Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Pivot Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Target Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Query: UMLS:C0033687 (
proteinuria
)
24,015
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
We report a case of IgA nephropathy with tuberculous pleurisy that was treated with steroid pulse therapy combined with tonsillectomy. A 27-year-old female was referred to our hospital because of hematuria and
proteinuria
. Her urinalysis showed mild
proteinuria
(0.7 to 0.9 g/day) with dysmorphic red blood cells and cellular casts. Her serum creatinine level was within the normal range. Renal biopsy specimens revealed mild mesangial proliferation with cellular crescent and adhesion of glomeruli to the Bowman's capsule. Tubulointerstitial changes including mononuclear cell infiltration and tubular atrophy were also observed. Immunohistochemical staining of IgA and C3 was detected in the mesangial area, leading to the diagnosis of IgA nephropathy. She had a past history of tuberculous pleurisy at 13 years of age and had taken antituberculosis drug for one and a half year. Although treatment with
angiotensin receptor
antagonist was started, the amount of
proteinuria
was not changed. Steroid pulse therapy with tonsillectomy followed by oral prednisolone 20 mg/day was conducted.
Proteinuria
and hematuria gradually decreased. Her respiratory status and chest X-ray had been closely followed up by her respiratory physician. After one and a half years of treatment with low-dose prednisolone, her urinalysis became almost normal. Recurrence of tuberculosis was not observed during the follow-up period. The successful outcome of this case encouraged us to treat IgA nephropathy with a past history of tuberculosis using interventions including steroid pulse therapy.
...
PMID:[Steroid pulse therapy combined with tonsillectomy in a patient with IgA nephropathy complicated with tuberculous pleurisy]. 1613 Apr 12
Patients with chronic proteinuric nephropathies are at high risk of developing progressive renal insufficiency. There are limited controlled data on the efficacy of potentially toxic immunosuppressive therapies for many of these diseases such as immunoglobulin A nephropathy and idiopathic membranoproliferative glomerulonephritis. This limitation has not deterred healthcare providers from using such agents based on anecdotal experience. We report our experience taking care of three children with heavy
proteinuria
from chronic glomerular diseases. All were treated with a combination of angiotensin-converting enzyme inhibitors and
angiotensin receptor
blockers without concomitant immunosuppression. All went into complete remission soon after starting therapy, allowing corticosteroid avoidance. The purpose of this report is to make healthcare professionals more aware of the potential success that can be achieved with this relatively nontoxic drug regimen. Larger controlled clinical trials using this strategy are needed to better evaluate the efficacy and safety of this approach in children with glomerular diseases.
...
PMID:Angiotensin blockade in children with chronic glomerulonephritis and heavy proteinuria. 1613 38
Calcium antagonists comprise 2 main subclasses, dihydropyridines and nondihydropyridines, and have been studied extensively in hypertensive patients. Early meta-analyses suggested that short-acting calcium antagonists were associated with higher mortality rates resulting from cardiovascular events and other etiologies. Recent meta-analyses failed to show any substantive difference between long acting calcium antagonists and other antihypertensive drug classes with regard to cardiovascular outcomes in those with low to moderate cardiovascular risk or kidney disease progression among those with stage 2 or 3 nonproteinuric kidney diseases. The data from calcium antagonist trials are consistent in that they decrease stroke incidence but fail to protect against new-onset heart failure. In people with proteinuric kidney disease, that is > 300 mg protein/gram creatinine, use of dihydropyridine calcium antagonists to lower blood pressure without the use of agents that block the renin angiotensin aldosterone system does not provide optimal slowing of nephropathy progression. This relates directly to lack of antiproteinuric effects with this subclass and not seen with nondihydropyridine agents that reduce
proteinuria
to a greater degree than dihydropyridines. Thus, calcium antagonists are safe and as efficacious as other antihypertensive agents to reduce cardiovascular risk. They should be avoided in people with systolic dysfunction but may be used for blood pressure lowering in people with preserved systolic function. Dihydropyridine calcium antagonists should only be used in conjunction with angiotensin-converting enzyme inhibitors or
angiotensin receptor
blockers in proteinuric kidney disease because they will not optimally slow kidney function loss in their absence.
...
