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Query: UMLS:C0409974 (
lupus
)
22,386
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Postpartum
hemolytic uremic syndrome
(
HUS
) is described in a woman with a history of spontaneous abortions and both circulating
lupus
anticoagulant and anticardiolipin antibody (ACA). After termination of her pregnancy because of severe preeclampsia, ACA blood levels increased simultaneously with the onset of a microangiopathic process associated with severe hypertension and renal failure. Plasma exchange resulted in a rapid decline in ACA levels and immediate improvement in her clinical condition. This case strongly suggests an important causal relationship between ACA and postpartum
HUS
. The possible mechanisms of ACA-related postpartum
HUS
and the potential role of plasmapheresis in its treatment are reviewed and discussed.
...
PMID:Postpartum hemolytic uremic syndrome associated with antiphospholipid antibodies. A case report and review of the literature. 149 77
The frequency of renal vascular lesions (RVL) and their relevance in the progression of renal damage were evaluated by the Pathology Group of the "Gruppo Italiano per lo Studio della Nefrite Lupica" (GISNEL). Of 285 patients with lupus nephritis collected from 20 nephrology centers in Italy and classified according to World Health Organization (WHO) criteria, 79 cases (27.7%) with RVL were identified and classified as follows: (1)
lupus
vasculopathy (n = 27); (2) hemolytic-uremic syndrome/thrombotic thrombocytopenic purpura (
HUS
/TTP) malignant hypertension-like lesions (n = 24); (3) vasculitis (n = 8); (4) arterio-arteriosclerosis (n = 20). At the time of renal biopsy, patients with RVL had mean serum creatinine levels significantly higher than patients without RVL (201.8 +/- 195.9 mumol/L [2.2 +/- 2.2 mg/dL] v 108.1 +/- 108.0 mumol/L [1.2 +/- 1.2 mg/dL]; P less than 0.01). Hypertension was more frequent in patients with RVL than in those without (68.4% v 30.5%; P less than 0.01). The probability of kidney survival assessed according to the Kaplan-Meier method at 5 and 10 years was, respectively, 74.3% +/- 5.9% and 58.0% +/- 8.9% in patients with RVL, compared with 89.6% +/- 2.7% and 85.9% +/- 3.7% in patients without RVL. However, the two groups did not differ significantly as regards overall survival, the probability of survival at 5 and 10 years being 86.5% +/- 4.5% and 78.8% +/- 6.6% in patients with RVL and 92.2% +/- 2.2% and 83.3% +/- 4.4% in patients without RVL.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Renal vascular lesions as a marker of poor prognosis in patients with lupus nephritis. Gruppo Italiano per lo Studio della Nefrite Lupica (GISNEL). 186 81
The renal glomeruli are vulnerable to injury by a number of drugs and other toxic agents. These agents may lead to damage by one of two basic mechanisms: direct, dose-related toxic injury; indirect, immunologically mediated injury, largely dose-independent. Proteinuria is the simplest and most important functional indicator of glomerular injury. It occurs almost immediately in direct toxic injury, but there is a latent period of weeks to months with immunologically mediated processes. Of the two mechanisms, the second is by far the more common in clinical settings. The best studied experimental agent causing direct toxic injury is the aminonucleoside of puromycin. Clinically, perhaps the most important agent is Cyclosporine A. Although this agent is usually thought of primarily as a tubular toxin, it is capable of giving rise to a microangiopathic glomerular lesion similar to that in the
hemolytic uremic syndrome
. The classic model for immunologic glomerular lesion is Heymann nephritis, which produces a membranous glomerulopathy. Clinically, most drug mediated glomerulopathies also take the form of a membranous nephropathy, usually with a frank nephrotic syndrome. Among the more common offenders are penicillamine, gold salts used in rheumatoid arthritis, and captopril used in hypertension. The other common type of drug-related glomerulopathy occurs as part of a
lupus
-like syndrome induced by a variety of drugs, including hydralazine, procainamide, and penicillamine. All of these give rise to a variety of antibodies, most prominently antinuclear antibodies, and in the more severe cases there may be
lupus
-like glomerular lesions as well.
...
