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)

To determine indications for treatment with high-dose intravenous methylprednisolone pulse therapy in lupus nephritis, we retrospectively assessed the response to pulse therapy over oral prednisolone administration in 120 biopsy proven lupus nephritis patients according to WHO morphologic classification. In the pulse group, 1 g of methylprednisolone was administered on three consecutive days and oral steroid therapy (40-30 mg) was started. In many occasions in treating class III and IV-b, repeated pulse therapy was performed. In control oral prednisolone group, middle-dose steroid therapy (50-30 mg) was started. In patients with minor glomerular abnormalities and mesangial lupus nephritis, rapid improvement of serological activities was observed in pulse group assessed by serum complement level, anti-DNA antibodies, and anti-nuclear antibodies. In patients with focal lupus nephritis, rapid rise in serum complement level and fall in proteinuria was observed in the pulse group. In patients with diffuse proliferative lupus nephritis with active necrotizing lesions, faster rise in serum complement level and proteinuria were observed in the pulse group. In patients with membranous lupus nephritis there was no significant difference between two groups. In comparison with the effect of pulse therapy among each morphologic class, the rise of serum complement level was slowest in class IV-b. Both group of IV-b and V manifested nephrotic syndrome and by pulse therapy the decrease in urinary protein was faster and more significant in class IV-b compared with class V. No significant adverse effect of methylprednisolone was observed during about 150 times of pulse therapy. Bacterial, viral infections such as herpes zoster and fungal infections were observed in pulse group as often as control group.
...
PMID:[Effect of methylprednisolone pulse therapy in patients with lupus nephritis assessed by WHO morphologic classification]. 227 95

From July 1984 to December 1987, 9 patients with lupus nephritis did not respond to the administration of two courses of methylprednisolone pulse therapy and cyclophosphamide treatment for 56 days. Therefore, high-dose intravenous human gamma-globulin (IVIG) was administrated. Before IVIG therapy, renal biopsy showed class IV lupus nephritis in 5 cases, class V in 2 cases, and class IV with V in 2 cases. Immunofluorescence of the renal biopsy showed heavy IgG deposits along the glomerular capillary walls. These heavy glomerular IgG deposits were dissociated after in vitro incubation of the cryostat kidney sections with plasmin-treated, PEG-treated, sulfonated human gamma-globulin and a human Fc fragment, as evidenced by a dramatic decrease or even absence of fluorescent intensity. After high-dose IVIG treatment, 3 out of 5 cases of class IV lupus nephritis had a good response with decreased proteinuria and creatinine; serum C3, C4 levels and CH50 hemolytic activity also increased. The glomerular IgG deposits decreased in the follow-up biopsy. Pathologically, 2 of them transformed into class IIb. The capacity to synthesize immunoglobulin after pokeweed mitogen stimulation was reduced and the circulating immune complexes (CIC) lowered after high-dose IVIG treatment. In the others there was partial response. These clinical and immunological improvements after high-dose IVIG therapy are probably related to the modulation of macrophage-T cell function and enhancement of suppressor T cell function. The toxicity of high dose IVIG was minimal, but the cost is high, search for an optimal dosage is warranted.
...
PMID:Improvement of histological and immunological change in steroid and immunosuppressive drug-resistant lupus nephritis by high-dose intravenous gamma globulin. 248 Dec 40

A new simple scoring staging system was developed and evaluated in 121 cases of multiple myeloma, followed from first diagnosis to demise. A score of 1 was assigned to each of the following features: bone marrow plasma cells more than 30%, hemoglobinemia less than 11 g/dl, lytic bone lesions of degrees 2-3, presence of Bence Jones proteinuria and serum beta 2-microglobulin levels higher than 8.0 micrograms/ml. Therefore, the score for each patient ranged from 0 to 5, corresponding to six risk classes: score 0 = class I; score 1 = class II; score 2 = class III; score 3 = class IV; score 4 = class V; score 5 = class VI. Since no differences in mean survivals and in survival curves were found between classes I and II, between classes III and IV and between classes V and VI, three stages could be devised: stage A (good prognosis) corresponding to classes I and II; stage B (intermediate prognosis) corresponding to classes III and IV; stage C (poor prognosis) corresponding to classes V and VI. Significant differences were found among the three stages regarding mean survivals, survival curves, and response to treatment. This scoring staging system is very simple in its formulation; only five routine parameters and no calculations are necessary for obtaining a score and consequently a stage for each patient. Moreover, the system can identify categories of multiple myeloma patients with homogeneous characteristics since it appears to be correlated with response to treatment and survival.
...
PMID:[Proposal of a new staging system using scoring of multiple myeloma]. 263 28

