Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0409974 (lupus)
22,386 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

The study population comprised all 20 patients followed since 1990 through December 2004 at the Le Bonheur Children's Medical Center with diagnosis of C1q nephropathy (55% boys; 60% African Americans). All were aged under 18 years at biopsy (mean 11.2 years, 65% aged 11 or over); the youngest presented at age 10 months and progressed to end-stage renal disease at 14 months. None had clinical or laboratory features of systemic lupus erythematosis or membranoproliferative glomerulonephritis. Clinical features assessed at diagnosis were age, gender, blood pressure, history of macroscopic hematuria, urinary protein to creatinine ratio, serum creatinine, estimated glomerular filtration rate, renal histology, and pattern for immunofluorescent reactants. At the time of biopsy 40% had nephrotic syndrome and 30% nephrotic range proteinuria without nephrotic syndrome. Three patients with nephrotic syndrome also had chronic renal insufficiency at diagnosis. The most common histological feature was focal segmental glomerulosclerosis in 40%, but 30% had minimal change lesion. Four patients, all with nephrotic syndrome at diagnosis, progressed to end-stage renal disease. Of the 12 patients not presenting with nephrotic syndrome, none had chronic renal insufficiency at last follow-up. Kidney survival was 94% and 78% at 1 and 5 years, respectively, in all patients and 88% and 49% in those presenting with nephrotic syndrome.
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PMID:C1q nephropathy: features at presentation and outcome. 1613 42

Steroid resistant nephrotic syndrome (SRNS) remains a challenge facing pediatric nephrologists. The underlying histopathology usually affects the course of the disease and the response to treatment. We studied the pattern of histopathology in children with SRNS who presented to the King Abdul Aziz University Hospital (KAUH), Jeddah, Saudi Arabia. The records of all children with primary SRNS, who were seen between 2002 and 2007 were reviewed. Only patients who had undergone a renal biopsy were included in the study. The histopathology slides were reviewed by two renal pathologists independently. Patients with congenital nephrotic syndrome, lupus or sickle cell disease, were excluded from the study. Thirty-six children fulfilled the inclusion criteria, and included 25 girls and 11 boys with female to male ratio of 2.3:1. Fifty percent of the children (n=18) were Saudi and the remaining 50% were from various other racial backgrounds (9 Asians, 4 Arabs, 2 Africans and 3 from the Far East). Their mean age at presentation was 4.3 +/- 3.0 years (range 1-12 years). The mean serum albumin at presentation was 15.6 +/- 7.1 g/L and all of them had 4+ proteinuria on urinalysis. Five children had elevated serum creatinine at presentation while the mean serum creatinine was 50.4 +/- 45.6 micromol/L. Three children had low serum complement levels at presentation and none were positive for hepatitis B surface antigen or antinuclear antibody (ANA). The renal histopathology was compatible with focal and segmental glomerulosclerosis (FSGS) in 39% (n=14), IgM nephro-pathy in 28% (n=10), mesengioproliferative glomerulonephritis (MesPGN) in 17% (n=6), mini-mal change disease (MCD) and C1q nephropathy (C1qNP) in 8% each (n=3 + 3) and IgA nephro-pathy in 3% (n=1). Our retrospective review shows that FSGS was the commonest underlying histopathology in children who presented with SRNS followed by IgM nephropathy and other variants of MCD such as MesPGN. C1qNP was the underlying cause in some children.
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PMID:Pattern of steroid resistant nephrotic syndrome in children living in the kingdom of Saudi Arabia: a single center study. 1973 91

We experienced a case of a 2-year-old boy, who presented with steroid resistant nephrotic syndrome, which developed insidiously. Renal biopsy revealed that he had focal and segmental glomerulosclerosis on light microscopy, dominant mesangial deposition of C1q by immunofluorescent staining, and electron dense deposits on electron microscopy, which are all compatible with C1q nephropathy. He had no clinical sign of any collagen diseases, including systemic lupus erythematodes. So, the diagnosis of C1q nephropathy was made. An intensive treatment by a combination of cyclosporine, prednisolone and methylprednisolone pulse therapy was successful in achieving remission and disappearance of proteinuria in this patient. Although he developed hypertension requiring calcium blocker and angiotensin converting enzyme inhibitor, his renal function stayed within normal limit for 3 years after the initiation of the treatment. The growth was well preserved during the 3 years of treatment with almost unchanged SD scores for height. He has delay in speech, which may not be associated with the etiology of his nephropathy, based on the absence of such association in the previous reports. C1q nephropathy is still a controversial clinical entity, so accumulation of the cases may help further understand the pathogenesis and clinical manifestation of C1q nephropathy.
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PMID:C1q nephropathy in a 2-year-old boy presenting with steroid resistant nephrotic syndrome. 2131 45

