glomerular proteinuria
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F1000Research ◽  
2022 ◽  
Vol 10 ◽  
pp. 1146
Author(s):  
Ikram Mami ◽  
Jihen Hsinet ◽  
Syrine Tlili ◽  
Hela Jebali ◽  
Ilhem Ben Othmani ◽  
...  

A 57-year-old male who had been working in masonry for 33 years was hospitalized for renal function decline associated with exertional dyspnea. He presented with hypertension and limb edema. Urinalysis revealed an active urine sediment with glomerular proteinuria at 1.5 g/24h and the renal biopsy identified mesangial IgA Nephropathy. Chest tomography scans showed signs of silicosis. The patient received Angiotensin-Converting Enzyme Inhibitors with stable renal function. To our knowledge, the association of silicosis-IgA nephropathy has rarely been reported in the literature. This case highlights the effect of chronic exposure to silica dust and its association with both silica and renal disease.


F1000Research ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 10 ◽  
pp. 1146
Author(s):  
Ikram Mami ◽  
Jihen Hsinet ◽  
Syrine Tlili ◽  
Hela Jebali ◽  
Ilhem Ben Othmani ◽  
...  

A 57-year-old male who had been working in masonry for 33 years was hospitalized for renal function decline associated with exertional dyspnea. He presented with hypertension and limb edema. Urinalysis revealed an active urine sediment with glomerular proteinuria at 1.5 g/24h and the renal biopsy identified mesangial IgA Nephropathy. Chest tomography scans showed signs of silicosis. The patient received Angiotensin-Converting Enzyme Inhibitors with stable renal function. To our knowledge, the association of silicosis-IgA nephropathy has rarely been reported in the literature. This case highlights the effect of chronic exposure to silica dust and its association with both silica and renal disease.


Author(s):  
Andrea Domingo-Gallego ◽  
Marc Pybus ◽  
Leire Madariaga ◽  
Juan Alberto Piñero-Fernández ◽  
Sara González-Pastor ◽  
...  

Abstract Background Proteinuria is a well-known risk factor for progressive kidney impairment. Recently, C-terminal cubilin (CUBN) variants have been associated with isolated proteinuria without progression of kidney disease. Methods Genetic testing of 347 families with proteinuria of suspected monogenic cause was performed by next-generation sequencing of a custom-designed kidney disease gene panel. Families with CUBN biallelic proteinuria-causing variants were studied at the clinical, genetic, laboratory, and pathologic levels. Results Twelve families (15 patients) bearing homozygous or compound heterozygous proteinuria-causing variants in the C-terminal CUBN gene were identified, representing 3.5% of the total cohort. We identified 14 different sequence variants, five of which were novel. The median age at diagnosis of proteinuria was 4 years (range 9 months to 44 years), and in most cases proteinuria was detected incidentally. Thirteen patients had moderate-severe proteinuria at diagnosis without nephrotic syndrome. These patients showed lack of response to angiotensin-converting enzyme inhibitor (ACEi) and angiotensin receptor blocker (ARB) treatment, normal kidney biopsy, and preservation of normal kidney function over time. The two remaining patients presented a more severe phenotype, likely caused by associated comorbidities. Conclusions Identification of C-terminal pathogenic CUBN variants is diagnostic of an entity characterized by glomerular proteinuria, normal kidney histology, and lack of response to ACEi/ARB treatment. This study adds evidence and increases awareness about albuminuria caused by C-terminal variants in the CUBN gene, which is a benign condition usually diagnosed in childhood with preserved renal function until adulthood.


Nephrology ◽  
2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Laura Gobbi ◽  
Elena Naso ◽  
Luca Dal Santo ◽  
Marny Fedrigo ◽  
Dorella Del Prete ◽  
...  

Author(s):  
Rashim Salota ◽  
Marta Lapsley ◽  
Ekramun Nabi ◽  
Simon Packer ◽  
Steve Hyer ◽  
...  

