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Query: UMLS:C0033687 (
proteinuria
)
24,015
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
High concentrations of alpha-fetoprotein (alpha-FP) were found at 14, 19, and 21 weeks gestation in the serum of a woman with a history of unexplained fetal death in her previous pregnancies. The alpha-FP concentration of the liquor also was high at 21 weeks and the pregnancy was terminated. Though the fetus was macroscopically normal, measurement of albumin, alpha-FP, IgG, and
alpha2-macroglobulin
in the fetal urine showed a selective
proteinuria
, and congenital nephrosis was diagnosed after examination of the fetal kidneys by electron microscopy. Possibly some fetuses reported to be "false-positive for neural tube defect" may have had renal lesions of this nature. Examination of fetal urine may be the simplest initial diagnostic procedure in any future case.
...
PMID:Fetal proteinuria in diagnosis of congenital nephrosis detected by raised alpha-fetoprotein in maternal serum. 6 73
Main components of kinin system, the arginine-esterase activity and proteinase inhibitors were estimated in blood serum of patients with nephrotic syndrome of various etiology (glomerulonephritis, amyloidosis, systemic lupus erythematous) and also in patients with latent nephritis and in healthy donors. Content of all the kinin system components (kallikreinogen, kininogen and kininase 1) proved to be increased in all the forms of nephropathy studied. Free kallikrein was found in blood serum of patients with nephrotic syndrome as distinct from healthy persons and patients with latent nephritis. The arginine-esterase activity, which shows the level of trypsin-like proteinases, was altered dissimilarly, depending on the nephrotic syndrome etiology: it was maximally increased in nephrotic syndrome of amyloid genesis and decreased in patient with systemic lupus erythematosus. High content of kallikrein and kininase I with simultaneous decrease in kininogen was typical for patients with severe form of nephrotic syndrome. Impairment of kidney in nephrotic syndrome was also characterized by an increase in alpha1-antitrypsin and in the total antitryptic activity, which reached the maximal value in nephrotic syndrome of the I degree and decreased at the II degree of the disease. In nephrotic syndrome content of
alpha2-macroglobulin
was maximally increased at the II degree of nephrotic syndrome and decreased in severe form of the disease. The primary alteration in content of proteinase inhibitors and high level of kinin system components were assumed to determine the conditions for activation of kinin system in blood serum and to impair the nephrotic syndrome pathogenesis, which was complicated by systemic manifestations. High content of kinin system components was apparently determined by the increased synthesis in liver tissue in response to inflammation and massive
proteinuria
; kininase I and alpha2-macrolgobulin, as proteins with high molecular weight, were likely to be selectively retained in blood circulation when the capillary penetration was increased.
...
PMID:[State of the kinin system and level of serum proteinase inhibitors in latent nephritis and the nephrotic syndrome of different etiology]. 7 Jan 11
The authors have elaborated a biochemical technique for the assessment of the selectivity of
proteinuria
by means of the clearances of ceruloplasmin, haptoglobin and albumin. The results obtained in 69 patients were compared to those established by the method of Cameron and Blanford, as well as by the clearance of
alpha2-macroglobulin
. No significant differences were found in the indices of
proteinuria
, as determined by the proposed biochemical technique and by the method of Cameron and Blanford. Thus the diagnostic value of both methods to assess the selectivity of
proteinuria
could be considered as equal. The additional measurement of the selectivity of
proteinuria
by means of proteins with considerably high molecular weight (haptoglobin,
alpha2-macroglobulin
) gave the possibility of recording cases with severely impaired glomerular permeability. In this respect, the use of the clearance of haptoglobulin, particularly the phenotype Hp 2--2, provided valuable diagnostic information in cases in which the routine methods gave borderline values for the index of
proteinuria
.
...
