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)

With the aim to analyze the prognostic value of anti-RNP/Sm and anti-Ro/La antibodies (Ab) in lupus nephropathy, we have studied through Contraimmunoelectrophoresis (CIE) and Immunoblotting (IB) the serum of 63 patients diagnosed of systemic lupus erythematosus. Mean age was 36.5 years (15-71) and 90% were females. We have classified the patients into three subgroups: I, 25 patients without nephropathy; II, 26 patients with evidence of nephropathy (persistent proteinuria and/or microhematuria) and normal renal function; and III, 12 patients with renal failure (servu creatinine > 1.5 mg/dl). 21 patients had kidney biopsy. IB allows to identify a higher number of positive serum, specially in the case of anti-RNP (7.9% CIE vs 28.5% IB) and anti-Sm antibodies (6.3% vs 30.1%). Prevalence of anti-RNP Ab is lower in subgroup III (32% I vs 34% II vs 8% III) (p > 0.05). Anti-Sm Ab are more frequent in group II and are not associated with renal failure (16% vs 54% vs 8%) (p > 0.05). Anti-Ro Ab are related with the absence of nephropathy (52% vs 15% vs 0%) (p < 0.05). We conclude that IB is more sensitive than CIE in the detection of these Ab and its use in Systemic Lupus Erythematosus permits to identify patient subgroups with lesser risk to develop renal failure. Even though our data are preliminary, we suggest that the detection of anti-RNP/Sm and/or anti-Ro/La antibodies are a good prognostic factor in lupus nephropathy.
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PMID:[Prognostic value of anti-RNP/Sm and anti-Ro/La antibodies in lupus nephropathy]. 147 60

A 22 year old male of lupus nephritis associated with minimal change nephrotic syndrome was described. The patient was well until 4 years earlier, when Raynaud's phenomenon and photosensitivity developed. One week before admission, edema appeared suddenly and proteinuria was pointed out on July 28, 1990. On admission, his legs, ankles, and eyelids were edematous. There was no sclerodactylia, although Raynaud's phenomenon was positive when his hand disclosed to the cold. Urinalysis showed heavy albuminuria (10.4g/day), but urinary sediment showed no abnormality. Immunological examination showed positive antinuclear antibody, determination at a titer of 1: 160 with a speckled pattern. Anti-RNP and anti-Sm antibody were positive. However, neither anti-DNA antibody nor hypocomplementemia was detected. There was high concentration of serum IgE (2564IU/ml). Renal biopsy was performed. Light microscopic study showed slight increase of mesangial cells and matrix. Immunofluorescence study showed mesangial localization of IgG and C3. Electron microscopic study showed electron dense deposits only in the mesangial area. The diagnosis of lupus nephritis associated with minimal change nephrotic syndrome (MCNS) was made and administration of PSL was started. Proteinuria disappeared after 3 weeks and nephrotic syndrome remitted completely. The case of lupus nephritis associated with MCNS is very rare. Therefore, the relationship between amounts of proteinuria and various histological types of 67 cases with lupus nephritis which we experienced at our hospital was evaluated. Results showed that nephrotic range proteinuria was not present in mesangial lupus nephritis. So, it was concluded that if heavy albuminuria was found in mesangial lupus nephritis, we should consider the possibility of lupus nephritis associated with MCNS.
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PMID:[A case report of lupus nephritis associated with minimal change nephrotic syndrome--comparison of various histological types of 67 cases with lupus nephritis]. 147 24

In a retrospective study the outcome of 40 pregnancies in 20 women with a high titer of anti-RNP antibodies was evaluated. In the 18 pregnancies that occurred after disease onset, transient proteinuria was noted in 3 and transient thrombocytopenia in 2. Deep venous thrombosis was observed in one patient. Preeclampsia in another woman necessitated cesarean sections in 2 pregnancies with successful outcome. The observed complications may all be seen in normal pregnancies. There was no evidence of exacerbation of maternal disease during pregnancy or in the postpartum period. Our study indicates that in women with high anti-RNP titer the risk of fetal loss or maternal worsening of disease seems slight.
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PMID:Pregnancy outcome in patients with high titer anti-RNP antibodies. A retrospective study of 40 pregnancies. 171 70

