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)

Monthly intravenous cyclophosphamide (IVCY) has been a recommended therapy for severe lupus nephritis or neurological flare-ups in lupus patients. But the optimal treatment regimen and duration remains unknown. We report our experience in an open study of 37 patients treated with monthly IVCY. Thirty-four women and 3 men, mean age 35.5 with a mean disease duration of 59 months, with a mean 5.7 ACR criteria for SLE were analysed. 27 (group I) had lupus nephritis (OMS Class III or IV) and 10 had neurological involvement (group II). In group I, after six months of IVCY, a significant improvement was noticed in the UCH-Middlesex clinical index (2.9 pts vs 7.8), the proteinuria (3.12 g/d vs 5.4), complement and split fractions (CH50 98.4 vs 48.9%; C3 877 vs 600 mg/l; C4 177 vs 128 mg/l), the level of anti-DNA antibodies (67.5 vs 775 UI/ml) and the daily dose of steroids (22 vs 44 mg/d). Kidney biopsies showed a reduction of the activity index despite a slight increase of the chronicity index (4.1 vs 6.3 pts and 5.5 vs 3.6 pts). Those results were not maintained at medium and long term. Moreover five patients presented with worsening of renal function during IVCY treatment and two patients relapsed after the end of the treatment. In group II significant improvement was noticed at six months concerning the clinical index (1.77 pts vs 7.17) and the daily dose of steroids, 3 patients died because of cerebral vasculitis refractory to IVCY. Adverse effects are frequent: infectious (25 among 20 patients), hemorrhagic cystitis (2 events in 1 patient), gastrointestinal side effects were common (12/37 patients). Were also noticed: neutropenia (5/37), transient amenorrhea (4/28), drug induced menopausis (2/28). Overall mortality is important (7/37), uneffectiveness of IVCY was noticed in 5 patients, flares occurred in 8 patient during or after stopping treatment. IVCY seems efficacious if given at the very beginning of the flare. Its usefulness is obvious at six months among clinical and biological data in patients with severe lupus nephritis or neurological flare. It seems that long term outcome on the renal function is not modified.
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PMID:[Treatment of acute systemic lupus erythematosus with intravenous infusions of cyclophosphamide. Value and limitations]. 802 84

Proteinuria associated with acute heart disease was studied prospectively in 160 patients admitted to the coronary care unit with suspected AMI. Series 1 comprised 150 patients, divided into the following groups: AMI, 27 UAP, 43 AP, 22 NIP and 18 excluded. Albumin and creatinine were measured in the first urine passed after admission (sample 1) and the first morning urine the following 2 days (samples 2 and 3). The ACR was significantly higher in the AMI and UAP groups than in the other patient groups (p < 0.0001). There was no significant difference of ACR between the AMI and UAP in sample 1 (p = 0.31). In the AMI, UAP and AP groups ACR was significantly higher in sample 1 than in samples 2 and 3 (p < 0.005). In the NIP group there were no significant differences between sample 1 versus samples 2 and 3 (p = 0.06). Series 2 comprised 10 patients: 8 AMI, 1 UAP and 1 AMYO. ACR were measured in all specimens voided during the period of observation. ACR can oscillate within hours between normal concentrations and concentrations well into or above the microalbuminuric range. We propose the term episodic albuminuria for this reversible, switch-like change in renal function. The albuminuric episodes lasted 90-600 minutes. Maximum values for ACR were between 133-790 mumol/mol or 78-466 mg/g. In healthy, resting individuals ACR is < 50 mumol/mol (< 30 mg/g). The rapid changes in glomerular permeability may reflect systemic changes in endothelial permeability in the affected individuals. We speculate that atrial natriuretic peptide (ANP) may be a mediator of this type of albuminuria.
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PMID:Albuminuria in ischemic heart disease. 1038 13

