Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UNIPROT:P41181 (collecting duct)
5,183 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

The kidney involvement in leptospirosis appears to be a special form of acute renal failure due to a higher frequency of polyuric forms and the presence of hypokalemia with an elevated urinary fractional excretion of potassium. Using a clearance technique, we detected higher fractional urinary potassium excretion in leptospirotic guinea pigs (26.5 +/- 4.7%) than in normal animals (14.1 +/- 2.8%, p < 0.05). After blocking distal NaCl reabsorption with furosemide, it was observed that in leptospirotic animals both fractional sodium excretion (40.0 +/- 7.4%) and fractional potassium excretion (136.3 +/- 32.7%) were higher than in normal animals (20.4 +/- 3.8%, p < 0.05, and 43.6 +/- 9.0%, p < 0.05, respectively). Microperfusion studies showed that the normal and leptospirotic medullary thick ascending limb had both identical transepithelial potential difference (+3.7 +/- 0.4 vs. 3.9 +/- 0.2 mV) and relative sodium-to-chloride permeability. The same technique showed that the osmotic water permeability (Posm; 0.9 +/- 0.4 x 10(-5) cm/s.atm) and diffusional permeability (34.7 +/- 6.6 x 10(-5) cm/s) observed in the leptospirotic inner medullary collecting duct (IMCD) in the presence of vasopressin were unchanged, as was also the case for urea permeability (3.74 +/- 0.7 x 10(-5) cm/s). These data show that acute renal failure in leptospirosis is characterized by tubular changes leading to potassium secretion probably due to a decrease in proximal sodium reabsorption. Furthermore, the inability to concentrate urine evidenced by the low P(o)sm present in leptospirotic animals is due, at least in part, to IMCD resistance to vasopressin.
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PMID:Renal involvement in leptospirosis: a pathophysiologic study. 143 48

Leptospirosis is an acute septicemic illness that affects humans in all parts of the world. Approximately 10% of patients with leptospirosis develop severe disease, the Weil syndrome, with jaundice, acute kidney injury (AKI), and pulmonary hemorrhage. Leptospirosis-induced AKI is typically nonoliguric with a high frequency of hypokalemia. Experimental and clinical studies demonstrated that tubular function alterations precede a drop in the glomerular filtration rate and are mainly in the proximal tubule. Studies in humans and animals have demonstrated a decrease in the expression of proximal sodium (NHE3) and water tubular transporter, aquaporin 1 (AQP1) together with higher renal expression of the Na-K-2Cl cotransporter NKCC2. In an experimental model, at the initial phase of the disease, the expression of AQP2, the water transport of the collecting duct, is decreased, which explains the higher incidence of nonoliguric AKI. During the recovery phase of AKI, AQP2 expression increased in human and animals as a compensatory mechanism. Alveolar hemorrhage, pulmonary edema, acute respiratory distress syndrome, or a combination of these features may accompany AKI and is associated with high mortality. Studies with hamsters demonstrated that in leptospirosis a noncardiogenic pulmonary edema occurs consequently to a decrease in the clearance of alveolar fluid, due to a decrease in sodium transporter in the luminal membrane (ENaC) and an increase in the NKCC1 basolateral membrane transporter. Antibiotic treatment is efficient in the early and late/severe phases and revert all kidney transporters. Early and daily hemodialysis, low daily net fluid intake, and lung-protective strategies are recommended for critically ill patients with leptospirosis.
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PMID:Pathophysiology of leptospirosis. 2348 97