cd/m3. Simultaneously female wistar rats, 170--190 g, were fed 25, 50, and 100 ppm cadmium in drinking water for 90 days. After inhalation and ingestion of the metal, there were comparable kidney cadmium levels, but higher liver and blood levels after oral uptake. Coincident with the higher blood cadmium concentrations, proteinuria was observed only after oral administration. Likewise, there was a significant decrease of serum iron after ingestion and no lowering of the serum iron after inhalation of the metal. The inhalation led to a marked dose dependent weight increase of the lungs, which was followed by an impairment of gas exchange. Obviously, after inhalative cadmium uptake of 90 days pulmonary changes precede renal damage.
...
PMID:Early signs of oral and inhalative cadmium uptake in rats. 20 65

Cadmium is an inessential trace metal which accumulates in human tissues from contamination of food, water or air. The kidney is the critical organ following long-term, low-level absorption either by inhalation or ingestion; accumulation occurring in tubular epithelium in the form of a cadmium-metallothionein complex, giving rise to tubular dysfunction. In a group of 12 cadmium workers some of whom were followed for up to 16 years, tubular proteinuria, renal glycosuria, aminoaciduria, hypercalciuria and defects of concentration and acidification have been observed. Two men became recurrent renal stone formers and 1 man, who had nephrocalcinosis when first seen, later developed vitamin D-resistant osteomalacia. Renal tubular dysfunction following cadmium exposure may continue symptom-free for long intervals, but in a proportion of cases serious clinical effects may eventually develop.
...
PMID:Cadmium nephropathy. 22 11

The study of renal function, primarily the tubular function, in 55 patients with idiopathic, recurrent renal stones showed a large number of abnormalities. 49% of the patients, especially the women were affected. The most common defect was a reduced acidification capacity of varying degrees of severity in 64% of the woman and in 20% of the men. Impairment of the acidification capacity of the distal tubule was found in 18% and of the proximal tubule in 11% of the patients. Inability to dilute the urine after water loading was found in 17% and tubular proteinuria also in 17% of the patients. Most patients with an impaired tubular function had a severe stone disease. The defects in acidification and dilution capacity ought to be of pathogenetic importance for stone formation and should be considered in the selection of preventive therapy.
...
PMID:Tubular defects in patients forming calcium-containing stones. 34 51

The nephrotic syndrome may be associated with several complications caused by severe proteinuria. The consequences of severe renal protein loss are disturbances of water and electrolyte metabolism, thromboses and thromboembolic complications, hyperlipidemia with accelerated atherosclerosis and, finally, some other complications due to the decreased oncotic pressure and the renal loss of transport globulins and immunoglobulins. Diagnosis and treatment of these complications are important in the management of patients with nephrotic syndrome. In the present study, the frequency and localization of thromboses and thromboembolic complications in 11 patients with nephrotic syndrome are described. In addition, factors which are known to be responsible for the hypercoagulable state in nephrotic syndrome were evaluated and correlated to the thromboembolic complications in these patients. An important finding was that in all patients with thromboses and thromboembolic complications, the serum albumin concentrations were below 2 g/100 ml, whereas, with one exception, serum albumin levels were above 2 g/100 ml in cases without thromboembolic complications. Our results indicate that serum albumin levels may be used as an indirect parameter to assess the risk of thromboembolic complications in patients with nephrotic syndrome.
...
PMID:[Complications of nephrotic syndrome with special reference to thromboembolic accidents]. 37 Sep 77

A mesangial glomerulonephropathy, characterized by the deposition of rat IgG, IgM, and C3 in the glomerular mesangium, was produced in Wistar rats by a prolonged administration of mercuric chloride (HgCl2). The HgCl2 was dissolved in sterile distilled water (0.2 mg. per ml.), and a group of 15 male Wistar rats was given injections subcutaneously three times a week on alternate days at a dosage of 0.15 mg. per 100 gm. of body weight for 27 weeks. A control group of nine rats was given injections of distilled water only. Mesangial glomerulonephropathy developed in 12 of 15 rats injected with HgCl2 and was characterized by the following: (1) coarse granular and nodular deposition of rat IgG, IgM, and C3 in the mesangium of all glomeruli, (2) absence of staining for rat albumin, IgA, and fibrin, (3) presence of electron-dense deposits in the mesangium, (4) focal and segmental proliferation of the mesangial matrix, (5) interstitial inflammation, (6) tubular atrophy, and (7) deposition of periodic acid-Schiff-positive material in the medulla adjacent to the thin limbs of the loops of Henle. Glycosuria and a slight increase in proteinuria were observed transiently in some rats. The blood urea nitrogen levels were normal in all rats. Eluates from the kidneys with heavy mesangial deposits contained rat IgG. However, the eluted antibody failed to react with normal rat kidney tissue components. None of the above findings were present in the control rats. The study provides a model of a mesangial nephropathy that seems to be immunologically induced; however, the mechanism for the formation and deposition of the immune deposits containing rat IgG, IgM, and C3, and the nature of the antigen(s) have not been elucidated.
...
PMID:Mesangial glomerulonephropathy with deposition of IgG, IgM, and C3 induced by mercuric chloride: a new model. 37 39