Data related to the disease course of patients with systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE) with special attention to the persistence of disease activity in the long term are scarce. At this moment reliable figures are only known about the survival rate as a measure of outcome. The aim of this multicenter study was to describe the outcome of SLE patients with a disease duration of greater than 10 y. Outcome parameters were two disease activity-scoring systems (SLEDAI and ECLAM), the end organ damage (SLICC/ACR damage index) and treatment. Our results are derived from 187 SLE patients followed at 10 different centres in Europe over a period of 1 y. Serious clinical signs or exacerbations, defined by the occurrence or detoriation of already existing symptoms of renal and cerebral nervous systems were observed in 2-11% of the patients, seizures and psychosis in 3%, proteinuria in 11% and an increase in serum creatinine in 5% of the patients. No change took place in the overall damage index. Yet, the disease course in most patients was characterized by periods of tiredness (42-60%), arthritis (20-25%), skin involvement such as malar rash (32-40%), migraine (15-20%), anaemia (15%) and leucopenia (17-19%). Summarizing these results it is shown that patients, still under care after such a long time of having this disease, do have a disease that is far from extinguished.
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PMID:Systemic lupus erythematosus. Disease outcome in patients with a disease duration of at least 10 years: second evaluation. 1124 10

Microalbuminuria (MA) is associated with adverse health outcomes in diabetic and hypertensive adults. The prevalence and clinical significance of MA in nondiabetic populations is less clear. The purpose of this study was to generate national estimates of the prevalence of MA in the US population. Untimed urinary albumin concentrations (UACs) and creatinine concentrations were evaluated in a nationally representative sample of 22,244 participants aged 6 years and older. Persons with hematuria and menstruating or pregnant women were excluded from analysis. The percent prevalence of clinical proteinuria (UAC > or = 300 mg/L) was similar for males and females. However, the prevalence of MA (urinary albumin-creatinine ratio [ACR], 30 to 299 mg/g) was significantly lower in males (6.1%) compared with females (9.7%). MA prevalence was greater in children than young adults and increased continuously starting at 40 years of age. MA prevalence was greater in non-Hispanic blacks and Mexican Americans aged 40 to 79 years compared with similar-aged non-Hispanic whites. MA prevalence was 28.8% in persons with previously diagnosed diabetes, 16.0% in those with hypertension, and 5.1% in those without diabetes, hypertension, cardiovascular disease, or elevated serum creatinine levels. In adults aged 40+ years, after excluding persons with clinical proteinuria, albuminuria (defined as ACR > or = 30 mg/g) was independently associated with older age, non-Hispanic black and Mexican American ethnicity, diabetes, hypertension, and elevated serum creatinine concentration. MA is common, even among persons without diabetes or hypertension. Age, sex, race/ethnicity, and concomitant disease contribute to the variability of MA prevalence estimates.
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PMID:Microalbuminuria in the US population: third National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey. 1214 24

Variations in systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE) clinical manifestations, serologies and outcomes have been related to gender differences. However, these associations have not been evaluated in Puerto Ricans. A cross-sectional study was performed in a cohort of 235 Puerto Rican SLE patients. Clinical variables, autoantibodies, SLICC/ACR damage index and mortality rate were determined. Of the 235 SLE patients, 12 (5%) were males. Male and female patients were similar with respect to age, disease duration and follow up. Men were more likely to have pericardial effusion (41% vs 5%, p<0.01), pleural effusion (58% vs 10%, p<0.01), proteinuria (>0.5 g/24 hr) (58% vs 24%, p=0.02), renal insufficiency (42% vs 11%, p<0.01) and end-stage renal disease (33% vs 6%, p<0.01) than women. Anti-Sm antibodies (60.0% vs 13%, p<0.01) and anti-snRNP antibodies (56% vs 21%, p=0.03) were more prevalent in men. SLICC/ACR mean damage index (2.7 +/- 2.7 vs 1.0 +/- 1.6, p<0.01) and mortality rate (25% vs 4.5%, p=0.02) were higher in men. In conclusion, male SLE patients of this cohort had higher prevalence of serositis and renal involvement than women. They also had a poorer outcome, presenting higher disease damage and mortality.
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PMID:Gender differences in a cohort of Puerto Ricans with systemic lupus erythematosus. 1498 7