PMID:Biochemical methods for the assessment of the selectivity of proteinuria. 8 Mar 90
The authors applied a new method for biochemical determination of
proteinuria
selectivity by means of ceruloplasmin clearance, used as a protein with high molecular weight as well as those of haptoglobulin and albumin -used as proteins with low molecular weight. The investigation was carried out among 94 patiens with different glomerulopathies. The equivalence of both the biochemical methods was confirmed statistically. In 58 of the examined patients,
proteinuria
selectivity is determined simultaneously and by the JgG clearance and trasferrin-accoringing to the method of Cameron et al. (with immunodiffused plaques) and immunoelectrophoresis and by the clearance of
alpha2-macroglobulin
and transferrin. Nd. statistically significant and authenical differences were established between the
proteinuria
selectivity determined by the relationship between the clearances of ceruloplasmin and albumin, of ceruloplasmin and haptoglobulin (biochemically determined) and of Jg G and transferrin (determined with the aid of immunodiffused plaques and immunoelectropphoresis). All that gives ground the authors to consider the results from the biochemical and immunochemical methods rather similar. That fact, the low prime cost and the possibility the biochemical methods to be put into practice in well equipped clinical laboratories emphasize their importance for the everyday nephrologist practice as well.
...
PMID:[Proteinuria selectivity in patients with glomerular nephropathy determined by a biochemical route]. 122 22
Plasma fibronectin concentration was measured by means of rocket immunoelectrophoresis in 20 cases of glomerular
proteinuria
of various origins, and correlated with urinary protein loss, serum albumin, cholesterol and plasma alpha 1 antitrypsin and
alpha 2 macroglobulin
. Plasma fibronectin was significantly increased in the patient's group as compared to the controls (1.91 +/- 0.659 U/ml, 1.01 +/- 0.193 U/ml respectively, p less than 0.001) and correlated with cholesterolaemia (r = 0.662, p less than 0.001). Increased plasma fibronectin may be an additional risk factor for thrombotic tendency in NS.
...
PMID:Plasma fibronectin levels in patients with glomerular proteinuria. 243 37
When compared to normal weight normolipidemic control subjects, dilute blood clot lysis time was found to be obviously (p less than 0.001) prolonged in hypertriglyceridemic patients without
proteinuria
and slightly (p less than 0.05) accelerated in hyperlipidemic nephrotic patients in spite of their very high levels of plasma fibrinogen. As a result the ratio plasma fibrinogen (mg/dl) per clot lysis time (minutes) was 1.241 +/- 0.08 (X +/- SEM) in control subjects, 0.574 +/- 0.07 in hypertriglyceridemic patients and 2.69 +/- 0.172 in nephrotic patients. This finding suggesting that a larger amount of fibrin is rather readily dispersed from dilute blood clots of nephrotic patients was associated with higher levels of plasma t-PA:Ag (9.45 ng/ml +/- 1.18 in nephrotic patients versus 5.8 ng/ml +/- 1.23 in controls before venous occlusion and respectively 33.1 ng/ml +/- 3.83 versus 20.3 +/- 3.40 in controls after venous occlusion). Plasminogen activator activity of the euglobulins as assessed by the bovine fibrin-agarose plate was significantly higher in nephrotic patients only after venous occlusion. Plasma samples of nephrotic patients exerted a more potent inhibition of fibrinolysis in a urokinase activated system. This effect was, however, mainly due to the high levels of
alpha 2 macroglobulin
in nephrotic plasma which apparently have little influence on dilute blood clot lysis time.
...
PMID:Tissue-type plasminogen activator (t-PA) and dilute blood clot lysis time in nephrotic patients. 250 97
In 74 of 195 patients with isolated
proteinuria
and/or haematuria investigated by means of renal biopsy laser-nephelometric determinations of the concentrations of albumin,
alpha2-macroglobulin
, transferrin, IgG, IgA and IgM in the urine were performed. Their result was that patients with chronic interstitial nephritis or chronic glomerulonephritis by increased concentration of albumin, transferrin, IgG and IgA statistically ascertained differ from patients with normal renal tissue or slight glomerular abnormalities.
...