A 40-year-old woman was admitted because of increasing exertional dyspnea. Right heart failure was suggested by the presence of hepatomegaly, pretibial edema and also echocardiographic findings. Physical examination and echocardiography showed no evidence of valvular disease or congenital heart disease except for right ventricular dilatation and tricuspid regurgitation. The ventricular septum deviated toward the left ventricle throughout the cardiac cycle, but left ventricular function was preserved. Severe pulmonary hypertension averaging 44 mmHg was revealed by cardiac catheterization. Digital subtraction angiography and pulmonary blood flow scintigraphy showed no evidence of pulmonary artery embolism, and no interstitial pulmonary lesions that might have caused pulmonary hypertension were recognized. Hypergammaglobulinemia suggested an autoimmune disorder, and signs of systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE), such as pleural effusion, proteinuria, lymphocytopenia, LE cell phenomenon and antinuclear antibodies were present. Several autoimmune diseases are known to be causative factors of pulmonary hypertension. However, only ten cases of SLE complicated by pulmonary hypertension have been reported the present one. These cases were characterized by a high incidence of Raynaud's phenomenon and positivity for anti-RNP antibody. In our present case, SLE activity was suppressed using prednisolone, but pulmonary hypertension persisted and the patient eventually died due to right cardiac failure. Judging from the clinical course of the ten reported cases of SLE-pulmonary hypertension, there seems to be no hope of improving the pulmonary hypertension once it has become established. Therefore it is important to detect and cure pulmonary hypertension as early as possible.
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PMID:[A case of lupus erythematosus preceded by right heart failure due to pulmonary hypertension]. 174 69

The study was designed to determine whether manifestations of autoimmunity are altered with age, using an experimental model in which systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE) is induced in mice. Young (2-month-old), and aging (18-month-old) BALB/c female mice were immunized with a human monoclonal anti-DNA antibody that bears a common idiotype (16/6 Id). Control groups were either left untreated or were injected with human IgM (HIgM). Anti-16/6 Id levels were found to be significantly lower in the old mice than in the young. Similarly, anti-anti-16/6 Id (murine 16/6 Id+) values were lower in the old. Mice injected with the 16/6 Id also produced various autoantibodies, including anti-dsDNA, anti-RNP, anti-Sm and anti-histones antibodies. The levels of these antibodies were lower in the old mice than in the young, yet the differences were not statistically significant. Levels of autoantibodies examined in control animals were either similar in both age groups (anti-RNP and histones) or lower in the old (anti-dsDNA and Sm). Four months after a booster injection of 16/6 Id, the young mice developed clinical manifestations of SLE, including proteinuria and leukopenia, which were seen, in milder form, in the aged mice. Immune complex depositions examined by immunohistology on kidney sections suggested similar differences based on the age of the animals. Our results suggest that aging might actually be associated with a decline in the capacity to produce autoimmune responses.
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PMID:Effects of aging on the induction of experimental systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE) in mice. 187 31

The identification of differences in the clinical manifestations of systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE) due to racial and socioeconomic factors has been hampered in previous studies by limitations in the numbers of black patients examined. We sought to define racial differences in the cumulative clinical manifestations of SLE in a large, racially balanced cohort (184 black patients and 174 white patients). Differences in the cumulative disease manifestations of SLE between black and white patients were evaluated by multivariate regression techniques, controlling for socioeconomic status and the potential confounding factors of age, gender, duration of follow-up, and treatments. Race was found to be an important factor influencing the prevalence of 9 of 24 clinical features of SLE. As a group, blacks more commonly manifested anti-Sm and anti-RNP antibodies, discoid skin lesions, and proteinuria, and less commonly manifested photosensitivity, than whites. Among specific age, gender, and socioeconomic subgroups, blacks were more likely than whites to have had psychosis, serositis, and urinary cellular casts, and less likely to have had sicca syndrome. Racial differences in the prevalence of renal failure were due to socioeconomic effects. These results suggest that race is under-recognized as a factor influencing the clinical heterogeneity of SLE.
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PMID:Clinical manifestations of systemic lupus erythematosus. Identification of racial and socioeconomic influences. 232 45

