Results 221 to 230 of about 132,152 (259)
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Glomerulonephritis

The Lancet, 1999
The differential diagnosis of glomerulonephritis without systemic disease includes poststreptococcal glomerulonephritis, IgA nephropathy, rapidly progressive glomerulonephritis (RPGN), and membranoproliferative glomerulonephritis (MPGN). Glomerular inflammation is probably induced directly by a nephritogenic streptococcal protein in poststreptococcal ...
J M, Durand, S, Burtey
openaire   +4 more sources

Glomerulonephritis

Pediatrics in Review, 2023
Glomerulonephritis (GN) encompasses several disorders that cause glomerular inflammation and injury through an interplay of immune-mediated mechanisms, host characteristics, and environmental triggers, such as infections. GN can manifest solely in the kidney or in the setting of a systemic illness, and presentation can range from chronic and relatively
Vahakn Shant, Keskinyan   +2 more
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Glomerulonephritis

The Lancet, 2005
The term glomerulonephritis encompasses a range of immune-mediated disorders that cause inflammation within the glomerulus and other compartments of the kidney. Studies with animal models have shown the crucial interaction between bone-marrow-derived inflammatory cells and cells intrinsic to the kidney that is both fundamental and unique to the ...
S J, Chadban, R C, Atkins
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Acute glomerulonephritis

The Lancet, 2022
Glomerulonephritis is a heterogeneous group of disorders that present with a combination of haematuria, proteinuria, hypertension, and reduction in kidney function to a variable degree. Acute presentation with full blown nephritic syndrome or rapidly progressive glomerulonephritis is uncommon and is mainly restricted to patients with post-infectious ...
Sanjeev, Sethi   +2 more
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Glomerulonephritis

DMW - Deutsche Medizinische Wochenschrift, 2013
Glomerulonephritides represent a heterogenous group of diseases with different pathophysiology. A definitive diagnosis requires a renal biopsy. The differentiation between a primary or secondary glomerulonephritis is of major clinical relevance, because most secondary forms resolve once the primary cause is treated properly.
J, Floege, A, Bienert
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Glomerulonephritis

Current Opinion in Nephrology and Hypertension, 1993
Advances in cell and molecular biology have generated fresh insights into the mechanisms of glomerular injury, a field with very few substantial advances in the past 20 years. Currently, the nature of renal antigens involved in the immune reaction is being identified, as in the case of Goodpasture antigen.
G, Remuzzi, C, Zoja, T, Bertani
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