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Query: UMLS:C0730345 (
microalbuminuria
)
4,018
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Previous studies of diabetic patients indicate that increased urinary excretion of certain plasma proteins (molecular radii <55 A), such as IgG, transferrin, and
ceruloplasmin
, precede the development of
microalbuminuria
. Moreover, increases in these urinary proteins predict future development of
microalbuminuria
. To clarify whether blood pressure changes influence urinary excretion of these proteins, we examined relationships between diurnal blood pressure changes measured by ambulatory blood pressure monitoring and urinary excretion of IgG, transferrin,
ceruloplasmin
, alpha2-macroglobulin (88 A) and albumin (36 A) measured separately during the day and night in 20 healthy controls and 26 normotensive, normoalbuminuric diabetic patients. Diurnal change in systolic blood pressure was not correlated to urinary excretion of either albumin or alpha2-macroglobulin in either diabetic patients or controls. However, statistically significant correlations between diurnal changes in systolic blood pressure and those of urinary excretion of IgG, transferrin and
ceruloplasmin
were found in diabetic patients but not in controls. The present findings suggest that urinary excretion of IgG, transferrin, and
ceruloplasmin
are more easily affected than albuminuria by systemic blood pressure changes in normoalbuminuric diabetic patients. This is supported by our previous finding that urinary excretion of IgG, transferrin and
ceruloplasmin
increased while albuminuria did not following enhanced glomerular filtration rate after acute protein loading, which causes increased glomerular capillary pressure due to afferent arterioles dilation, mimicking diabetic intra-renal hemodynamics. Taken together, these findings suggest that urinary excretion of IgG, transferrin, and
ceruloplasmin
may be more sensitive indicators of glomerular capillary pressure change than albuminuria in normoalbuminuric diabetic patients.
...
PMID:Diurnal changes in urinary excretion of IgG, transferrin, and ceruloplasmin depend on diurnal changes in systemic blood pressure in normotensive, normoalbuminuric type 2 diabetic patients. 1967 Jan 6
Diabetic kidney disease is the leading cause of end-stage renal disease in developed and developing countries.
Microalbuminuria
is the gold standard for detection and prediction of diabetic kidney disease and cardiovascular risk disease in clinical practice. However,
microalbuminuria
has several limitations, such as lower sensitive, larger variability. It is urgent to explore higher sensitivity and specificity for earlier detection of diabetic kidney disease and more accurate prediction of the progression to end stage renal disease. We reviewed some new and important urinary biomarkers, such as: transferrin, immunoglobulin G, immunoglobulin M, Cystanic C, podocytes, type IV collagen, 8-oxo-7, 8-dihydro-2'-deoxyguanosine,
ceruloplasmin
, monocyte chemoattractant protein-1 and so on. We need good quality, long-term, large longitudinal trials to validate published biomarkers and find new biomarkers, considering biomarkers reviewed here are from small cross-sectional studies.
...
PMID:New urinary biomarkers for diabetic kidney disease. 2425 92
Diabetic nephropathy (DN) is a frequent and severe complication of diabetes mellitus (DM). Its diagnosis in incipient stages may allow prompt interventions and an improved prognosis. Towards this aim, biomarkers for detecting early DN can be used.
Microalbuminuria
has been proven a remarkably useful biomarker, being used for diagnosis of DN, for assessing its associated condition-mainly cardiovascular ones-and for monitoring its progression. New researches are pointing that some of these biomarkers (i.e., glomerular, tubular, inflammation markers, and biomarkers of oxidative stress) precede albuminuria in some patients. However, their usefulness is widely debated in the literature and has not yet led to the validation of a new "gold standard" biomarker for the early diagnosis of DN. Currently,
microalbuminuria
is an important biomarker for both glomerular and tubular injury. Other glomerular biomarkers (transferrin and
ceruloplasmin
) are under evaluation. Tubular biomarkers in DN seem to be of a paramount importance in the early diagnosis of DN since tubular lesions occur early. Additionally, biomarkers of inflammation, oxidative stress, podocyte biomarkers, and vascular biomarkers have been employed for assessing early DN. The purpose of this review is to provide an overview of the current biomarkers used for the diagnosis of early DN.
...
PMID:Urinary Biomarkers in the Assessment of Early Diabetic Nephropathy. 2741 55