PMID:[Early diagnosis of primary chronic glomerulonephritis in the latency stage]. 409 May 61
Matrix metalloproteinases (MMPs) secreted by connective tissue cells are capable of acting on extracellular matrix components of glomerular basement membrane at a slow rate and thus may play a role in the control of protein permeability and in the progression of certain kinds of glomerulonephritis. We have used an in vitro assay to measure the direct effect of three MMPs and human neutrophil elastase on glomerular albumin permeability (Palbumin). Glomeruli were isolated from normal male Sprague-Dawley rats and suspended in isolation medium with or without interstitial collagenase, gelatinase-A, stromelysin-1, or elastase and were incubated at 37 degrees C for up to 4 hours. A tissue-specific inhibitor of matrix metalloproteinases (TIMP-1) and a plasma proteinase inhibitor,
alpha2-macroglobulin
(alpha2M), were used to block the activity of MMPs. Palbumin was calculated from the change in glomerular volume in response to an applied oncotic gradient. In this study stromelysin-1 (10 microg/ml) and elastase (5 microg/ml) increased Palbumin significantly. Stromelysin-1 increased Palbumin after 4 hours, whereas elastase had an effect after 2 hours. Lower concentrations of stromelysin-1 or shorter incubation time had no effect on Palbumin. Incubation for up to 4 hours with interstitial collagenase (10 microg/ml) or gelatinase-A (10 microg/ml) had no effect on Palbumin. Coincubation with TIMP-1 and alpha2M blocked the stromelysin-1-mediated increase in Palbumin. We conclude that stromelysin-1 is capable of affecting the glomerular filtration barrier directly and that it may play an important role in causing
proteinuria
in glomerular diseases.
...
PMID:Matrix metalloproteinase (stromelysin-1) increases the albumin permeability of isolated rat glomeruli. 878 37
Loss-of-function mutations of the ClC-5 chloride channel lead to Dent's disease, a syndrome characterized by low molecular weight
proteinuria
, hypercalciuria, and kidney stones. We show that ClC-5 is expressed in renal proximal tubule cells, which normally endocytose proteins passing the glomerular filter. Expression is highest below the brush border in a region densely packed with endocytotic vesicles, where ClC-5 colocalizes with the H+-ATPase and with internalized proteins early after uptake. In intercalated cells of the collecting duct it again localizes to apical intracellular vesicles and colocalizes with the proton pump in alpha-intercalated cells. In transfected cells, ClC-5 colocalizes with endocytosed
alpha2-macroglobulin
. Cotransfection with a GTPase-deficient rab5 mutant leads to enlarged early endosomes that stain for ClC-5. We suggest that ClC-5 may be essential for proximal tubular endocytosis by providing an electrical shunt necessary for the efficient acidification of vesicles in the endocytotic pathway, explaining the
proteinuria
observed in Dent's disease.
...
PMID:ClC-5, the chloride channel mutated in Dent's disease, colocalizes with the proton pump in endocytotically active kidney cells. 965 42
A quantification of proteins of different molecular size has been shown to be useful in characterizing the mechanism and medical causes of
proteinuria
. By analyzing urine albumin, alpha1-microglobulin, immunoglobulin G and
alpha2-macroglobulin
together with total protein, prerenal, glomerular, tubular and postrenal causes of
proteinuria
can be detected and differentiated by their specific urine protein patterns. Using automated turbidimetric procedures, prerenal proteinurias are characterized by an albumin/total protein ratio below 0.4. Tubulo-interstitial diseases which are negative in the protein test strip procedure are detected and clearly differentiated from other causes of
proteinuria
by their high alpha1-microglobulin/albumin ratios. In post-renal
proteinuria
,
alpha2-macroglobulin
proved to be a useful marker, when albumin excretion exceeds 100 mg/l urine. This protein exhibits plasma-like ratios to albumin in postrenal causes, whereas it is much lower in renal proteinurias. The new strategy, which has been evaluated in more than 500 clinically and partly histologically proven cases of renal diseases, more sensitively detects glomerular and tubulo-interstitial diseases when applied in urine screening and allows us to distinguish all clinically important causes from analysis of a morning spot urine sample.
...
PMID:Physiopathology of proteinuria and laboratory diagnostic strategy based on single protein analysis. 991 26
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