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1.
Exercise-induced acute renal failure without rhabdomyolysis is not a rare condition. We experienced 6 cases (5 men and a woman) during last the 8 years. All cases complained of severe loin pain and nausea after mild to moderate exercises (for example, a track race in an athletic meeting). The elevation of serum and urinary myoglobin was undetected. In 4 of 5 patients with abdominal CT, renal patchy vasoconstriction (wedge-shaped low-density lesion) was observed. This was diagnosed as exercise-induced acute renal failure with loin pain (serum creatinine levels: 1.7-8.6 mg/dl). The renal function in 5 of the 6 cases normalized in about three weeks by fluid replacement therapy and hemodialysis support, which one patient received for 3 days. One patient required a long time for improvement of renal function and renal insufficiency persisted (serum creatinine 1.8 mg/dl). In 2 patients, the concentration of serum uric acid became very low after the recovery of renal function. These two patients were diagnosed as an isolated hyperuricosuric hypouricemia. More than half of the 6 patients had previously experienced the same episodes (loin pain and nausea) after exercise. Exercise-induced acute renal failure, probably due to renal patchy vasoconstriction, seems to be not a rare disease. The etiology of renal patchy vasoconstriction after exercises remains to be elucidated. The occurrence of acute renal failure must be taken into consideration when the youngster, especially with renal hypouricemia, complains of severe loin pain and nausea after exercise such as a track race.  相似文献   

2.
Exercise-induced acute renal failure in 3 patients with renal hypouricemia   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2  
Three cases of exercise-induced non-oliguric acute renal failure in patients with renal hypouricemia, an isolated defect of the renal urate transport system, are described. During acute renal failure, the serum uric acid levels were 5.6, 2.7 and 5.8 mg/dl, respectively, and were within normal limits. The values representing the fractional excretion of uric acid (FEUA) were 28.7, 60.0 and 12.7%, with accompanying serum creatinine levels of 8.1, 3.9 and 3.3 mg/dl, respectively. After recovery, the serum uric acid fell to 0.6, 0.7 and 1.0 mg/dl and the FEUA increased to 79.3, 52.8 and 43.2%, respectively. Two of the patients examined exhibited decreased reabsorption of filtered urate. These 3 examples of renal hypouricemia represented 23% of 13 cases of mild exercise-induced acute renal failure encountered within our experience.  相似文献   

3.
We here report the case of a 38-year-old male with back pain and vomiting occurring after exercise. Serum creatinine level was elevated, and he was admitted to our hospital with diagnosis of acute renal failure (ARF). He had experienced similar attacks at least 4 times, including the present episode, from the age of 22 years. After admission, the patient was managed only by resting, and remission was nearly attained in about 1 month. The renal biopsy specimen performed on day 15 showed findings of acute tubular necrosis, thickening of the tubular basement membrane, and interstitial fibrosis. After remission, the serum uric acid level was 0.7-0.8 mg/dl, fractional excretion of uric acid was 0.63, and the possibility of other diseases facilitating the excretion of uric acid was denied. Therefore, ARF associated with idiopathic renal hypouricemia was diagnosed. Since only mild responses were observed in a pyradinamide loading test and a benzbromarone loading test, the case was considered to be a presecretary reabsorption disorder type. Renal function tests showed the almost complete recovery of the glomerular filtration rate (GFR: 114 ml/min/1.73 m2), but the urine concentrating ability was markedly decreased (specific gravity 1.019 and osmolarity 516 mOsm/kgxH2O in Fishberg test). Past data from this patient indicated that this renal dysfunction had been persisting for ten years. We examined 9 patients with renal hypouricemia and focused on the differences between the two groups (with or without complications). Four patients had a history of exercise-induced ARF or calculus. The urine concentrating ability was significantly lower in these patients (group A) than in the other patients without complications (group B). The glomerular filtration rate in group A was within the normal range, but was lower than in group B. These results suggested the possibility that patients with renal hypouricemia with complications may have chronic renal dysfunction in the future.  相似文献   

4.
Exercise-induced acute renal failure in a patient with renal hypouricemia   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2  
We describe a case of exercise-induced acute renal failure (ARF) in a patient with hypouricemia. Following recovery from ARF, the patient’s serum urate concentration was 0.6–0.9 mg/dl, and the ratio of urate clearance to creatinine clearance (C ua/C Cr) was 41.9%–56.6%. There was no change in the C ua/C Cr following the administration of pyrazinamide or probenecid, suggesting defects of tubular urate/anion exchangers. Because the renal biopsy revealed acute tubular necrosis without uric acid crystals, the ARF of this patient might be due to oxygen free radicals resulting from exercise stress and hypouricemia. Received: 15 March 1999 / Revised: 10 September 1999 / Accepted: 14 September 1999  相似文献   

