A 74-year-old womanwith erythropoietic protoporphyria (EPP) with hepatic dysfunction is reported. She had been photosensitive for two years prior to admission. Physical examination revealed hepatosplenomegaly and erosions on her face. Moderate increases in serum bilirubin and biliary tract enzymes were noted. Histology of the biopsied liver revealed moderate fibrosis and dilatation of bile canaliculi containing orange pigment. Marked increases in protoporphyrin in erythrocytes and feces were noted. The patient died of hepatic failure a year and a half after admission with maximumserum bilirubin of 34 mg/dl. This patient seems to be the oldest among reported EPP cases with liver dysfunction. (Internal Medicine 33: 802-805, 1994)
To determine the contribution of the ovary to the development of glomerulosclerosis, we investigated the effect of ovariectomy on glomerulosclerosis, using the unilaterally nephrectomized (Nx) female Sprague-Dawley rat. At 6 weeks of age, groups 2 and 3 underwent unilateral right nephrectomy and group 3 was simultaneously ovariectomized, while group 1 underwent a sham operation. Body weight, blood pressure, urinary protein, serum albumin, cholesterol, blood urea nitrogen and serum creatinine were checked every 2 months from 2 to 12 months after right nephrectomy. Control group 1, the Nx group 2 and the ovariectomized (Nx + ovariectomized) group 3 were studied morphologically at 6 and 12 months after nephrectomy. Body weight significantly increased in ovariectomized rats as compared with control and Nx rats. Nx rats became proteinuric with age. Ovariectomy significantly reduced proteinuria to the same levels in the controls. The glomerulosclerosis index was significantly higher in Nx rats than in either controls or ovariectomized rats. Ovariectomy attenuated glomerular injury in Nx rats, though not to the same levels in the control rats. Three groups showed no significant differences in either blood pressure or plasma somatomedin C. Growth hormone (GH) was significantly decreased by ovariectomy. The severity of glomerular injury and the glomerular tuft volume correlated with GH levels. Our results suggested that a decrease in plasma GH may contribute to the attenuating effect of ovariectomy on the development of glomerular injury in aging unilaterally Nx female Sprague-Dawley rats.
Hypercalciuria in the absence of urolithiasis has been considered to be a cause of asymptomatic hematuria. No mechanism for this association has been demonstrated. In an effort to establish the specificity of this association, we induced hypercalciuria in 10 healthy subjects by oral administration of l,25(OH)2 vitamin D for 10 days. This protocol reproducibly produced markedly increased urinary calcium excretion (mean calciumxreatinine ratio 0.5). Despite this, no subject developed hematuria as seen by dipstick urinalysis or by alteration in erythrocyte Addis counts (mean counts 1.02 × 106/12 h before vitamin D and 0.84 × 106/ 12 h after 10 days of therapy). This study provides no evidence that short-term hypercalciuria alone produces hematuria in otherwise healthy individuals.
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