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         Glomerular Diseases:     more books (33)
  1. Renal Disease: Classification and Atlas of Glomerular Diseases by Jacob Churg, 1982-12
  2. Color atlas of kidney biopsy: Pathology of glomerular diseases by Wolfgang Rotter, 1985
  3. Pathology of Glomerular Disease (Contemporary Issues in Surgical Pathology) (Vol 1)
  4. The Official Patient's Sourcebook on Glomerular Disease: A Revised and Updated Directory for the Internet Age by Icon Health Publications, 2002-07
  5. Renal biopsy in glomerular diseases: Clinical, histological, immunohistological and electron-microscopic studies by Edit Beregi, 1978-01-01
  6. Nephrology... Obstruction, Stones and Tumours ... Glomerular Disease by A. W. & Moffat, D. B. & Sanders, E. Asscher, 1984
  7. Atlas of Glomerular Disease: Morphological and Clinical Correlation by Priscilla Kincaid-Smith, John P. Dowling, et all 1985-01
  8. Renal Glomerular Disease (Topics in Renal Disease) by P. Sharpstone, J.A. Trafford, 1981-05-31
  9. Slide Atlas of Nephrology. Obstuction, Stones and Tumours. Glomerular Disease. by A. William. [and] David B. Moffat. Eric Sanders. Asscher, 1984
  10. The Epidemic Challenge of Chronic Kidney Disease in Older Patients by MBChB, MSc, MRCP(UK), MD Ahmed H. Abdelhafi Z, MBChB, MRCP(UK) Evelyn Tan, et all 2010-05-17
  11. Glomerular Filtration Rate Is Used to Redefine Kidney Disease.: An article from: Internal Medicine News by Mitchel L. Zoler, 2001-07-15
  12. Pathophysiology of Renal Disease by Burton David Rose, 1987-03-01
  13. The Official Patient's Sourcebook on Glomerular Disease A Revised and Updated Directory for the Internet Age by Icon Health Publications, 1980
  14. Renal Glomerular Diseases: Atlas of Electron Microscopy with Histopathological Bases and Immunofluorescence Findings by Jonas Valaitis, 2002-08-14

61. BookFinder.com: Renal Glomerular Diseases: Atlas Of Electron Microscopy With His
Renal glomerular diseases Atlas of Electron Microscopy with Histopathological Bases and Immunofluorescence Findings. by Jonas Valaitis.
http://www.bookfinder.com/dir/i/Renal_Glomerular_Diseases-Atlas_of_Electron_Micr
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Renal Glomerular Diseases:
Atlas of Electron Microscopy with Histopathological Bases and Immunofluorescence Findings
by Jonas Valaitis
ISBN: Title: Renal Glomerular Diseases: Atlas of Electron Microscopy with Histopathological Bases and Immunofluorescence Findings Author: Jonas Valaitis Publisher: American Society for Clinical Pathology Edition: Hardcover Found a mistake in this data?
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62. Glomerular Diseases-WKMG-TV Health Center
glomerular diseases damage the glomeruli, letting protein and sometimes red blood cells leak into the urine. What are the symptoms of glomerular disease?
http://wkmg-tvhealth.ip2m.com/index.cfm?pt=itemDetail&item_id=466&site_cat_id=15

63. T HTML HEAD META Http - Equiv = Content - Type
HTML HEAD META http equiv = Content - Type content = text / html ; charset = UTF - 1 6 TITLE glomerular diseases / TITLE STYLE
http://www.acpmedicine.com/abstracts/sam/med1005.htm
Glomerular Diseases Abstract March 2000 Section 10 Nephrology V Glomerular Diseases Stuart J. Shankland, M.D. Associate Professor of Medicine and Director, Nephrology Fellowship Program, Division of Nephrology, University of Washington School of Medicine © 2004 WebMD Inc. All Rights Reserved. WebMD Professional Publishing, P.O. Box 1819, Danbury CT 06813 (800-545-0554 or 203-790-2087)

64. Best Practice Medicine-Professional Reference - Primary Glomerular
BEST PRACTICE REPORT, Management Highlights. •, Primary glomerular diseases must be differentiated from glomerular diseases arising as a part of a generalized
http://merck.micromedex.com/index.asp?page=bpm_brief&article_id=CPM01NP266