5.
We present two cases of a 12-year-old Japanese boy and a 14-year-old Japanese girl who had exercise-induced acute renal failure (ARF). They experienced general fatigue, nausea/vomiting, and vague discomfort in the abdomen after physical exercise at school. In case of the boy, abdominal pain subsided, but renal dysfunction lasted 17 days, with peak levels of creatinine 9.4 mg/dl and uric acid 11.3 mg/dl. On the other hand, as the girl had suffered from hypouricemia before, she followed a doctor’s guidance on prevention of ARF. Consequently, she was promptly diagnosed as having exercise-induced ARF associated with hypouricemia, and rapidly recovered from ARF within a week. The difference between their clinical courses suggested a possibility that previous laboratory evaluation of serum uric acid assisted in the management of exercise-induced ARF associated with hypouricemia. School-aged children, especially Japanese and Asian, may be advised to have their serum uric acid measured before starting physical training at school.  相似文献   

6.
BACKGROUND: A retrospective investigation was conducted to define the clinical features of exercise-induced acute renal failure (ARF) associated with renal hypouricaemia with the aim of clarifying further the clinical features of the disease entity. METHODS: A questionnaire was mailed to 43 institutions in Japan that had experienced case(s) of exercise-induced ARF associated with renal hypouricaemia. Fifty-four patients (48 males and six females) were identified from 38 institutions. RESULTS: Median age at the first episode of ARF was 17 years (range 11-46). The maximal serum uric acid and creatinine levels were 4.40+/-2.49 (range 0.4-13.3) and 5.45+/-3.33 mg/dl (range 1.10-17.7), respectively. The serum uric acid level after recovery was 0.70+/-0.25 mg/dl (range 0.1-1.4). The short-term prognosis seemed to be good and histological findings in 28 patients showed minimal change or acute tubular necrosis except for one patient with chronic lesions. ARF episodes occurred predominantly in September, October and May, mostly after strenuous exercise such as a short-distance race. The first symptoms were nausea/vomiting in 51 episodes, loin pain in 35, abdominal pain in 22, general fatigue in 16 and low-grade fever in seven. Thirteen patients (24.1%) experienced recurrent ARF at various intervals. Univariate and multivariate analyses failed to demonstrate any risk factor of ARF recurrence, although no female patients experienced ARF recurrence. CONCLUSIONS: The reason for the heterogeneity in ARF associated with renal hypouricaemia remains unknown. Further studies, especially on molecular mechanisms, are required to establish the best guidance against ARF recurrence.  相似文献   

7.
A 22-year-old man had recurrent exercise-induced acute renal failure (ARF). He was found to have isolated renal hypouricemia: serum uric acid level was 0.7–1.0 mg/dl and fractional excretion of uric acid (FEUA) was 37%–43%. He showed no suppression of FEUA following the the administration of pyrazinamide, and no increase of FEUA after benzbromarone, suggesting a subtotal defect. We investigated renal function, FEUA, and serum nitric oxide after a treadmill exercise test in our patient and two control subjects. On the day after the exercise test, plain and enhanced abdominal computed tomography (CT) scans were performed in our patient. During the arterial phase, early equilibration phase, equilibration phase, and 2, 6, and 24 h after the injection of contrast medium, renal CT scans were performed at the same slice level. Although ARF was not induced by this level of exercise, the CT scans showed patchy contrast enhancement 2, 6, and 24 h after contrast medium administration. This finding suggests that patchy renal vasoconstriction may occur in patients with renal hypouricemia after strenuous exercise, even in the setting of normal creatinine clearance. Received: June 19, 1998 / Accepted: September 4, 1998  相似文献   

8.
This report is a 17-year-old man with an acute renal failure who complained of nausea, vomiting, bilateral loin pain and abdominal pain after scuffle. Renal biopsy specimen obtained from the left kidney revealed acute tubular necrosis. After recovering renal function he showed extreme hypouricemia (serum uric acid, 0.6 mg/dl) and elevated uric acid clearance (62-78 ml/min). The fractional excretion of uric acid (CUA/Ccr) could not be influenced by either oral pyrazinamide or probenecid. As no other renal tubular or metabolic abnormalities were detected, it is suggested that presecretory reabsorption defect or subtotal defect in uric acid transportation was responsible for the hypouricemia in this patient.  相似文献   