The effect of sex hormones on the induction of experimental systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE) with a human anti-DNA (16/6 Id +) antibody, was studied. We found that injection of the pathogenic idiotype to BALB/c females and orchiectomized males treated with estrogen caused a rapid outburst of the disease 3 months after immunization, while nonestrogen treated mice developed the disease 5 months after immunization. The flare of SLE disease was characterized by raised levels of autoantibodies in the sera to dsDNA, histones, cardiolipin, Sm, RNP, SSA (Ro), SSB (La) and an emergence of high titers of mouse antibody carrying the 16/6 Id. These enhanced antibody levels were associated with an increase in erythrocyte sedimentation rate, proteinuria and leukopenia. Immunofluorescent studies confirmed the existence of immune complexes in the afflicted kidneys. Testosterone treated BALB/c females and orchiectomized males developed a classical response to the human anti-DNA antibody (16/6 Id +), but failed to develop fulminant SLE-like disease. Our data demonstrate the importance of sex hormones on the induction of experimental SLE-like disease in mice with no genetic tendency to autoimmunity.
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PMID:Sex hormone involvement in the induction of experimental systemic lupus erythematosus by a pathogenic anti-DNA idiotype in naive mice. 233 51

Systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE) has been induced in C3H.SW mice by their immunization with a human monoclonal anti-DNA antibody that bears a common idiotype-16/6 Id. Following immunization, high levels of murine anti-16/6 and anti-anti-16/6 antibodies were detected in the sera of the immunized mice. Elevated titers of autoantibodies reacting with ssDNA, dsDNA, poly(I), poly(G), RNP, Ro, and La were also observed. The serological findings were associated with significant proteinuria, leukopenia, and elevated erythrocyte sedimentation rate. Immune complex deposition in the glomerular mesangium and sclerosis of the glomeruli were demonstrated. To study whether or not anti-idiotype antibodies are involved in the induction of the disease, a murine monoclonal antibody against the 16/6 Id was prepared and injected into C3H.SW mice. The anti-16/6 Id antibody induced experimental SLE similarly to the 16/6 Id with an accelerated kidney pathology. A study performed on different mouse strains indicated that the susceptibility to the induction of SLE by the 16/6 Id is strain dependent and directly correlates to their ability to produce anti-16/6 Id specific antibodies.
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PMID:The role of the idiotypic network in the induction of experimental systemic lupus erythematosus. 278 55

(2R,5R)-6-heptyne-2,5-diamine (MAP; MDL 72175), a potent irreversible inhibitor of L-ornithine decarboxylase (ODC), possesses immunosuppressive activities in vitro as the result of inhibition of lymphocyte polyamine biosynthesis. The effects of MAP were now studied in vivo in MRL-lpr/lpr female mice, an animal model for human systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE). Administration of MAP (0.2% in drinking water; drug intake: 0.25-0.35 g/kg body weight/day) to female mice for 15 weeks, starting 8 weeks after birth, reduced by 47% the number of spleen cells, retarded development of lymphadenopathy and, at that time, markedly prolonged the survival of the mice. At week 23, MAP reduced plasma IgG concentrations by 50% whereas, in contrast, those of IgM were elevated 1.5-fold. No statistically significant effects of MAP were observed on plasma levels of anti-DNA autoantibodies although serum anti-RNP and anti-Sm titres tended downwards during treatment. Neither glomerular lesions nor proteinuria were improved by MAP administration. Finally chronic administration of MAP for 45 weeks prolonged the median survival time from 29.75 to 35.5 weeks.
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PMID:Immunosuppressive effects of (2R,5R)-6-heptyne-2,5-diamine, an inhibitor of polyamine synthesis: II. Beneficial effects on the development of a lupus-like disease in MRL-lpr/lpr mice. 340 47

Sera from 70 patients with systemic lupus erythematosus were studied for antinuclear antibodies and its clinical significance. Indirect immunofluorescence technique with mouse liver tissue and Crithidia luciliae flagella as substrates was used to detect antinuclear antibodies (FANA) and antibodies to double-stranded DNA (anti-ds DNA), respectively. Double immunodiffusion method identical with reference sera was used to detect antibodies to extractable nuclear antigens (anti-ENA). The prevalence of fluorescence antinuclear antibodies, antibodies to ds DNA and antibodies to ENA were 95.7%, 52.9% and 58.6%, respectively. Patients with homogeneous pattern of FANA presented clinically with high incidence of LE cell phenomenon. Patients with anti-ds DNA antibodies presented clinically with high incidences of serositis, profuse proteinuria, low serum C3 and high clinical activity. Patients with anti-RNP antibodies presented with high incidence of Raynaud's phenomenon and low incidence of anti-ds DNA antibodies. Patients with severe renal involvement showed a good correlation with high titer of anti-ds DNA antibodies and low serum C3. Therefore, these two factors together are helpful to predict the severity of renal involvement at the time of serum sample was obtained.
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PMID:Clinical significance of antinuclear antibodies in systemic lupus erythematosus. 702 88


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