A 49-year-old Japanese woman was diagnosed with rheumatoid arthritis (RA) based on ACR criteria in May 1999. She developed liver injury after initiation of disease-modifying antirheumatic drugs (DMARDs) and was found to have contracted HCV infection. RA disease activity worsened following restriction of medication due to liver dysfunction. However, 3 mg/day of prednisolone (PSL) resulted in a temporary but marked improvement of RA in December 2001; but arthritis recurred along with Raynaud's phenomenon and palpable purpura. Differential diagnosis between arthritis caused by cryoglobulinemia and exacerbation of RA was important for the selection of appropriate treatment. She manifested non-erosive arthritis on medium and large joints with proteinuria, hematuria and hypocomplementemia. In addition, type III cryoglobulin was detected and chronic active hepatitis was observed on liver biopsy in March 2002. We considered that the main cause for the arthritis was HCV-related mixed cryoglobulinemia. Administration of IFN-alpha resulted in the disappearance of HCV-RNA and cryoglobulin followed by amelioration of arthritis without exacerbation of RA.
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PMID:[Active arthritis due to cryoglobulinemia based on HCV infection in a patient with RA improvement of arthritis with IFN-alpha]. 1504 16

We report a multicenter study of Chinese children in Hong Kong with systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE) nephritis. Children were included if: they fulfilled the ACR criteria, had significant proteinuria or casturia, were Chinese and younger than 19 years and had been diagnosed with SLE between January 1990 and December 2003. Investigators in each center retrieved data on clinical features, biopsy reports, treatment and outcome of these patients. There were 128 patients (eight boys, 120 girls; mean age: 11.9+/-2.8 years). About 50% presented with multisystem illness and 40% with nephritic/nephrotic symptoms. Negative anti-dsDNA antibodies were found in 6% of the patients. Renal biopsy revealed WHO Class II, III, IV and V nephritis in 13 (10%), 22 (17%), 69 (54%) and 13 (10%) patients, respectively. The clinical severity of the nephritis did not accurately predict renal biopsy findings. The follow-up period ranged from 1 to 16.5 years (mean+/-SD: 5.76+/-3.61 years). During the study five patients died (two from lupus flare, one from cardiomyopathy, two from infections). Four patients had endstage renal failure (ESRF) (one died during a lupus flare). All deaths and end-stage renal failure occurred in the Class IV nephritis group. Chronic organ damage was infrequent in the survivors. The actuarial patient survival rates at 5, 10 and 15 years of age were 95.3, 91.8, and 91.8%, respectively. For Class IV nephritis patients, the survival rates without ESRF at 5, 10, and 15 years were 91.5, 82.3 and 76%, respectively. The survival and chronic morbidity rates of the Chinese SLE children in the present study are comparable to those of other published studies.
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PMID:Lupus nephritis in Chinese children--a territory-wide cohort study in Hong Kong. 1663 24

The goals of this study were to ascertain damage in patients with systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE) from five rheumatologic centres in Argentina and to examine overall damage, damage by domain and damage by item within each domain. We performed a retrospective observational study including patients with SLE (ACR 1997 revised and modified criteria) from five rheumatology centres in Argentina. Organ damage was scored using the SLICC/ACR DI (SDI), ascertained at years 1, 2, 5 and 10. Three centres provided information up to the fifth year. Of the 197 patients, 88.3% were women and their mean age was 33.2 years. The mean disease duration and follow-up were 7.6 and 5.3 years, respectively. Damage accrued gradually over time with SDI ranging from 0.52 (+/-1.1) at year 1 up to 2.46 (+/-2.1) at year 10. The renal system was the most involved system, followed by the neuropsychiatric, the cardiovascular and the musculoskeletal systems. Proteinuria, cognitive impairment, pericarditis, avascular necrosis, cataract and alopecia were the predominant items in their respective systems. Systems such as peripheral vascular, pulmonary, gastrointestinal, diabetes, malignancy and premature gonadal failure were not frequent. Overall SDI had a gradual increase over time. Damage in each domain of SDI, except for diabetes, had a similar behaviour. Behaviour of items in each domain varied.
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PMID:Accrual of organ damage over time in Argentine patients with systemic lupus erythematosus: a multi-centre study. 1741 6

