Proteinuria in atherosclerotic renovascular disease

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Abstract

Proteinuria is well described in atherosclerotic renovascular disease (ARVD), but the prevalence is unknown, and the pathogenesis may vary between patients. Substantial proteinuria (> 2 g/day) however, would be regarded by many as atypical of ARVD. We studied 94 patients (52 male) with ARVD, median age 67 years (range 49-87). Digital subtraction angiography was performed on all patients. Protein was assayed in 24-h urine samples and GFR derived using the Cockroft-Gault formula. Forty-nine patients (52%) had proteinuria < 0.5 g/24 h. Proteinuria increased with worsening renal function. Biopsies from seven non-diabetic patients with substantial proteinuria showed: minimal changes (1); glomerular sclerosis with marked ischaemic changes (3); focal glomerulosclerosis (2); and athero-emboli (1). Proteinuria, rather than being indicative of other pathology, is often a marker of severity of parenchymal disorder in atherosclerotic nephropathy, which itself is the major determinant of renal dysfunction in patients with ARVD.

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APA

Makanjuola, A. D., Suresh, M., Laboi, P., Kalra, P. A., & Scoble, J. E. (1999). Proteinuria in atherosclerotic renovascular disease. QJM: An International Journal of Medicine, 92(9), 515–518. https://doi.org/10.1093/qjmed/92.9.515

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