Proteinuria was characterized by SDS-PAGE and by immunoblotting with anti-human albumin sera for the detection of urinary polymers of albumin (PA) in 40 patients with biopsy proven lupus glomerulonephritis (LN) (6 pts class III WHO, 24 pts class IV, 10 pts class V) with various clinical presentations (nephrotic syndrome with normal or impaired renal function, 14 pts; urinary abnormalities with normal or impaired renal function, 21 pts; clinical remission, 5 pts); in 25 pts, for whom the characterization of proteinuria and the renal biopsy were performed at the same time, the activity and chronicity index scores were calculated. The mixed SDS-PAGE patterns, characterized by the presence of low molecular weight proteins, were the more frequently found; the mixed patterns were significantly associated with interstitial leukocyte infiltration (p = 0.05) and glomerular sclerosis (p = 0.046) and nonsignificantly associated with higher values of serum creatinine; no SDS-PAGE pattern had predictive value on functional outcome at 36 months. Albumin polymers were present in 67% of pts; in active disease they were present in 33% of class III, in 100% of class IV and in 45% of class V WHO (p = 0.026); PA were not present in 5 pts with clinical remission (4 class IV and 1 class V WHO). The presence of PA was significantly associated with high values (> 10) of activity index (p = 0.009) and with extracapillary proliferation (p = 0.041). Serum creatinine was lower in patients without PA (Scr 1.0 +/- 0.4 mg/dl) than in those with PA (Scr 1.5 +/- 1.0 mg/dl), but the difference was not statistically significant.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:SDS-PAGE patterns and polymeric albumin in proteinuria of lupus glomerulonephritis. 773 85

Renal involvement i.e. lupus nephritis (LN) in systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE) mainly determines course and outcome of the disease. Recognition of early manifestations of LN makes adequate therapy possible, with very good therapeutic results. We report 7 patients from a group of 150 SLE patients under our permanent control, 4 female and 3 male, mean age 21 years. All of them had signs of LN: proteinuria 7/7 haematuria 4/7 without azotaemia. Renal biopsy was performed in 6 pts, and histological finding was: class II 1 pt, class IV 3 pts and class V in 2 pts. In 4 pts tubulointerstitial changes were noted, while all showed immunofluorescent deposits of immunoglobulins and complement. Methylprednisolone "pulse" therapy (1000 mg, i.v., 3 days) followed by tapering of the steroid dose was given. Reduction of proteinuria and disappearance of haematuria were observed in all patients. During follow up, kidney function remained normal.
...
PMID:[Methylprednisolone pulse therapy in the early phases of lupus nephritis]. 910 36

Systemic lupus erythematosus is a disease considered as seldom in Senegal. Nevertheless its incidence is increasing these last years. The prognosis is significantly related to the renal involvement, classified into 6 classes by the WHO. The treatment of these different forms is variable, consisting on abstention or symptomatic treatment for the class III (with low activity index), class II, I, and V (without renal failure). In the other hand a vigorous treatment is indicated in the class III, with consistent activity index, class IV and class V with renal failure. The most frequent of these treatment remains the association using corticosteroids and immunosuppressants. Among immunosuppressants, cyclophosphamide and azathioprine are the most commonly used. The case we reported is about a 41 years old woman who presented a class IV lupic nephropathy, with a good outcome after a 18 months corticosteroid and immunosuppressants association treatment. This case leads us to some recommendations. Considering our poor socioeconomical conditions, we suggest to treat all patients presenting proteinuria higher than 2 mg/24h. However it is more judicious to perform renal biopsy on patients with signs evocating renal impairement and to treat the class III, IV and V whatever would be the degree of activity and chronicity indexes. This treatment must associate immunosuppressive drugs and corticosteroids; the modalities and duration depending on clinical presentation, histologic features and evolution.
...
PMID:[Management of lupus nephritis in Senegal]. 982 39