9.
Oh KJ  Lee HH  Lee JS  Chung W  Lee JH  Kim SH  Lee JS 《Clinical nephrology》2006,66(4):297-301
Acute renal failure (ARF) with severe loin pain induced by anaerobic exercise is a rare condition that is accompanied by wedge-shaped contrast enhancement seen on computerized tomographic (CT) scan without evidence of rhabdomyolysis. An 18-year-old Korean male was transferred to our hospital for evaluation of mild azotemia, that developed after anaerobic exercise. The laboratory tests revealed that the serum creatinine was 2.1 mg/dl and the serum uric acid level was 1.6 mg/dl without any elevation of the serum myoglobin or creatine phosphokinase. Under the impression of exercise-induced ARF, we tried to determine the relationship between the occurrence of clinical symptoms, renal dysfunction and the characteristic CT findings by observing those changes prospectively before and after anaerobic exercise. After obtaining a written consent, the patient underwent a strenuous period of anaerobic exercise to induce the clinical symptoms. Before exercise, he was completely asymptomatic; his serum creatinine level was 0.9 mg/dl and CT scan of the kidneys showed no abnormalities. Loin pain developed 2 hours after exercise, and the serum creatinine level increased to 1.2 mg/dl 18 hours after the exercise. CT scan 18 hours after exercise showed multiple perfusion defects, and a 24-hour delayed CT scan showed multiple areas of wedge-shaped enhancement on both kidneys. These changes were completely resolved on the follow-up CT scan obtained 13 days after exercise with the return of a normal serum creatinine level. We conclude that reversible renal vasoconstriction is probably the main pathophysiologic mechanism of acute renal failure induced by anaerobic exercise.  相似文献   

10.
We describe a 12-year-old boy with renal hypouricaemia who presented with acute renal failure after a 6-h sports training session. Back and loin pain were noted at presentation. Although serum creatinine and blood urea nitrogen were elevated, the serum uric acid concentration was normal (2.6 mg/dl). This decreased to 0.3 mg/dl after recovery. The pyrazinamide and probenecid tests revealed that the cause of renal hypouricaemia in this patient was totally defective uric acid reabsorption. Acute renal failure after exercise is a rare but serious complication in paediatric patients with renal hypouricaemia.  相似文献   

11.
Renal hypouricemia is a clinical disorder attributed to an increased renal urate excretion rate and is well known to involve a high risk of urolithiasis and exercise-induced acute kidney injury (AKI). This report concerns two interesting cases of nephrotic syndrome (NS)-induced AKI associated with renal hypouricemia. A 64-year-old female (Case 1) and a 37-year-old male (Case 2) were hospitalized because of AKI (serum creatinine: 2.07 mg/dl and 3.3 mg/dl, respectively), oliguria and NS. They were treated with prednisolone and temporary hemodialysis. Renal function improved, but hypouricemia persisted during hospitalization. Histological findings in both cases led to a diagnosis of minimal change nephrotic syndrome and identification of the diuretic phase of tubulointerstitial damage because of findings such as acute tubular necrosis. Furthermore, distal tubules of Case 2 showed an amorphous mass, possibly a uric acid crystal. Analysis of the two cases with the URAT1 gene, encoded by SLC22A12, found a homozygous mutation in exon 4 (W258stop) of each one. Our cases show that patients with renal hypouricemia may be susceptible to AKI without involvement of exercise if they possess some facilitators. Renal hypouricemic patients should therefore be carefully examined for all complications from renal hypouricemia because of high risk of AKI.  相似文献   

12.
13.
Mutational analysis of idiopathic renal hypouricemia in Korea   总被引:5,自引:0,他引:5  
Idiopathic renal hypouricemia is a hereditary disease characterized by abnormally high renal uric acid clearance. Most patients are clinically silent, but acute renal failure (ARF), urolithiasis, or hematuria may develop. A defect in the SLC22A12 gene, which encodes the renal uric acid transporter, URAT1, is the known major cause of this disorder. We performed a mutational analysis of the SLC22A12 gene in five Korean patients with idiopathic renal hypouricemia in this study. Two patients presented with microscopic hematuria, one with uric acid urolithiasis, and one with exercise-induced ARF. One patient was asymptomatic. Three different mutations, W258X, R90H and R477H, were detected in four of the patients. However, no mutation was found in the fifth ARF patient. This is the first study of SLC22A12 mutations in a country other than Japan. W258X was found to be the predominant SLC22A12 mutation in Korean renal hypouricemia patients, as has been reported in Japan.  相似文献   