Background- Retinol-binding protein4 (RBP) assays using polyclonal antibodies (pRBP) have major problems of non-linearity of dilution and a very small useable dynamic range. Our objective was to develop a specific assay with a wider dynamic range to detect tubular proteinuria. Methods: mRBP (monoclonal capture and second antibody with colorimetric detection) and fRBP, (polyclonal capture and monoclonal second antibody with fluorescence detection) were developed and compared with pRBP. 488 patient samples were collected- 290 samples were analysed by mRBP and 198 samples with fRBP and compared with pRBP. Results: mRBP assay has the advantages of better linearity on dilution and wider analytical range over pRBP. It is limited by poor signal in the patients with albuminuria and glomerular proteinuria and inferior discrimination between patient groups. fRBP had an intra-assay and inter-assay CV of <6% and <8% respectively; and analytical range was 2.3-599 µg/L. fRBP was linear on dilution within the analytical range. Correlation (r) was 0.8722(95% CI 0.7621 to 0.9333, p< 0.0001), Mann-Whitney test revealed no significant difference (U= 18877, n=198, p = 0.5244) asserting that the medians of the two samples were identical. Bland-Altman test between pRBP and fRBP showed a mean negative bias of 16.43(CI -994 to 1027) μg/mmol Conclusion: The combination assay with fluorescence detection (fRBP) proved more discriminatory than a purely monoclonal system especially in patients with significant proteinuria and has advantages of better linearity on dilution and wider analytical range than the existing pRBP assay and compared extremely well with pRBP.


2021 ◽  
Vol 16 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Myriam Dao ◽  
Jean-Baptiste Arnoux ◽  
Frank Bienaimé ◽  
Anaïs Brassier ◽  
François Brazier ◽  
...  

Abstract Background Chronic kidney disease (CKD) is one of the main long-term prognosis factors in methylmalonic acidemia (MMA), a rare disease of propionate catabolism. Our objective was to precisely address the clinical and biological characteristics of long-term CKD in MMA adolescent and adult patients. Patients and methods In this retrospective study, we included MMA patients older than 13 years who had not received kidney and/or liver transplantation. We explored tubular functions, with special attention to proximal tubular function. We measured glomerular filtration rate (mGFR) by iohexol clearance and compared it to estimated glomerular filtration rate (eGFR) by Schwartz formula and CKD-EPI. Results Thirteen patients were included (M/F = 5/8). Median age was 24 years (13 to 32). Median mGFR was 57 mL/min/1.73 m2 (23.3 to 105 mL/min/1.73 m2). Ten out of 13 patients had mGFR below 90 mL/min/1.73 m2. No patient had significant glomerular proteinuria. No patient had complete Fanconi syndrome. Only one patient had biological signs suggestive of incomplete proximal tubulopathy. Four out of 13 patients had isolated potassium loss, related to a non-reabsorbable anion effect of urinary methylmalonate. Both Schwartz formula and CKD-EPI significantly overestimated GFR. Bias were respectively 16 ± 15 mL/min/1.73 m2 and 37 ± 22 mL/min/1.73 m2. Conclusion CKD is a common complication of the MMA. Usual equations overestimate GFR. Therefore, mGFR should be performed to inform therapeutic decisions such as dialysis and/or transplantation. Mild evidence of proximal tubular dysfunction was found in only one patient, suggesting that other mechanisms are involved.


2021 ◽  
Vol 22 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Qi Chen ◽  
Xiaoyi Wang ◽  
Jingjing Min ◽  
Lin Wang ◽  
Lijun Mou

Abstract Background Gitelman syndrome (GS) is an autosomal recessive inherited salt-losing tubulopathy (SLT). Here, we describe, for the first time, a case of GS without Gitelman-like features and with concomitant kidney stones, cysts and diabetic nephropathy (DN). Case presentation We described a male patient had a 19-year history of recurrent fatigue. From childhood, he had polydipsia and polyuria, paroxysmal tetany and palpitation. Serum biochemistry revealed chronic hypokalemia, metabolic alkalosis, normomagnesemia, mildly elevated Cr. Concomitant 24 h urine collection showed inappropriate renal potassium wasting, borderline hypercalciuria, moderate proteinuria consisting of major glomerular. Ultrasound of urinary tract showed bilateral and multiple kidney stones and cysts. Whole exome sequencing (WES) identified compound heterozygous mutations of SLC12A3. The unusual association of SLTs and glomerular proteinuria prompted us to perform a renal biopsy. Renal pathology showed renal involvement consistent with GS and early stage of diabetic nephropathy (DN). After treatment with KCl, magnesium oxide, perindopril and acarbose, the patient had been cured. The fatigue didn’t relapse. Conclusion GS had high variability of phenotype, GS may have no Gitelman-like features, kidney stones are not the exclusion criteria of GS. Renal biopsy should be warranted for GS patients with moderate to massive glomerular proteinuria.