Like systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE) itself, manifestations of lupus nephritis are highly varied in their clinical presentation, ranging from mild proteinuria to rapidly progressive glomerulonephritis causing renal insufficiency within weeks. The clinical variability is in keeping with the broad spectrum of histological abnormalities present in renal biopsy specimens from these patients. The therapeutic modalities currently being used in lupus nephritis include oral steroids, pulse methylprednisolone and cytotoxic drugs such as cyclophosphamide and azathioprine either singly or in combinations, depending on the World Health Organisation morphologic classification of the disease. The use of plasmapheresis for proliferative lupus nephritis (WHO class III and IV) and cyclosporin for membranous lupus nephritis (WHO class V) is based on open trials, but not supported by randomised controlled trials. This review assesses the therapeutic modalities available for the treatment of lupus nephritis, giving the available evidence from the literature and acknowledging that none of them might be perfect.
...
PMID:Treatment options in lupus nephritis. 1006 98

Autoimmune phenomena are common in human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) infection, yet systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE) and HIV infection rarely are seen concurrently in the same patient. Many of the cases of combined HIV infection and SLE reported in the literature are patients with SLE before HIV infection and who did not undergo renal biopsy at a time when both processes were present. We report the clinical manifestations and renal biopsy findings in four subjects with concurrent HIV infection and SLE and compare them with the seven previously reported cases in the literature. Taken together, most patients were black (91%) and male (73%), and approximately half (55%) were children with perinatal HIV infection. These demographics differ markedly from those of idiopathic SLE, a disease that predominantly affects female adults. Renal presentations included proteinuria and hypocomplementemia, frequently with hematuria and renal insufficiency. Renal biopsy findings in 10 cases included all classes of lupus nephritis (class IIb in two cases, class III in one case, class IV in three cases, class V in three cases, class III and V in one case), two of which also displayed overlapping features of HIV-associated nephropathy (HIVAN). One case had isolated findings of HIVAN. This cohort provides a unique population in which to study interacting pathomechanisms between HIV infection and SLE.
...
PMID:Renal manifestations of concurrent systemic lupus erythematosus and HIV infection. 1007 Sep 7

We report about a 27-year-old white male, a known case of class III lupus nephritis with a very high anti-nuclear antibody (ANA) titer, who after 10 years of complete clinical and serological remission presented with sudden development of malar rash, proteinuria and an increase in the serum creatinine. Repeated serologic studies were all negative for ANA. A repeat kidney biopsy disclosed the presence of focal segmental glomerulosclerosis lupus nephritis (class IIIc) superimposed with a new membranous lupus nephritis (class V).
...
PMID:Lupus nephritis in an anti-nuclear antibody-negative young male. The simultaneous presence of class III and class V renal lesions. 1040 99

We compared the clinicopathologic features of 22 patients with hepatitis B virus-related membranous nephropathy, all with detectable glomerular hepatitis B e antigen, and of 26 patients with lupus nephritis class V. Both groups of patients similarly presented with heavy proteinuria or nephrotic syndrome; however, the patients with hepatitis B virus-related membranous nephropathy, who were predominantly male, did not have the extrarenal manifestations and autoantibodies seen in systemic lupus erythematosus. The glomerular lesions in both clinical entities were similar and at times indistinguishable, demonstrating polyclonal immunoglobulins and polytypic complements in similar subepithelial ultrastructural distribution. No morphologic feature, single or combined, carrying a high positive predictive value for the diagnosis of either nephritis was identified. Lesions such as hematoxyphil bodies and fingerprint dense deposits, distinctive of systemic lupus erythematosus, were rarely found. At the time of biopsy, when systemic lupus erythematosus is not clinically suspected, the diagnosis between hepatitis B virus-related membranous nephropathy and lupus nephritis may be difficult or impossible to differentiate, especially in geographic areas where both lupus nephritis and hepatitis B surface antigen carriers are common. This study focused on the use of specific monoclonal antisera to detect glomerular hepatitis B virus antigens, which contribute to the diagnosis of hepatitis B virus-related nephritis.
...
PMID:Hepatitis B virus-related nephropathy and lupus nephritis: morphologic similarities of two clinical entities. 1069 74


1 2 3 4 5 Next >>