14.
AIMS: The prognosis of renal cholesterol crystal embolism (CCE) is poor. Although various treatments for CCE have been attempted, there is no optimal therapy. We tested the effect of low-dose prednisolone (PS) on CCE-related acute renal failure (ARF). PATIENTS AND METHODS: 7 patients (mean age 69 years) diagnosed with CCE-related ARF were treated with oral PS at 15-20 mg/day for 2-4 weeks, which was then tapered at 5 mg/day over 2-4 weeks, followed by 5 mg/day maintenance dose. Recurrent ARF during PS tapering was treated with a larger dose of PS. RESULTS: Inciting factors were identified in four patients: coronary angiography (n=3) and cerebral angiography (n=1). On admission, serum creatinine (SCr) was 2.1 +/- 0.3 mg/dl (mean +/- SEM). SCr and eosinophil count before treatment were 4.2 +/- 0.4 mg/dl and 682 +/- 73/microl, respectively. PS therapy improved ARF in all cases at week 2 (SCr 3.8 +/- 0.5 mg/dl) parallel to a decrease in eosinophilia (116 +/- 30/microl), and at week 4 (3.1 +/- 0.4 mg/dl and 134 +/- 20/microl, respectively). At last follow-up, renal function was improved or maintained in 5 patients compared with that at week 4 post-treatment. One patient died of lung cancer. Another required LDL apheresis and hemodialysis but died due to CCE-related multi-organ failure. A third patient had recurrent ARF and was re-treated with a larger dose of PS, which resulted in an immediate decrease in SCr. However, the patient developed acute renal dysfunction due to congestive heart failure, and required hemodialysis. CONCLUSIONS: Low-dose PS improved CCE-related ARF, probably through amelioration of inflammatory reaction surrounding affected renal vessels.  相似文献   

15.
Familial renal hypouricemia is a hereditary disease characterized by extraordinary high renal uric acid (UA) clearance and is associated with acute renal failure (ARF). A 17-year-old Japanese male developed ARF after anerobic exercise. Renal function improved completely after approximately 2 weeks of hydration treatment. After remission, hypouricemia became evident (1.0 mg/dL) from the initial level of UA (4.8 mg/dL) and fractional excretion of uric acid (FEUA) was >50%. His parents showed normal levels of UA and FEUA. Polymerase chain reaction of a urate anion exchanger known to regulate UA level [SLC22A12 gene: UA transporter 1 (URAT1)] demonstrated compound heterozygous mutations (Q297X and R90H). Thus, we describe a Japanese male with hypouricemia complicated by anerobic exercise-induced ARF, with definite demonstration of a genetic abnormality in the responsible gene, URAT1.  相似文献   

16.
The prognosis of renal cholesterol crystal embolism (CCE) is poor, and many patients progressively develop to the end-stage of chronic renal failure. We herein experienced a 66-year-old male patient who recovered from hemodialysis (HD) shortly after an amputation of inflammatory toes. The patient complained of painful digital cyanosis at bilateral toes and livedo reticularis at right lower leg 4 weeks following aortic angiography. Laboratory examinations revealed eosinophilia and overt proteinuria (3.0 g/day). His serum creatinine level increased from 2.18 to 8.57 mg/dl over 6 weeks, and HD treatment was started. Treatment with simvastatin (5 mg/day) did not reverse renal failure and hypereosinophilia, but the amputation of right gangrene toes promptly increased urine output and eosinophilia completely disappeared concomitantly with a decline of C-reactive protein from 9.7 to 0.7 mg/dl. Serum creatinine level was also reduced to 3.46 mg/dl, and he eventually stopped HD totally after 32 sessions. This case suggested that the surgical amputation promptly recovered renal function. Reversal of inflammation may be more effective than lipid-lowering therapy for renal failure in our patient.  相似文献   

17.
We describe a 41-year old man with obsessive-compulsive neurosis who developed acute renal failure (ARF) due to acute interstitial nephritis (AIN) during 6 weeks of treatment with clomipramine hydrochloride (CPH). He had a slight fever, mild arthralgia, appetite loss, and diarrhea after taking CPH. On admission, he showed serum creatinine (sCr) of 7.31 mg/dl, and creatinine clearance (Ccr) of 2.5 ml/min. He subsequently became anuric and required hemodialysis. Renal biopsy revealed AIN with diffuse mononuclear cell infiltration. After the withdrawal of CPH and treatment with prednisolone (PSL) 0.5 mg/kg per day, his urinary output improved, along with improvement of his renal function; therefore hemodialysis was finally discontinued. To our knowledge, this is the first case report of AIN induced by clomipramine.  相似文献   