Author(s):  
Acaris Benetti ◽  
Flávia Letícia Martins ◽  
Letícia B Sene ◽  
Maria Heloísa Massola Shimizu ◽  
Antonio Carlos Seguro ◽  
...  

This study investigated the molecular mechanisms underlying the antiproteinuric effect of DPP4 inhibition in 5/6 renal ablation rats and tested the hypothesis that the urinary activity of DPP4 correlates with chronic kidney disease (CKD) progression. Experiments were conducted in male Wistar rats who underwent 5/6 nephrectomy (Nx) or sham operation, followed by 8 weeks of treatment with the DPP4 inhibitor (DPP4i) sitagliptin or vehicle. Proteinuria increased progressively in Nx rats throughout the observation period. This increase was remarkably mitigated by sitagliptin. Higher levels of proteinuria in Nx rats compared to control rats were accompanied by higher urinary excretion of retinol-binding protein 4 (RBP4), a marker of tubular proteinuria, as well as higher urinary levels of podocin, a marker of glomerular proteinuria. RBP4 and podocin were not detected in the urine of Nx+DPP4i rats. Tubular and glomerular proteinuria was associated with the reduced expression of megalin and podocin in the renal cortex of Nx rats. Sitagliptin treatment partially prevented this decrease. Besides, the angiotensin II renal content was significantly reduced in the Nx rats that received sitagliptin compared to vehicle-treated Nx rats. Interestingly, both urinary DPP4 activity and abundance increased progressively in Nx rats. Additionally, urinary DPP4 activity correlated positively with serum creatinine levels, proteinuria, and blood pressure. Collectively, these results suggest that DPP4 inhibition ameliorated both tubular and glomerular proteinuria and prevented the reduction of megalin and podocin expression in CKD rats. Furthermore, these findings suggest that urinary DPP4 activity may serve as a biomarker of renal disease and progression.


2020 ◽  
Vol 319 (6) ◽  
pp. F988-F999
Author(s):  
Jennifer R. Charlton ◽  
Weizhen Tan ◽  
Ghaleb Daouk ◽  
Lisa Teot ◽  
Seymour Rosen ◽  
...  

Pathogenic variants in the LRP2 gene, encoding the multiligand receptor megalin, cause a rare autosomal recessive syndrome: Donnai-Barrow/Facio-Oculo-Acoustico-Renal (DB/FOAR) syndrome. Because of the rarity of the syndrome, the long-term consequences of the tubulopathy on human renal health have been difficult to ascertain, and the human clinical condition has hitherto been characterized as a benign tubular condition with asymptomatic low-molecular-weight proteinuria. We investigated renal function and morphology in a murine model of DB/FOAR syndrome and in patients with DB/FOAR. We analyzed glomerular filtration rate in mice by FITC-inulin clearance and clinically characterized six families, including nine patients with DB/FOAR and nine family members. Urine samples from patients were analyzed by Western blot analysis and biopsy materials were analyzed by histology. In the mouse model, we used histological methods to assess nephrogenesis and postnatal renal structure and contrast-enhanced magnetic resonance imaging to assess glomerular number. In megalin-deficient mice, we found a lower glomerular filtration rate and an increase in the abundance of injury markers, such as kidney injury molecule-1 and N-acetyl-β-d-glucosaminidase. Renal injury was validated in patients, who presented with increased urinary kidney injury molecule-1, classical markers of chronic kidney disease, and glomerular proteinuria early in life. Megalin-deficient mice had normal nephrogenesis, but they had 19% fewer nephrons in early adulthood and an increased fraction of nephrons with disconnected glomerulotubular junction. In conclusion, megalin dysfunction, as present in DB/FOAR syndrome, confers an increased risk of progression into chronic kidney disease.


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