PMID:Calcium antagonists: effects on cardio-renal risk in hypertensive patients. 1617 20
Experimental and clinical studies impressively demonstrate that angiotensin-converting enzyme inhibitors (ACEI) and
angiotensin receptor
blockers (ARB) significantly reduce
proteinuria
and retard progression of glomerular disease. The underlying intraglomerular mechanisms are not yet fully elucidated. As podocyte injury constitutes a critical step in the pathogenesis of glomerular
proteinuria
, beneficial effects of ACEI and ARB may partially result from interference with a local renin-angiotensin system (RAS) in podocytes. The knowledge of expression and function of a local RAS in podocytes is limited. In this study, we demonstrate functional expression of key components of the RAS in differentiated human podocytes: podocytes express mRNA for angiotensinogen, renin, ACE type 1, and the AT(1) and AT(2)
angiotensin receptor
subtypes. In Western blot experiments and immunostainings, expression of the AT(1) and AT(2) receptor was demonstrated both in differentiated human podocytes and in human kidney cortex. ANG II induced a concentration-dependent increase in cytosolic Ca(2+) concentration via AT(1) receptors in differentiated human podocytes, whereas it did not increase cAMP. Furthermore, ANG II secretion was detected, which was blocked by neither the ACEI captopril nor the renin inhibitor remikiren nor the chymase inhibitor chymostatin. ANG II secretion of podocytes was not increased by mechanical stress. Finally, ANG II was found to increase staurosporine-induced apoptosis in podocytes. We speculate that ACEI and ARB exert their beneficial effects, in part, by interfering with a local RAS in podocytes. Further experiments are required to identify the underlying molecular mechanism(s) of podocyte protection.
...
PMID:Functional expression of the renin-angiotensin system in human podocytes. 1618 86
The findings of diffuse tubular injury with abundant tubular calcium phosphate deposits on renal biopsy are referred to as nephrocalcinosis, a condition typically associated with hypercalcemia. During the period from 2000 to 2004, 31 cases of nephrocalcinosis were identified among the 7349 native renal biopsies processed at Columbia University. Among the 31 patients, 21 presented with acute renal failure (ARF), were normocalcemic, and had a history of recent colonoscopy preceded by bowel cleansing with oral sodium phosphate solution (OSPS) or Visicol. Because the precipitant was OSPS rather than hypercalcemia, these cases are best termed acute phosphate nephropathy. The cohort of 21 patients with APhN was predominantly female (81.0%) and white (81.0%), with a mean age of 64.0 yr. Sixteen of the 21 patients had a history of hypertension, 14 (87.5%) of whom were receiving an angiotensin-converting enzyme inhibitor or
angiotensin receptor
blocker. The mean baseline serum creatinine was 1.0 mg/dl, available within 4 mo of colonoscopy in 19 (90.5%) patients. Patients presented with ARF and a mean creatinine of 3.9 mg/dl at a median of 1 mo after colonoscopy. In a few patients, ARF was discovered within 3 d of colonoscopy, at which time hyperphosphatemia was documented. Patients had minimal
proteinuria
, normocalcemia, and bland urinary sediment. At follow-up (mean 16.7 mo), four patients had gone on to require permanent hemodialysis. The remaining 17 patients all have developed chronic renal insufficiency (mean serum creatinine, 2.4 mg/dl). Acute phosphate nephropathy is an underrecognized cause of acute and chronic renal failure. Potential etiologic factors include inadequate hydration (while receiving OSPS), increased patient age, a history of hypertension, and concurrent use of an angiotensin-converting enzyme inhibitor or
angiotensin receptor
blocker.
...