65. Diseases Of The Glomerulus
Diseases of the Glomerulus. glomerular diseases. Nephrotic syndrome. Causes of immune complex GN in cats. Familial glomerular diseases. Amyloidosis. Amyloidosis.
http://www.vet.ohio-state.edu/docs/VM602/ppt/glom/outlinec.htm
Diseases of the Glomerulus
Glomerular diseases

Nephrotic syndrome

Components of the Glomerulus
Diseases of the Glomerulus
Glomerular diseases

Nephrotic syndrome

Components of the Glomerulus
...
Glomerular disease: Prognosis

66. R E N A L S E R V I C E
Discussion groups. glomerular diseases. Back to discussion groups list. Subject, Author, Date. New discussion. Alex s Goldfarb, 200107-17. ReNew discussion.
http://www.renalservice.com/discussion.php3?discussion=1&thread=3

67. NEJM -- Sign In
can nowadays successfully substitute for renal function when kidneys have failed, there are almost no effective treatments for chronic glomerular diseases.
http://content.nejm.org/cgi/content/full/337/17/1250

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68. NEJM -- Glomerulonephritis
In the United States alone, glomerular diseases accounted for 51 percent of the 305,876 cases of treated endstage renal disease that were reported to the US
http://content.nejm.org/cgi/content/extract/339/13/888
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Previous Volume 339:888-899 September 24, 1998 Number 13 Next Glomerulonephritis
Donald E. Hricik, M.D., Moonja Chung-Park, M.D., and John R. Sedor, M.D. Since this article has no abstract, we have provided an extract of the first 100 words of the full text and any section headings.
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Diseases involving the renal glomeruli are encountered frequently in clinical practice and are the most common causes of end-stage renal disease worldwide. In the United States alone, glomerular diseases accounted for 51 percent of the 305,876 cases of treated end-stage renal disease that were reported to the U.S. Renal Data System between 1991 and 1995, including 115,938 cases of diabetic nephropathy (37.9 percent) and 41,333 cases of nondiabetic glomerular disease (13.5 percent). Some common glomerular diseases do not cause progressive renal failure but are important causes of morbidity and sources of considerable medical expense.

69. JN 2002; Vol.15 N°5: 469-479
Virusrelated glomerular diseases Histological and clinical aspects. TABLE II - VIRAL INFECTIONS INVOLVED IN glomerular diseases (see text for references).
http://www.sin-italia.org/jnonline/vol15n5/belgiojoso/belg.html
Table of Contents Review J NEPHROL 2002; 15: 469-479 Virus-related glomerular diseases: Histological and clinical aspects Giovanni Barbiano di Belgiojoso, Francesca Ferrario, Nicoletta Landriani - Renal Unit, "L. Sacco" Hospital, Milano - Italy ABSTRACT: Viral infections can be the causative agent in many glomerular diseases, and diagnostic criteria include clinical and laboratory data and tissue molecular analysis. Hepatitis B virus (HBV) is a well known cause of membranous glomerulonephritis (MGN), membranoproliferative GN (MPGN) and IgA nephropathy (IgAN), frequently in Asian populations. Hepatitis C virus (HCV), besides cryoglobulinemia-mediated glomerulonephritis (GN), is reported to cause other forms of GN. Human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) infection is closely related to a collapsing focal segmental glomerulosclerosis (FSGS), a distinct disease that affects mainly Africans and African-Americans. In the course of HIV infection other immune complex (IC) GN can occur, most frequently in whites. Nephrotic syndrome and progression to renal insufficiency are the main clinical manifestations. HIV-HCV co-infection is related to an IC glomerular disease, sometimes with immunotactoid deposits.
Recent reports emphasize the role of parvovirus B19 (PV B19) for "idiopathic" collapsing FSGS and ICGN, and of Coxsackie B virus for IgAN. Renal biopsy is useful for defining virus-related glomerular lesions and a guide for prognostic and therapeutic evaluation.

