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:C0035078 (
renal failure
)
31,970
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
There is considerable circumstantial evidence relating neoplasia to glomerular injury. Recently, more convincing evidence has been derived from the demonstration of tumor-associated antigen or antibody to such antigen, in relation to glomerular basement membranes in four patients with glomerular injury and cancer. The most common form of glomerulopathy reported in patients with carcinoma has been
membranous glomerulonephritis
. However, increased mesangial cells and matrix have also been found in some patients with hematuria and progressive
renal failure
. In contrast, most patients with Hodgkin's disease and glomerulopathy have had the minimal lesion-type nephrotic syndrome, which has usually responded to successful treatment of the Hodgkin's disease. Glomerular abnormalities have also been reported with chronic lymphocytic leukemia, lymphosarcoma, Waldenstrom's macroglobulinemia, and benign tumors. When there is no apparent cause, proteinuria with or without hematuria or impaired renal function should suggest the possibility of associated neoplasia, particularly in elderly patients.
...
PMID:Glomerular injury in patients with neoplasia. 18 Aug 69
Membranous glomerulonephritis
is not usually considered to be responsive to steroid or cytotoxic therapy. This report describes a patient with advanced
renal failure
who responded to treatment with prednisolone and azathioprine, initially given as immunosuppression for a renal graft which did not function.
...
PMID:Improvement of renal failure due to membranous glomerulonephritis after unsuccessful renal transplantation. 35 46
A patient with what initially appeared to be a typical
membranous nephropathy
had a progressive course to
renal failure
, nephrectomy, and transplantation. The nephrectomy specimen revealed abundant glomerular crescents and capsular synechiae. Post-transplantation the patient again developed a
membranous nephropathy
with florid crescents. Radioimmunoassay and indirect immunofluorescence tests failed to reveal anti-glomerular basement membrane antibody in the serum or kidney. It appears that there is a form of
membranous nephropathy
with crescent formation, unrelated to anti-GBM antibody, which has the capacity to recur after transplantation.
...
PMID:An unusual variant of membranous nephropathy with abundant crescent formation and recurrence in the transplanted kidney. 35 8
Seventy-two adults with the nephrotic syndrome without renal insufficiency had a membranous type of renal histology on biopsy. These patients were randomly allocated to at least eight weeks of alternate-day treatment with prednisone or placebo in a multicenter study. Deterioration of glomerular filtration rate was significantly more rapid in placebo-treated than in prednisone-treated patients, and ultimately 10 of 38 given placebo but only one of 34 given prednisone were in
renal failure
(creatinine more than 5 mg per deciliter [440 mumol per liter]) or dead (P less than 0.02). In male patients and in those with nonselective initial proteinuria, there was a trend (not reaching statistical significance) toward more rapid deterioration of renal function. Age, admission blood pressure, serum creatinine, daily total protein excretion, and severity of histologic changes did not predict the subsequent course. We conclude that a short course of alternate-day prednisone therapy was beneficial in our group of patients with idiopathic
membranous nephropathy
.
...
PMID:A controlled study of short-term prednisone treatment in adults with membranous nephropathy. Collaborative Study of the Adult Idiopathic Nephrotic Syndrome. 38 20
Different types of urinary protein excretion may be recognized by determination of the proteins molecular weight. Beside chromatography different electrophoretic procedures have been applied to urinary proteins to study the underlying renal disease. The various zone electrophoreses separate merely by surface charge, proteins however covered by sodium dodecyl sulfate (SDS) migrate according to their molecular radius. So by SDS-polyacrylamide electrophoresis (SDS-PAe) macromolecular proteinurias (Mr 60,000- greater than 300,000 daltons) due to glomerular damage may be distinguished from micromolecular forms (Mr 10,000-70,000 d) due to tubular dysfunction. By densitometric quantitation of the separated Ig and transferrin an index of the glomerular selectivity is obtained, i.e. the capacity of the glomerular system, to retain serum proteins of a Mr above 150,000 d. By this procedure proliferative and degenerative glomerulopathies may be distinguished from minimal change disease, focal glomerular sclerosis and early
membranous nephropathy
; serial determinations of this selectivity index in the latter two disease entities show a gradual deterioration of glomerular protein handling with time. A glomerular proteinuria of even "physiological" quantity has been proved as early sign of renal involvment in systemic diseases; it may be detected earlier as for example the retinopathy in juvenile diabetics. Micromolecular proteinurias also occur at least in two forms: the typical tubular proteinuria (MW 10,000-70,000 d) is associated with acute or chronic severe tubular dysfunction as in interstitial nephritis and acute
kidney failure
; rejection episodes of kidney transplants lead to transient tubular proteinurias, too. The second form of micromolecular proteinuria (Mr 40,000-70,000 d) has been found frequently in association with a glomerular in diabetic and hypertensive glomerulosclerosis. By measuring clearances of the microproteins, the proteinuria with this pattern could be established as form independant from glomerular and tubular proteinurias. The constancy of the two micromolecular proteinurias led to the hypothesis of at least two selective mechanism of tubular protein resorption. SDS-PAe additionally allows the differentiation of extrarenal proteinurias, as caused by overflow, paraproteins, postrenal Ig-secretion or bleeding etc. In comparing clinical and in part histological data of about 2,000 patients suffering from kidney diseases the analysis of urinary proteins by this method has been proved as valuable non-invasive tool for diagnosis and follow-up.