18.
A 45-year-old woman had hypouricemia (serum uric acid, 1.0-2.3 mg/dl) with increased uric acid clearance (29.8 +/- 9.3 ml/min/1.73 m2). Uric acid clearance to creatinine clearance ratio (Cua/Ccr) was suppressed markedly by pyrazinamide to 2.3% and surprisingly enhanced by probenecid to 227.8%. No other renal tubular or metabolic abnormalities were detected. This previously unreported high postprobenecid Cua/Ccr suggests that markedly increased urate secretion by the renal tubule is responsible for hypouricemia in this patient.  相似文献   

19.
Smoking in young men may trigger anti-GBM disease manifesting with hemoptysis. We present a male adolescent in whom hemoptysis was mistaken to be a sign of airway infection for several months and who later on underwent an unusual antibody-negative relapse. The 16-year-old patient had a history of smoking and therapy-refractant hemoptysis and, later, acute macrohematuria with renal insufficiency necessitating hemodialysis (initial creatinine 4.2 mg/ dl). Chest X-ray showed diffuse lung infiltration. Renal biopsy revealed linear IgG deposits along the glomerular basement membrane (GBM) and cellular crescents in 13/16 glomeruli, simultaneously increased anti-GBM antibodies were detected. Thus, anti-GBM glomerulonephritis was diagnosed. After treatment with prednisone, oral cyclophosphamide and plasmapheresis, chest X-ray and hemoptysis improved, but renal failure persisted. Anti-GBM antibodies were negative. 4 weeks later, the patient presented again with a clinical relapse of severe hemoptysis and respiratory insufficiency after smoke exposition. Despite negative anti-GBM antibodies, he was treated similarly to a relapse and after the second course of plasmapheresis the patients' general condition improved and hemoptysis subsided. During the next 10 months the patient was stable with negative antibodies. He was under intermittent hemodialysis until laboratory measurements showed improved renal function. Now, 30 months after the acute episode, the patient is off dialysis for 17 months with stable creatinine values of 1.9 - 2.4 mg/dl, and is currently being treated with antihypertensive medicaments, calcitriol, calciumacetate, natriumhydrogencarbonate and allopurinol. The prognosis of anti-GBM glomerulonephritis depends on serum creatinine and the need of dialysis at initial presentation. In these patients, one-year survival rate is 67% and 5% for kidney function. Of note, despite the unfavorable prognosis in our patient, renal function recovered after 1 year of hemodialysis treatment. It is important to consider that in patients with anti-GBM disease antibody-negative relapses are possible.  相似文献   

20.
The findings of diffuse tubular injury with abundant tubular calcium phosphate deposits on renal biopsy are referred to as nephrocalcinosis, a condition typically associated with hypercalcemia. During the period from 2000 to 2004, 31 cases of nephrocalcinosis were identified among the 7349 native renal biopsies processed at Columbia University. Among the 31 patients, 21 presented with acute renal failure (ARF), were normocalcemic, and had a history of recent colonoscopy preceded by bowel cleansing with oral sodium phosphate solution (OSPS) or Visicol. Because the precipitant was OSPS rather than hypercalcemia, these cases are best termed acute phosphate nephropathy. The cohort of 21 patients with APhN was predominantly female (81.0%) and white (81.0%), with a mean age of 64.0 yr. Sixteen of the 21 patients had a history of hypertension, 14 (87.5%) of whom were receiving an angiotensin-converting enzyme inhibitor or angiotensin receptor blocker. The mean baseline serum creatinine was 1.0 mg/dl, available within 4 mo of colonoscopy in 19 (90.5%) patients. Patients presented with ARF and a mean creatinine of 3.9 mg/dl at a median of 1 mo after colonoscopy. In a few patients, ARF was discovered within 3 d of colonoscopy, at which time hyperphosphatemia was documented. Patients had minimal proteinuria, normocalcemia, and bland urinary sediment. At follow-up (mean 16.7 mo), four patients had gone on to require permanent hemodialysis. The remaining 17 patients all have developed chronic renal insufficiency (mean serum creatinine, 2.4 mg/dl). Acute phosphate nephropathy is an underrecognized cause of acute and chronic renal failure. Potential etiologic factors include inadequate hydration (while receiving OSPS), increased patient age, a history of hypertension, and concurrent use of an angiotensin-converting enzyme inhibitor or angiotensin receptor blocker.  相似文献   

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