A combination of HPA and serum PG assays, plus scheduling endoscopy accordingly, is a cost-effective method of screening for gastric cancer risk in Japan.
Although the clinical benefits of antiviral treatment in the management of membranous nephropathy (MN) in patients with chronic hepatitis B virus (HBV) infection have been suggested, it should be evaluated more carefully. In this report, we present two cases with quiescent HBV who were administered lamivudine for either the initial treatment of MN or to control the reactivation of HBV during treatment with corticosteroids. No clinical benefit of lamivudine as an initial treatment was observed in one patient, which obliged us to commence administration of prednisolone (PSL). On the other hand, lamivudine seemed to play a pivotal role in the remission of an acute exacerbation of hepatitis B during treatment with PSL and mizoribine in the other patient. These two patients seemed to tolerate administration of PSL with or without an immunosuppressive agent well, since gradual and prompt improvements of nephrotic status were confirmed within a few months, thus suggesting the potential benefit of steroid treatment. There is little consensus regarding the optimal choice of steroids and immunosuppressants for the treatment of MN with chronic HBV infection, due to the potential for stimulation of viral replication and precipitation of hepatic flares. Our observations, however, suggest that treatment with PSL still should be reserved for quiescent HBV carriers with MN. Further studies will be required to determine the optimal timing and appropriate duration of antiviral treatment in such patients requiring long-term immunosuppression.
This report presents a case of nephrotic syndrome and renal failure that developed in a 53-year-old female with metastatic breast carcinoma. She was diagnosed to have osteolytic bone metastases 5 years prior to admission, and had been administered pamidronate with a total dose of approximately 6800 mg. A renal biopsy revealed tubulointerstitial damage and marked wrinkling and retraction of the glomerular basement membrane with hypertrophy and hyperplasia of the epithelial cells, compatible with the collapsing form of focal segmental glomerulosclerosis (FSGS). Despite the discontinuation of pamidronate after admission, her renal function gradually decreased. She was finally managed with continuous palliative care for advanced malignancy through a shared effort, and died 96 days after undergoing the renal biopsy. Although the clinical impact of the pamidronate-associated kidney injury on the longitudinal changes in renal function remains to be delineated, it is therefore reasonable to consider that the collapsing FSGS associated with tubulointerstitial damage may have resulted in the irreversible renal injuries that were observed in the current case. Further studies and accumulated experience with renal biopsy are required to better determine the relationship between pathological alterations and prognostic characteristics among patients with pamidronate-associated renal impairments.
We describe a case of recurrent deterioration of renal function in a 54-year-old man who was found to have metabolic alkalosis, with a maximum PaCO(2) of 73.9 mmHg and a bicarbonate concentration of 55.3 mmol/l. He had a gradual exacerbation of nausea and vomiting due to atrophic gastritis, with a scarred, deformed pyloric part of the stomach and a duodenal bulb secondary to chronic peptic ulcer. His metabolic alkalosis and deteriorated renal function were corrected by intravenous saline with or without potassium chloride. However, his recovered creatinine clearance was at most 60 l/day (41.6 ml/min). A renal biopsy revealed cellular infiltration of mononuclear cells and atrophic change in the tubulointerstitium, suggesting chronic interstitial nephritis. Latent renal insufficiency and dehydration induced by protracted vomiting may easily induce a rapid and recurrent deterioration of renal function, and control of vomiting seemed to be the cardinal measure. Initially, his nausea and vomiting seemed to be successfully controlled by medication, however, they later became persistent and surgical correction of the stomach was carried out. Postoperative recovery was smooth, and the patient's vomiting and recurrent deterioration of renal function finally settled.
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