...
PMID:Diagnostic significance of SDS-PAA-electrophoresis of urinary proteins: different forms of proteinuria and their correlation to renal diseases. 44 75
Renal failure
in patients with pulmonary or extrapulmonary sarcoidosis has been attributed to interstitial disease. Reports of cases of primary glomerular abnormality with
renal failure
in patients with sarcoidosis are rare. We describe a patient with pulmonary sarcoidosis and
renal failure
due to
membranous nephropathy
with epithelial crescents. A review of primary glomerular involvement in patients with sarcoidosis and the association of immune complexes in the pathogenesis of the two diseases is discussed.
...
PMID:Membranous nephropathy with epithelial crescents in a patient with pulmonary sarcoidosis. 48 56
A series of 13 cases of feline
membranous nephropathy
is presented. Two groups were distinguished clinically; eight cats had the nephrotic syndrome and five others were in
renal failure
but not nephrotic. The definitive diagnosis was based on histological, immunofluorescence and ultrastructural examinations of renal tissue obtained at renal biopsy or necropsy. Glomerular lesions were classified according to the degree of glomerular change into three distinct groups; mild, moderately severe and advanced. A relationship was established between the mild and moderately severe groups and cats with the nephrotic syndrome, and the advanced group and cats in
renal failure
. Diuretic therapy was satisfactory in initial control of oedema in the nephrotic cases. Monitoring of previously nephrotic cats for up to three years indicated that the disease is progressive, although in some cases it is sufficiently slow for a cat to live a relatively normal life without continuing treatment. The prognosis for cats presented in
renal failure
is hopeless.
...
PMID:Membranous nephropathy in the cat: a clinical and pathological study. 55 41
The clinical and histopathological features of 37 patients with idiopathic
membranous nephropathy
are presented. Males were four times as commonly affected as females and the age at presentation ranged from nine to 70 years. The period of observation varied from three months to 23 years. Twenty-eight patients (76 percent) presented with the nephrotic syndrome and nine patients (24 per cent) presented with non-nephrotic proteinuria. At the end of the study, of the patients presenting with the nephrotic syndrome, seven (25 per cent) were in remission, seven (25 per cent) remained nephrotic, nine (32 per cent) showed only proteinuria and five (18 per cent) were dead or on dialysis. Altogether eight patients (28 per cent) developed
renal failure
. The nine patients who presented with non-nephrotic proteinuria appeared to do better, and none developed
renal failure
. The occurrence of spontaneous remission makes assessment of benefit from immunosuppressive therapy difficult. However, analysis of our data and a review of the literature suggest that in this condition oral prednisone, cyclophosphamide and azathioprine have no significant therapeutic properties. Histological assessment confirmed the occurrence of mild (Grade 1) changes in patients biopsied soon after presentation, and tubular atrophy increased with the duration of illness. Immunofluorescence confirmed deposition of mainly IgG and complement. Repeat biopsies in 14 patients showed no histological improvement and remission was not accompanied by resolution of histological abnormalities.
...
PMID:Idiopathic membranous nephropathy. 86 73
Twenty-eight patients with SLE and distinct, well-defined renal morphologic lesions of
membranous nephropathy
were followed up for 4 years. These patients comprised approximately 8% of the patients evaluated for SLE during a 12-year period. The patients with membranous lupus nephropathy had typical systemic features of SLE, and most of them had positive LE cell tests and ANA, low serum complement concentrations, and mildly elevated serum antinative DNA levels. Proteniuria and microscopic hematuria were usually discovered years after systemic symptoms of SLE had developed, Only two patients had slowly progressive
renal failure
, and most patients continued to have proteinuria. Prednisone treatment did not influence either proteinuria or renal function. In only one patient, the renal character of the disease changed drastically, demonstrating membranoproliferative glomerulonephritis. Six patients died (21%); most of these died of cardiovascular illnesses. The relatively benign and stable renal course of membranous lupus nephropathy in patients with otherwise typical SLE suggests that the renal pathogenesis is different from that of proliferative lupus nephritis.
...
PMID:Membranous lupus nephropathy: a clinicopathologic study. 91 91
In a retrospective study of the effect of treatment in biopsy-proved idiopathic
membranous nephropathy
, 91 adults and 12 children were followed for periods up to 29 years after clinical onset (mean, 6.5 years). Forty-four were treated with corticosteroids, 15 with corticosteroids and immunosuppressants; 44 had no treatment and served as a control group. Clinical cure and improvement were significantly greater in the treated than in the nontreated group (P less than 0.01). The recurrence rate, occurrence of
renal failure
and probability of death were significantly greater in the nontreated group, although some of these patients eventually showed improvement. Prognosis was better in patients who responded to therapy. These data strongly suggest that steroid therapy is beneficial in patients with
membranous nephropathy
.
...
PMID:Treatment of idiopathic membranous nephropathy. 95 60
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
Next >>