PMID:Drug-associated glomerulopathies. 294 Jun 67
A 12.5 year old girl was admitted to hospital with the typical signs of
hemolytic uremic syndrome
, and systemic
lupus
erythematodes as well. On the basis of clinical, blood chemistry, and histological findings we assumed an hemolysis-induced form of hemolytic-uremic syndrome as the most likely pathogenic mechanism. The child also suffered from congenital IgA-deficiency and produced an inhibitor against coagulation factor VIII. Congenital IgA-deficiency, systemic
lupus
erythematodes, inhibitor-induced hemophilia and
hemolytic uremic syndrome
are suggested to form a pathogenic sequence.
...
PMID:[Hemolytic uremic syndrome following juvenile lupus erythematodes disseminatus]. 309 24
We report here, a patient of systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE) with severe fibrinoid necrosis in the afferent arteriole of the glomerulus, in whom antiphospholipid antibody might have contributed to the pathogenesis. A 24-year-old female who was suffering from severe anemia with fragmented red blood cells, acute renal failure and thrombocytopenia, was admitted to our hospital. Further examinations revealed findings compatible with active lupus nephritis. Moreover, she was found to be positive for antiphospholipid antibody, and anticardiolipin antibody, as well as for
lupus
anticoagulant and syphilis test. Intensive treatment by methylprednisolone pulse therapy, hemodialysis, and double filtration plasmapheresis were performed. However, 13 days after admission she died suddenly because of intracranial hemorrhage. Pathological investigation of renal tissue revealed severe fibrinoid necrosis of the arterioles mainly in the glomerular afferent arteriole associated with diffuse proliferative lupus nephritis. In this case,
hemolytic uremic syndrome
(
HUS
) was associated with SLE. Antiphospholipid antibody was considered to be not only an accelerator in the arterial lesions of
HUS
, but also an initiator of
HUS
itself.
...
PMID:[A case of systemic lupus erythematosus associated with severe fibrinoid necrosis located mainly in the glomerular afferent arteriole]. 769 57
Thrombotic microangiopathic hemolytic anemia (TMHA) is characterized by thrombocytopenia, microangiopathic hemolytic anemia, fever, neurological symptoms, and kidney involvement. It presents as thrombotic thrombocytopenic purpura (TTP) or
hemolytic uremic syndrome
(
HUS
). TMHA has been considered to occur only rarely in systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE). However, there has been an increase in the reporting of this association in recent years, and autopsy studies have suggested that TMHA may be underdiagnosed in SLE because of the similarity in symptoms. We report four patients with SLE-related TMHA and describe 24 more patients from a literature review. All patients were women, 50% had active SLE, 89% presented as TTP, and 11% presented as
HUS
. Those patients with active SLE had low complement levels. Antiphospholipid antibodies or
lupus
anticoagulant were positive in 5 of 8 cases. Patients treated with plasma infusions or plasmapheresis had a lower mortality rate at 25% compared with 57% mortality in patients who were not treated with plasma infusions or plasmapheresis. It is suggested that TMHA should be considered in any SLE patient presenting with neurological symptoms or renal failure associated with fever, hemolytic anemia, and thrombocytopenia. Early recognition and appropriate therapy with plasmapheresis may improve prognosis.
...