A 19-year-old male presented with persistent macroscopic hematuria for last 3 months. On initial evaluation, he was found to have minimal proteinuria, normal renal function, and normal complement with negative lupus serology. Light microscopy, immunofluorescence and electron microscopy of renal tissue confirmed the presence of C1q nephropathy. Because of poor response to immunosuppressive agent (prednisolone and mycophenolate mofetil), passage of urinary clot once and vexing persistent macroscopic hematuria, alternative diagnosis was considered. Cystourethroscopy showed urethritis of prostatic urethra. Immunosuppressives were stopped and doxycycline started to which hematuria responded dramatically. This case report illustrates that hematuria in this patient was because of undiagnosed urethritis rather than incidental C1q nephropathy.
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PMID:Non-nephronal hematuria misdiagnosed as C1q nephropathy: Look before you leap. 2308 57

We describe a 16-year-old Caucasian boy who presented with steroid-sensitive nephrotic syndrome aged 2 years. His clinical course was one of frequent relapses and severe steroid dependence. To manage this, he was sequentially treated with levamisole, then oral cyclophosphamide before being started on ciclosporin. A renal biopsy performed prior to commencement of ciclosporin confirmed minimal change disease on light microscopy. The immunohistochemistry and electron microscopy findings were in keeping with this. His complement levels were normal and his lupus serology negative. He remained on ciclosporin therapy for 8 years and had two further renal biopsies to detect ciclosporin-induced renal damage. Both biopsies showed evidence of increasing amounts of C1q deposition on immunohistochemistry and the presence of immune deposits on electron microscopy. As he had continued negative lupus serology, this was compatible with a diagnosis of C1q nephropathy. In addition both biopsies had changes compatible with chronic mild ciclosporin nephrotoxicity. This case is the first report describing in detail a paediatric patient with evolving C1q nephropathy who was treated successfully with rituximab. We discuss the role of C1q in this clinicopathological entity and question its significance.
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PMID:C1q nephropathy: a true immune complex disease or an immunologic epiphenomenon? 2598 17

Bartter syndrome can manifest in three different forms and is rarely concomitant with glomerular nephropathies. However, this association is more frequently observed in children. We report the case of a 50-year-old woman with Gitelman syndrome for the past 30 years who also had a nephrotic syndrome of recent appearance. Her renal biopsy revealed hyperplasia of the juxtaglomerular apparatus and mesangial deposits of C1q, with no clinical or serological evidence of systemic erythematous lupus. We have not found any reports of instances of association of Gitelman syndrome and nephrotic syndrome arising from C1q nephropathy in adult patients. Our case suggests the possible existence of an association between hypokalaemic tubular nephropathies and glomerular nephropathies that may cause nephrotic syndrome.
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PMID:C1q nephropathy in a patient with Gitelman syndrome. 2598 2

C1q nephropathy is considered a form of glomerulonephritis, defined by histological findings of dominant Clq immune deposits in renal biopsy. It is a rare disease, most often manifested in children and young adults. The most common clinical manifestation of the disease is nephrotic syndrome, but other renal syndromes could also be found. The cause of the disease is not known, but the immune pathogenesis could be assumed. Often, resistance to glucocorticoid or other immunosuppressive therapy is present, potentially leading to chronic renal insufficiency. We present ten patients with renal biopsy and clinical findings of Clq nephropathy. None of the patients had clinical or serological manifestations of systemic lupus. All patients had normal findings of C3 and C4 components of complement, as well as normal ANF, anti-dsD-NA and ANCA antibodies.
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PMID:[C1Q NEPHROPATHY: CASE REPORTS AND LITERATURE REVIEW]. 2674 50