70. AJKD - Atlas Of Renal Pathology
Primary glomerular diseases. glomerular diseases That Cause Nephrotic Syndrome. Secondary glomerular diseases. Diseases Associated With Nephrotic Syndrome.
http://www3.us.elsevierhealth.com/ajkd/atlas/
Primary Glomerular Diseases
Glomerular Diseases That Cause Nephrotic Syndrome
Non-Immune Complex:
Immune Complex:
Glomerular Diseases That Cause Hematuria Or Nephritic Syndrome
Secondary Glomerular Diseases
Diseases Associated With Nephrotic Syndrome
Monoclonal Immunoglobulin Deposition Disease (MIDD):
Other:
Immune Mediated:
Non-immune Mediated:

71. Ingenta: Article Summary -- Glomerular Diseases In The Elderly In India
glomerular diseases in the elderly in India International Urology and Nephrology 2003, vol. 35, no. 2, pp. 283288(6) Prakash J.1
http://www.ingenta.com/isis/searching/ExpandTOC/ingenta?issue=pubinfobike://klu/

72. Scripta Academica Lundensis Dissertations From
proteinuria can be a good marker of the overall severity of the glomerular and tubulointerstitial damage, and therefore, the prognosis of glomerular diseases.
http://www.lub.lu.se/cgi-bin/show_diss.pl?db=global&fname=med_900.html

73. Untitled Document
Several reports in various glomerular diseases showed improvement or stabilization of renal function in majority of patients treated with MMF.
http://www.ijnephrol.com/janmar2004/17.htm
We found significant improvement in proteinuria along with improvement in serum albumin and creatinine clearance in majority of steroid resistant or dependant MCN. It also induced partial remission in one patient with MGN and in two patients with FSGS and induced complete remission in two out of three patients with LN type IV, and in one patient with MGN. Whether remission is sustained after stopping MMF needs to be seen.
In the doses used in our study , MMF showed minimal side effects and in general, was tolerated well and none of the patients needed stoppage of the drug, because of any side effects but the chances of a patient developing lymphoproliferative disorders or the long term adverse sequelae of intensive immunosuppression need to be watched for.
There are limitations of present study as it comprises small number of patients and it is not a controlled clinical trial.
This study, however does confirm the efficacy of MMF in the treatment of primary glomerular diseases like MCN, FSGS , MGN and lupus nephritis in patients with normal renal function or mild chronic renal failure.

74. Korean Standard Classification Of Diseases
glomerular diseases(N00N08) Exclusion hypertensive renal disease(I12.-) Use additional code, if desired, to indicate ? external
http://www.nso.go.kr/eng/standards/edis/n00-08.shtml
Glomerular diseases(N00-N08) Exclusion £ºhypertensive renal disease(I12.-) Use additional code, if desired, to indicate: ? external cause, e.g. shunt, radiation, etc. (Chapter XX) ? presence of renal failure (N17-N19) The following fourth-character subdivisions are for use with categories N00-N07. They classify morphological changes and should not normally be used unless these have been identified by renal biopsy or autopsy. The three-character categories relate to clinical syndromes. .0 Minor glomerular abnormality Minimal change lesion .1 Focal and segmental glomerular lesions Focal and segmental hyalinosis Focal and segmental sclerosis Focal glomerulonephritis .2 Diffuse membranous glomerulonephritis .3 Diffuse mesangial proliferative glomerulonephritis .4 Diffuse endocapillary proliferative glomerulonephritis .5 Diffuse mesangiocapillary glomerulonephritis Membranoproliferative glomerulonephritis, types 1 and 3, or NOS .6 Dense deposit disease Membranoproliferative glomerulonephritis, type 2 .7 Diffuse crescentic glomerulonephritis Extracapillary glomerulonephritis .8 Other Proliferative glomerulonephritis NOS .9 Unspecified

75. Faculty Profile - Dr. Couser
National Kidney Foundation Western Association of Physicians CLINICAL INTERESTS Immune renal diseases glomerular diseases Glomerulonephritis Nephrotic syndrome
http://depts.washington.edu/nephron/couser.htm
EDUCATION AND TRAINING
M.D., Dartmouth Medical School (1961-63), Harvard Medical School (1963-65)
Medicine residency, University of California, San Francisco (1965-67), Boston City Hospital, Boston, MA (1967-69)
Nephrology fellowship, Boston City Hospital, Boston, MA (1969-71), University of Chicago, Chicago, IL (1971-72)
William G. Couser, B.M.S., M.D.
Belding H. Scribner Professor of Medicine;
Division of Nephrology, University of Washington;
Director, George M. O'Brien Kidney Research Center
Dr. William Couser (UW Nephrology; Director, George M. O'Brien Kidney Research Center; Belding H. Scribner Professor of Medicine). Dr. Couser is Director of the O'Brien Center (Renal Response to Injury) and of the basic research training grant (Research Training in Renal Disease). His clinical interests are in immune renal diseases. His laboratory studies mechanisms of immune glomerular injury and proteinuria in animal models of glomerular disease. Studies in the past have been directed at defining mechanisms of immune deposit formation in the glomerulus and studying the role of complement and complement regulatory proteins in mediating and modulating glomerular and interstitial injury. Dr. Couser's research is supported by the O'Brien Center and an R01 grant from the NIH.
CONTACT INFORMATION

UWMC Division of Nephrology 1959 N.E. Pacific St./Box 356521/BB1265 H.S.B.