PMID:Thrombotic microangiographic hemolytic anemia in systemic lupus erythematosus. 789 74
The intraglomerular presence of thrombomodulin (TM) was examined in 19 patients with
lupus
glomerulonephritis (GN). TM is a cell surface glycoprotein found on endothelial cells and plays a key role in the protein C anticoagulant pathway. Renal biopsy specimens of patients with
lupus
GN and several kinds of renal disease other than
lupus
GN, i.e., membranous GN, IgA GN, minimal change nephrotic syndrome (MCNS) and
hemolytic uremic syndrome
(
HUS
) were examined by indirect immunofluorescence, using three kinds of monoclonal antibodies against human TM: KA-2, KA-3 and KA-4. It has been reported that KA-3 and KA-4 bind to enzyme-digested TM as well as intact TM, while KA-2 recognizes intact TM only. In the glomeruli from both normal subjects and patients with MCNS, only very weak staining of TM was found. Patients with
HUS
showed negative TM staining in the glomeruli. In contrast, positive to strongly positive staining of KA-2 as well as of KA-3 and KA-4 was observed mainly along the capillary wall of glomeruli from patients with
lupus
GN. Some patients with non-
lupus
GN showed positive staining of these monoclonal antibodies, but the staining was far more intense in most patients with
lupus
GN than in the patients with non-
lupus
GN. Staining of albumin and transferrin by the indirect method was negative in all cases of
lupus
GN that showed positive staining of TM. There was no relationship between the intensity of TM staining and the degree of proteinuria, creatinine clearance or histologic types of
lupus
GN.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Enhanced presence of thrombomodulin in the glomeruli of lupus glomerulonephritis. 802 12
A 15-year-old girl had severe Raynaud's phenomenon and arthralgias. A high ANA-IF titer was found and undifferentiated connective tissue disease was diagnosed. After 7 years of moderately flaring disease the patient deteriorated and presented with congestive heart failure, pleuropericardial effusion,
hemolytic uremic syndrome
, proteinuria and moderate hypertension. Autoantibodies against DNA, Sm-protein, and very high titers against U1RNP were detected. Therapy with high steroid doses, a cyclophosphamide pulse and 4 weeks of plasmaphresis with plasma exchange improved the heart, but not the renal condition. Symptomatic pancreatitis became the dominant problem of a progressively consuming process that resulted in the death of the patient. Post-mortem examination revealed widespread vasculopathy with intima proliferation and only minimal fibrosis involving the kidneys, heart and other main organs, including the pancreas. Taken together, the clinical picture was of an overlap between scleroderma and systemic
lupus
erythemathosus; the serologic and histopathologic findings suggest a diagnosis of a severe form of mixed connective tissue disease (MCTD).
...
PMID:Widespread vasculopathy with hemolytic uremic syndrome, perimyocarditis and cystic pancreatitis in a young woman with mixed connective tissue disease. Case report and review of the literature. 851 21
Acute renal insufficiency in the setting of hemolysis and thrombocytopenia, a triad that constitutes adult or pediatric
hemolytic uremic syndrome
, can be associated with or triggered by diverse conditions such as verocytotoxin-producing Escherichia coli, viral infections, pregnancy, malignant hypertension, scleroderma, renal radiation, allograft rejection,
lupus erythematosus
, and assorted medications such as mitomycin C, cyclosporine, and oral contraceptives. Recurrent and de novo
hemolytic uremic syndrome
occur after renal transplantation. Relapses are also common and probably reflect incomplete resolution of the initial episode. The major differential diagnoses of
hemolytic uremic syndrome
in the renal allograft include acute vascular rejection, cyclosporine, FK506 or antilymphocyte antibody nephrotoxicity, and malignant hypertension, all of which may display overlapping clinical and histologic features with primary
hemolytic uremic syndrome
; in such instances, the exact diagnosis may be quite difficult. It is possible that the risk of recurrence may be reduced by proper timing of transplantation and suitable choice of immunosuppressive agents. Intensive plasmapheresis in conjunction with fresh frozen plasma and supportive management of renal failure may lessen mortality and morbidity even in recurrent
hemolytic uremic syndrome
after transplantation.
...
PMID:Recurrent hemolytic uremic syndrome in an adult renal allograft recipient: current concepts and management. 858 82
Clinical presentation, laboratory findings, renal biopsy findings and subsequent clinical course were studied retrospectively in 90 children with acute renal failure to intrinsic renal damage. The mean age at presentation was 8.1 years. Diagnosis and number of patients were as follows:
Hemolytic uremic syndrome
(
HUS
) in 32 patients, tubulo-interstitial nephritis in 19, idiopathic nephrotic syndrome in 10, IgA nephropathy on 9, membranoproliferative glomerulonephritis in 8,
lupus
in 5, poststreptococcal glomerulonephritis in 4, cortical necrosis in 1, Henoch Schoenlein purpura nephritis in 1 and anti-neutrophil cytoplasmic antibody associated glomerulonephritis in 1. Thirty-nine patients needed dialysis, but 36 of these were able to stop dialysis, 3 patients with
HUS
without gastrointestinal symptoms needed chronic dialysis. The mean follow-up period was 7.3 years from onset, and the the latest follow-up 82 patients had normal renal function, 3 showed chronic renal failure, 2 had regular dialysis, 2 had successful renal transplantation, an 1 had died due to heart failure. A poor outcome was associated with diffuse crescents and the presence of severe vascular changes. The early biopsy findings were very useful for the management of children with acute renal failure.
...
PMID:[A clinicopathological study of 90 children with acute renal failure]. 928 14
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