Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0730345 (microalbuminuria)
4,018 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

A 15-year clinical follow-up is reported for a familial glomerulopathy characterized on light microscopy by the glomerular deposition of giant fibrillary deposits (Virchows Arch A Pathol Anat Histol 388:313-326, 1980). On electron microscopy, the deposits consist of randomly oriented fibrils (12 to 16 nm in width and 120 to 170 nm in length). These deposits show positive immunoreactivity for fibronectin. One hundred fifty-seven of 197 family members within five generations were investigated. The disease is characterized by the occurrence of albuminuria in the third to fourth decades of life and slow progression to end-stage renal disease over a period of 15 to 20 years with the occurrence of generalized distal tubular acidosis (renal tubular acidosis type IV), hypertension, and the nephrotic syndrome. The frequent occurrence of otherwise unexplained microalbuminuria in young individuals of generations IV and V could be indicative of incipient glomerular disease. In one affected male individual and in his unaffected sister, renal cell carcinoma was diagnosed, raising the possibility that this familial glomerulopathy might be associated with an increased risk to develop renal cell cancer by direct or indirect (associated genetic predisposition) mechanisms. The disease relapsed in one renal transplant, raising the possibility of the presence of a transferable factor that could be part of the deposited fibrillar material or, alternatively, interfere with the glomerular handling of the deposited material.
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PMID:Familial glomerulopathy with giant fibrillar (fibronectin-positive) deposits: 15-year follow-up in a large kindred. 915 3

We examined renal abnormalities in Greek patients with sickle-cell beta thalassemia (S-beta thal). A total of 17 patients aged 16-59 years suffering from S-beta thal and 17 age- and sex-matched healthy controls were studied. In all individuals we carried out a detailed study of renal function including electrolytes in serum and urine, concentrating or diluting ability, urine acidification ability, glomerular filtration rate (GFR), and hormones [such as plasma renin activity (PRA), serum aldosterone, and erythropoietin (EPO)]. Though the GFR did not differ significantly in patients and controls, half the patients had either supranormal or subnormal values. Serum potassium and uric acid were significantly higher in patients than controls. Serum phosphorus was similar in both groups, though patients with S-beta thal had significantly lower phosphate excretion indices. All patients were unable to maximally concentrate the urine, and seven also had limited ability to maximally dilute it. Five patients had incomplete distal renal tubular acidosis. Four had mild proteinuria, and six had microalbuminuria. Serum EPO and aldosterone were higher in S-beta thal patients than controls, but there was no difference in PRA between the two groups. There was a strong correlation between hemoglobin concentration and EPO levels, which was strongest in patients with GFR < 50 ml/min. We conclude that patients with S-beta thal, like sickle-cell anemia patients, present multiple abnormalities of renal function.
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PMID:Renal abnormalities in patients with sickle cell-beta thalassemia. 923 25