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.
...
PMID:Renin-angiotensin system in stroke-prone spontaneously hypertensive rats. 42 75

This article discusses a simple, sensitive, reproducible method for detecting HCG (human chorionic gonadotropin) in the urine and the subsequent early diagnosis of pregnancy. 5 ml of filtered urine sample (early morning) was concentrated in an M (microconcentrator) to 0.1 ml of retentate diluted with 0.4 ml of distilled water. It was then tested in a M-HIT (hemagglutination test). Another 0.1 ml aliquot of urine sample (filtered and unconcentrated) was diluted with the same amount of distilled water and tested in the same HIT (hemagglutination test). Urine samples from women of reproductive age, from perimenopausal, menopausal, and proteinuric women, and from adult males were tested in both the HIT and M-HIT, as well as in the MOB (mouse ovulation bioassay). The M-HIT Proved to be significantly more reliable than the HIT for diagnosis of early pregnancy, 25-55 days following menses. Appropriate negative results were obtained with the M-HIT in those urine samples from most of the nonpregnant, cycling, perimenopausal and postmenopausal women, and the adult males. False-positive reactions in the M-HIT resulted from the urine specimens of those with severe proteinuria. The MOB yielded positive results in a number of urine samples from pregnant, perimenopausal and menopausal women. The M-HIT, if properly done, indicates high reliability in diagnosing pregnancy as early as the 26th day in the cycles of menstruating women.
...
PMID:A simple and sensitive nonradioactive method for the detection of urinary human chorionic gonadotropin and diagnosis of early human pregnancy. I. Multiple-unit test. 48 29

The distribution and excretion of radioactivity from [14C]citrinin (3 mg/kg, i.v) was determined in male rats. At 0.5 h after administration maximum values of 14.7% and 5.6% of total radioactivity were observed in the liver and kidneys, respectively, and by 6 h decreased to 7.5% in the liver and 4.7% in the kidney. Plasma concentration of 14C decreased from 9.2% at 0.5 h to 4.7% at 6.0 h. 2 plasma elimination rates were observed, with half-lives of 2.6 and 14.9 h, respectively. Approximately 80% of the administered 14C activity was excreted in feces and urine by 24 h after administration. A second group of rats was pretreated with 50 mg/kg of citrinin, i.p., 4 days prior to administration of 3 mg/kg [14C]citrinin, i.v. 30% of the pretreated animals died and the remaining animals were divided into 2 groups on day 4 after pretreatment; rats which were "nephrotoxic" and rats which had "recovered" from the initial insult of citrinin. Proteinuria and glucosuria as well as enhanced urine output were observed in "nephrotoxic" rats 4 days after pretreatment. 24 h after [14C]citrinin, only 13% of 14C activity was detected in the urine of "nephrotoxic" rats. The plasma disappearance curve had 2 elimination rates, with half-lives of 0.6 and 14.1 h. "Nephrotoxic" rats retained 7.5% of the administered radioactivity in the liver compared to 1.3% in the "recovered" rats 24 h after the tracer dose and 47% of the radioactivity was either excreted in feces or in the colon contents after 72 h compared to 17.5% in "recovered" rats. Extraction of urine samples from "nephrotoxic" and "recovered" rats with chloroform suggested increased water soluble metabolites of citrinin in the urine from "nephrotoxic" rats. These data also suggested that in normal rats the kidneys are the major route of elimination of citrinin and its metabolite(s) while in rats rendered nephrotoxic by citrinin pretreatment, elimination is more dependent on hepatic excretion.
...
PMID:Distribution and excretion of [14C]citrinin in rats. 49 10

Splenectomised calves in metabolism cages were infected with Babesia bovis. During the infection, urine samples were collected and analysed for electrolytes, proteins, kinin, and urinary kallikrein. During the later stages of the infection there were significant reductions in urinary volume, water intake, urinary kinin, kallikrein, and electrolytes. Proteinuria was detected from 3--8 days postinfection of which 15--20% was haemoglobin and most of the remainder was albumin (70--75%). Fibrin degradation products, fibrinogen-like products, and haptoglobin were not detected. Degeneration of cortical tubules was detected by histological studies. As these tubules produce urinary kallikrein it seems probable that diminished glomerular blood flow and hence glomerular filtration rate are due to decreased production of this enzyme.
...
PMID:Acute Babesia bovis infections: renal involvement in the hypotensive syndrome. 49 8


1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 Next >>