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Nephrotic syndrome

2014
Nephrotic syndrome refers to excessive proteinuria, with associated hypoalbuminemia, edema, and hyperlipidemia. A diverse spectrum of disorders has been associated with nephrotic syndrome and related neurologic complications, although the relative infrequency of these cases limits conclusive associations. Neurologic manifestations of nephrotic syndrome
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Congenital nephrotic syndrome

Pediatric Nephrology, 1987
Congenital nephrotic syndrome (CNS) is an uncommon disorder. Several different diseases may cause the syndrome. These may be inherited, sporadic, acquired or part of a general malformation syndrome. The problems associated with nephrotic syndrome in early infancy are divided into three parts: diagnosis, treatment and prenatal diagnosis.
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Congenital nephrotic syndrome

The Journal of Pediatrics, 1959
Summary The clinical course and postmortem findings of 18 infants with the congenital nephrotic syndrome are presented. The infants came from 12 families with a total of 49 children, 37 per cent of whom were affected with CNSY. Eleven other infants in these sibships were born prematurely and died soon after birth.
N, HALLMAN, L, HJELT
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The Nephrotic Syndrome

New England Journal of Medicine, 1948
THE "nephrotic syndrome" is one of the most striking phenomena of renal disease. The combination of gross edema, hypoproteinemia, hypercholesterolemia, lipidemia and heavy proteinuria, in the absen...
S E, BRADLEY, C J, TYSON
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Congenital Nephrotic Syndrome

Nephron, 1973
Congentital nephrotic syndrome (CNS) is an uncommon disorder. Several different diseases may cause the syndrome. These may be inherited, sporadic, acquired or part of a general malformation syndrome. The problems associated with nephrotic syndrome in early infancy are divided into three parts: diagnosis, treatment and prenatal diagnosis.
N, Hallman, R, Norio, J, Rapola
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The Nephrotic Syndrome

New England Journal of Medicine, 1958
Diagnosis The diagnosis of the overt form of the nephrotic syndrome is usually a simple matter. When edema is the presenting complaint, the unmistakable laboratory evidences of the nephrotic syndrome will be found. In a few cases edema is not the presenting complaint; in fact, the patient may never have had edema.
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Polycyclic nephrotic syndrome

The American Journal of Medicine, 1957
Abstract A detailed report is presented of a patient in whom there were at least six and possibly eight separate episodes of the nephrotic syndrome without proteinuria in remissions. Other examples of polycyclic nephrotic syndrome with two to four cycles of relapse are reviewed.
D A, RYTAND, A J, COX
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The Nephrotic Syndrome

Pediatric Clinics of North America, 1971
Definition and classification. Developments in diagnosis and treatment, including a preliminary report of the International Cooperative Study.
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Nephrotic Syndrome

Pediatrics in Review, 1993
R C, Kelsch, A B, Sedman
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Nephrotic Syndrome in Children

Current Opinion in Pediatrics, 1993
Proteinuria in children with idiopathic nephrotic syndrome is secondary to a loss of charge selectivity of the glomerular basement membrane. Loss of anionic charges may be secondary to a defect of heparan sulfate proteoglycans, which is also found in the congenital nephrotic syndrome, or to cationic proteins, which neutralize the anionic charges of the
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