76. Drexel University College Of Medicine Faculty Group Practice: TopDocsOnline.com-
A number of different diseases can result in glomerular disease. HIV, the virus that leads to AIDS, can also cause glomerular disease.
http://www.topdocsonline.com/practices/PracticeInfo.asp?ID=50132&PracID=18

77. PEG: Glomerular Disease In Children
A newly established register of paediatric glomerular disease has accrued information from is rising in common with other immune mediated diseases of childhood
http://www.peg.leeds.ac.uk/glomerular.html
Paediatric Epidemiology Group
Who we are Where we are Current work Funding ... Links
Childhood Glomerular Disease Home Current work Childhood Glomerular disease
A newly established register of paediatric glomerular disease has accrued information from the Yorkshire region with a view to determining whether the incidence of nephrotic syndrome is rising in common with other immune mediated diseases of childhood such as asthma and diabetes. Results have shown stable rates but a fivefold excess incidence in South Asian children (presented at the Royal College of Paediatricians meeting, York 2000). Back to Current work
Paediatric Epidemiology Group, 30 Hyde Terrace, Leeds, LS2 9LN Tel: 0113 343 4842 Back to Top

78. Glomerulonephritis - VeterinaryPartner.com - A VIN Company!
Albumin can be lost (urinated away) in glomerular disease, lost in the intestinal tract in certain GI diseases, or simply underproduced in liver disease.
http://www.veterinarypartner.com/Content.plx?P=A&A=1352&S=1&SourceID=42

79. Entrez PubMed
glomerular Mesangium/immunology; glomerular Mesangium/pathology; Glomerulosclerosis, Focal Human; Immunoglobulins/analysis; Kidney diseases/genetics*; Kidney diseases
http://www.facultyof1000.com/pubmed/12764198
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Science. 2003 May 23;300(5623):1298-300. Related Articles, Links
CD2-associated protein haploinsufficiency is linked to glomerular disease susceptibility. Kim JM, Wu H, Green G, Winkler CA, Kopp JB, Miner JH, Unanue ER, Shaw AS.

80. Medical Illustrations
A biopsy may be helpful in confirming glomerular disease and identifying the cause. A number of different diseases can result in glomerular disease.
http://www.thomgraves.com/illustrations.htm
Medical illustrations Illustrations in a variety of styles and applications including: Medical Cartoons, Magazine and newspaper illustrations and Advertising and Graphic Design sample art works. The signs and symptoms of glomerular disease include proteinuria: large amounts of protein in the urine hematuria: blood in the urine reduced glomerular filtration rate: inefficient filtering of wastes from the blood hypoproteinemia: low blood protein edema: swelling in parts of the body One or more of these symptoms can be the first sign of kidney disease. But how would you know, for example, whether you have proteinuria? Before seeing a doctor, you may not. But some of these symptoms have signs, or visible manifestations: Proteinuria may cause foamy urine. Blood may cause the urine to be pink or cola-colored. Edema may be obvious in hands and ankles, especially at the end of the day, or around the eyes when awakening in the morning, for example. Urinalysis provides information about kidney damage by indicating levels of protein and red blood cells in the urine. Blood tests measure the levels of waste products such as creatinine and urea nitrogen to determine whether the filtering capacity of the kidneys is impaired. If these lab tests indicate kidney damage, the doctor may recommend ultrasound or an xray to see whether the shape or size of the kidneys is abnormal. These tests are called renal imaging. But since glomerular disease causes problems at the cellular level, the doctor will probably also recommend a kidney biopsya procedure in which a needle is used to extract small pieces of tissue for examination under different types of microscopes, each of which shows a different aspect of the tissue. A biopsy may be helpful in confirming glomerular disease and identifying the cause.

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