PMID:Acute phosphate nephropathy following oral sodium phosphate bowel purgative: an underrecognized cause of chronic renal failure. 1619 15
Drugs that inhibit the renin-angiotensin system (RAS), namely angiotensin-converting enzyme inhibitors (ACE-I) and
angiotensin receptor
antagonists (ARA) are gaining increasing popularity as initial medications for the management of hypertensive patients. In the year 2002, ACE-I were the most commonly prescribed drugs for the treatment of hypertension in USA. Although their antihypertensive efficacy as monotherapy is similar to other antihypertensive agents, they have the advantage of better tolerability, limited side effects and a favorable metabolic profile. When compared to other antihypertensive agents (diuretics, beta-adrenergic blockers and calcium antagonists) in large clinical trials, ACE-I and ARA provided no additional advantages regarding improvement in cardiovascular and total mortality. With the exception of the superiority of ARA in prevention of stroke, RAS inhibitors have no advantage over other agents in prevention of other cardiovascular morbid events, namely, heart failure (though ACE-I are superior to calcium antagonists), coronary heart disease and total cardiovascular events. However, there is the possibility that these agents have other benefits beyond blood pressure lowering. At equal degrees of blood pressure reduction, RAS inhibitors prevent or delay the development of diabetes mellitus and provide better end-organ protection, kidneys, blood vessels and the heart when compared with other antihypertensive agents. The combined use of ACE-I and ARA is particularly useful in organ protection. RAS inhibitors are specifically indicated in the treatment of hypertension in patients with impaired left ventricular systolic function, diabetes,
proteinuria
, impaired kidney function, myocardial infarction, multiple cardiovascular risk factors and possibly elderly patients. The main limitation of the ACE-I is cough and rarely angioedema. Elderly patients or those who are volume depleted or receiving large doses of diuretics or in heart failure are liable to develop hypotensive reaction and/or deterioration in kidney function.
...
PMID:RAS inhibition in hypertension. 1639 19
Hypertension is common in chronic renal disease and is a risk factor for the faster progression of renal damage, and reduction of blood pressure (BP) is an efficient way of preventing or slowing the progression of this damage. International guidelines recommend lowering BP to 140/90 mm Hg or less in patients with uncomplicated hypertension, and to 130/80 mm Hg or less for patients with diabetic or chronic renal disease. The attainment of these goals needs to be aggressively pursued with multidrug antihypertensive regimens, if needed. The pathogenesis of hypertensive renal damage involves mediators from various extracellular systems, including the renin-angiotensin system (RAS).
Proteinuria
, which occurs as a consequence of elevated intraglomerular pressure, is also directly nephrotoxic. As well as protecting the kidneys by reducing BP, antihypertensive drugs can also have direct effects on intrarenal mechanisms of damage, such as increased glomerular pressure and
proteinuria
. Antihypertensive drugs that have direct effects on intrarenal mechanisms may, therefore, have nephroprotective effects additional to those resulting from reductions in arterial BP. Whereas BP-lowering effects are common to all antihypertensive drugs, intrarenal effects differ between classes and between individual drugs within certain classes. Angiotensin-converting enzyme (ACE) inhibitors and
angiotensin receptor
blockers (ARB) have beneficial effects on
proteinuria
and declining renal function that appear to be mediated by factors additional to their effects on BP. These RAS inhibitors are recommended as a first-line antihypertensive approach in patients with chronic kidney disease. The addition of diuretics and calcium channel antagonists to RAS inhibitor therapy is also considered to be a rational strategy to reduce BP and preserve renal function. Calcium channel antagonists are a highly heterogeneous class of compounds, and it appears that some agents are more suitable for use in patients with chronic renal disease than others. Manidipine is a third-generation dihydropyridine (DHP) calcium channel antagonist that blocks both L and T-type calcium channels. Unlike older-generation DHPs, which preferentially act on L-type channels, manidipine has been shown to have beneficial effects on intrarenal haemodynamics,
proteinuria
and other measures of renal functional decline in the first clinical trials involving hypertensive patients with chronic renal failure. Preliminary results from a trial in diabetic patients who had uncontrolled hypertension and microalbuminuria despite optimal therapy with an ACE inhibitor or an ARB suggest that manidipine may be an excellent antihypertensive drug in combination with RAS inhibitor treatment in order to normalise BP and albumin excretion in patients with diabetes.
...