The antichromatin antibody (aCT) has been described as a useful marker for lupus nephropathy. The relevance of its nephritogenic potential may be appropriately evaluated in the context of renal histopathology. Therefore, the present study investigated the relationship of aCT with a particular histopathologic class of lupus nephritis (LN). Seventy-eight consecutive patients with systemic lupus erythematosus (ACR criteria) and active nephritis who underwent renal biopsy from 1999 to 2004 and with available frozen serum sample obtained at the time of biopsy were selected. aCT was measured by ELISA, and anti-dsDNA was measured by indirect immunofluorescence (IIF) and by ELISA. All renal biopsies were revised in a blinded manner by the same expert renal pathologist. Charts were extensively reviewed for demographic and renal features obtained at the time of biopsy. The prevalence of aCT (>or=20 U) was 59% with a mean titer of 74.3 +/- 38.7 U. Both aCT-positive and aCT-negative groups of patients had similar age, gender distribution, duration of lupus, and duration of renal disease. Anti-dsDNA was detected by IIF in 29.5% and by ELISA in 42.3% of the patients. Concomitant presence of both antibodies was observed in 63% (29/46) [anti-dsDNA by ELISA] and 45.6% (21/46) [anti-dsDNA by IIF] of the patients. Lower serum levels of C3 (73% vs. 40%, P = 0.0058) and C4 (82% vs. 46.7%, P = 0.0021) were more commonly observed in aCT >or= 20 U patients compared to the aCT-negative group. It is important to note that the use of a higher cut-off value (>or=40 U) for aCT test revealed a predominance of class IV LN (58% vs. 33%, P = 0.039) in aCT >or= 40 U compared to aCT < 40 U group. The mean levels of proteinuria, serum albumin, and creatinine were markedly altered but were comparable in both groups (P >or= 0.05). One fourth (26.3%) of the 19 patients with class IV LN and aCT >or= 40 U had no detectable anti-dsDNA (ELISA). These data suggest that high-titer aCT seems to be a valuable biomarker for proliferative class IV of LN.
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PMID:High-titer antichromatin antibody is associated with proliferative class IV of lupus nephritis. 1852 20

Gender may produce different characteristics in the manifestation of systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE). The present study investigated the influence of gender on clinical, laboratory, autoantibodies and histopathological classes of lupus nephritis (LN). As much as 81 patients diagnosed with SLE (ACR criteria) and active nephritis, who underwent renal biopsy between 1999 and 2004, and who had frozen serum samples and clinical data available from the time of biopsy, were selected for this study. The presence of anti-P and antichromatin antibodies was measured using ELISA, and anti-dsDNA was measured using indirect immunofluorescence. All of the renal biopsies were reviewed in a blinded manner by the same expert renal pathologist. The charts were extensively reviewed for demographic and renal features obtained at the time of the biopsy. Of the 81 patients (13.6%), 11 were male SLE patients. Both male and female lupus patients were of similar age and race, and had similar durations of lupus and renal disease. The female patients had more cutaneous (95.7 vs. 45.5%, P = 0.0001) and haematological (52.9 vs. 18.2%, P = 0.04) involvements than the male SLE patients. In addition, the articular data, central nervous system analyses, serositis findings and SLEDAI scores were similar in both experimental groups. Positivity for anti-dsDNA, anti-ribosomal P and antichromatin did not differ between the two groups, and both groups showed similarly low C3 or C4 serum levels. Our analysis indicated that no histopathological class of LN was predominant in both males and females. Interestingly, the serum creatinine levels were higher in the male SLE patients compared to the female SLE group (3.16 +/- 2.49 vs. 1.99 +/- 1.54 mg/dL, P = 0.03), with an increased frequency of high creatinine (81.8 vs. 47.1%, P = 0.04) as well as renal activity index (7.6 +/- 3.5 vs. 4.8 +/- 3.5, P = 0.02). In addition, whilst the mean levels of proteinuria, cylindruria and serum albumin were markedly altered, they were comparable between both lupus men and women. Moreover, the frequencies of dialysis, renal transplantation and death were similar between the two groups. These data suggest that male patients had a more severe LN compared to women diagnosed with this renal abnormality.
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PMID:Male gender results in more severe lupus nephritis. 1978 40


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