PMID:Renal protection in hypertensive patients: selection of antihypertensive therapy. 1639 60
The development of
angiotensin receptor
blockers (ARBs) has resulted in effective oral treatment for hypertension. One of the most recent members of this therapeutic class is olmesartan medoxomil (OM). The active metabolite, olmesartan, produces insurmountable AT1 receptor blockade and dose-dependently reduces BP. In both experimental and clinical studies, ARBs have been shown to exert renoprotective effects in addition to antihypertensive activity. In an SHR model of hypertensive renal injury, OM (3.0 and 10.0 mg/kg/day) dose-dependently reduced BP but also reduced urinary protein excretion by 65% and 75%, respectively (P < 0.05). Similar doses of OM, in a DOCA-salt hypertensive rat model, did not affect BP but reduced urinary protein excretion by 26% and 39% when compared to control hypertensive animals (P < 0.05). Hypertension is a major pathophysiological determinant of progressive arterial damage that can accelerate the development of diabetic nephropathy. At doses of 0.6 and 6.0 mg/kg/day, OM significantly reduces hypertension associated with type 2 diabetes. These doses of OM reduced BP and dose-dependently reduced
proteinuria
31% and 76%, respectively, in hypertensive ZDF rats (P < 0.01). OM also reduced renocortical and renomedulla injury by 19% and 50% at doses of 0.6 and 6.0 mg/kg/day. The glomerular sclerosis index (GSI) was also reduced by 25% and 37% (P < 0.05). Thus, OM improves both functional and morphologic damage associated with diabetic nephropathy. These studies demonstrate that OM, a potent ARB, dose-dependently reduces BP and also provides a dose-related nephroprotective effect in animal models of diabetes. These studies show that the antihypertensive affect of OM is renoprotective but suggest that these renal benefits may also occur independently from a reduction in BP. A further evaluation of the effects of OM in diabetes is warranted.
...
PMID:The angiotensin-II (AT-II) receptor blocker olmesartan reduces renal damage in animal models of hypertension and diabetes. 1641 56
The renin angiotensin system has been shown to be involved in the pathogenesis of vascular and renal sequelae of diabetes mellitus. In type 2 diabetes mellitus,
angiotensin receptor
blockers have been shown to exert clinical benefit by reducing the progression of diabetic nephropathy. They also improve endothelium-mediated vascular function. The latter effect is partly due to the reduction of angiotensin II-associated oxidative stress. Moreover, small clinical studies have shown that treatment with
angiotensin receptor
blockers also reduces the circulating levels of asymmetric dimethylarginine (ADMA), an endogenous inhibitor of nitric oxide (NO) synthase. In the VIVALDI trial, the ability of the
angiotensin receptor
blocker telmisartan to reduce the progression of diabetic nephropathy (associated with
proteinuria
) in comparison with valsartan in more than 800 patients with type 2 diabetes during 1 year of treatment is being studied. In order to gain more detailed insight into the potential pathomechanisms associated with this effect, further end-points have been defined. Among these are the circulating levels of ADMA and the urinary excretion rate of 8-iso-prostaglandin F2alpha (8-iso-PGF2alpha). The former is an endogenous inhibitor of NO-mediated vascular function(s) and a prospectively determined marker of major cardiovascular events and mortality; the latter is a lipid peroxidation product resulting from the nonenzymatic peroxidation of arachidonic acid, which exerts detrimental vascular effects similar to those of thromboxane A2. Urinary 8-iso-PGF2alpha has been shown in clinical studies to be an independent marker of cardiovascular disease. Highlighting the effects of telmisartan on ADMA and 8-iso-PGF levels in such a large cohort of diabetic patients will enhance our understanding of the roles of dysfunctional NO metabolism and redox mechanisms in the pathogenesis of end-organ damage and its prevention by pharmacotherapy with
angiotensin receptor
blockers.
...
PMID:ADMA and oxidative stress may relate to the progression of renal disease: rationale and design of the VIVALDI study. 1644 75
Angiotensin receptor blockers are the newest class of antihypertensive agents marketed for the treatment of hypertension. There is now an important amount of evidence indicating that this class of drugs exerts beneficial effects in patients with a variety of cardiovascular disorders. Evidence-based medicine includes well controlled studies with mortality and morbidity endpoints in patients with left ventricular dysfunction after a myocardial infarction, congestive heart failure, cerebrovascular disease, type-2 diabetic subjects with renal dysfunction and high-risk hypertensive patients. In addition to these hard endpoints, treatment with
angiotensin receptor
blockers prevents the development of type-2 diabetes, promotes a more pronounced regression of left ventricular hypertrophy, decreases microalbuminuria and
proteinuria
in renal patients, ameliorates coronary and peripheral vascular endothelial dysfunction and decreases plasma levels of several markers of vascular inflammation. In summary,
angiotensin receptor
blockers are antihypertensive drugs with a very good profile in terms of efficacy, tolerability and cardiovascular protection. They represent an important step in the search for the ideal antihypertensive agent.
...
PMID:Angiotensin receptor blockers in hypertension and cardiovascular diseases. 1652 51
<< Previous
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
Next >>