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person:alin06
Is it cerebral or renal salt wasting?
Maesaka, John K; Imbriano, Louis J; Ali, Nicole M; Ilamathi, Ekambaram
Cerebral salt-wasting (CSW), or renal salt-wasting (RSW), has evolved from a misrepresentation of the syndrome of inappropriate secretion of antidiuretic hormone (SIADH) to acceptance as a distinct entity. Challenges still confront us as we attempt to differentiate RSW from SIADH, ascertain the prevalence of RSW, and address reports of RSW occurring without cerebral disease. RSW is redefined as 'extracellular volume depletion due to a renal sodium transport abnormality with or without high urinary sodium concentration, presence of hyponatremia or cerebral disease with normal adrenal and thyroid function.' Our inability to differentiate RSW from SIADH lies in the clinical and laboratory similarities between the two syndromes and the difficulty of accurate assessment of extracellular volume. Radioisotopic determinations of extracellular volume in neurosurgical patients reveal renal that RSW is more common than SIADH. We review the persistence of hypouricemia and increased fractional excretion of urate in RSW as compared to correction of both in SIADH, the appropriateness of ADH secretion in RSW, and the importance of differentiating renal RSW from SIADH because of disparate treatment goals: fluid repletion in RSW and fluid restriction in SIADH. Patients with RSW are being incorrectly treated by fluid restriction, with clinical consequences. We conclude that RSW is common and occurs without cerebral disease, and propose changing CSW to RSW.
PMID: 19641485
ISSN: 1523-1755
CID: 2388782
Oral paricalcitol in the treatment of patients with CKD and proteinuria: a randomized trial
Fishbane, Steven; Chittineni, Harini; Packman, Michal; Dutka, Paula; Ali, Nicole; Durie, Nicole
BACKGROUND: Vitamin D has key roles in regulating systems that could be important in the pathobiological state of proteinuria. Because of this, it could be helpful in treating patients with proteinuric renal diseases. The objective is to determine the effect of oral paricalcitol on protein excretion in patients with proteinuric chronic kidney disease. STUDY DESIGN: Double-blind randomized study. SETTING & PARTICIPANTS: 61 patients with estimated glomerular filtration rate of 15 to 90 mL/min/1.73 m(2) and protein excretion greater than 400 mg/24 h. INTERVENTION: Randomization to 6 months of treatment with paricalcitol, 1 mug/d, or placebo. OUTCOMES & MEASUREMENTS: The predefined primary end point was to compare change in mean spot urinary protein-creatinine ratio between the baseline measurement and the last study evaluation (6 months in study completers) between the 2 groups. Every 4 weeks, there was measurement of serum intact parathyroid hormone, serum calcium, serum phosphorus, serum creatinine, and urine spot protein and creatinine. RESULTS: At baseline, mean urinary protein-creatinine ratios were 2.6 and 2.8 g/g in the placebo and paricalcitol groups, respectively. At final evaluation, mean ratios were 2.7 and 2.3, respectively. Changes in protein excretion from baseline to last evaluation were +2.9% for controls and -17.6% for the paricalcitol group (P = 0.04). A 10% decrease in proteinuria occurred in controls (7 of 27; 25.9%) and the paricalcitol group (16 of 28; 57.1%; P = 0.03). LIMITATIONS: The relatively small sample size limits the extent to which results should be generalized. CONCLUSIONS: Paricalcitol resulted in a significant reduction in protein excretion in patients with proteinuric renal disease.
PMID: 19596163
ISSN: 1523-6838
CID: 2388792
The Case | A 66-year-old male with hyponatremia. Psychogenic polydipsia [Case Report]
Ali, Nicole; Imbriano, Louis J; Maesaka, John K
PMID: 19564861
ISSN: 1523-1755
CID: 2388802
Forward RNAi screens in primary human hematopoietic stem/progenitor cells
Ali, Nicole; Karlsson, Christine; Aspling, Marie; Hu, Guang; Hacohen, Nir; Scadden, David T; Larsson, Jonas
The mechanisms regulating key fate decisions such as self-renewal and differentiation in hematopoietic stem and progenitor cells (HSPC) remain poorly understood. We report here a screening strategy developed to assess modulators of human hematopoiesis using a lentiviral short hairpin RNA (shRNA) library transduced into cord blood-derived stem/progenitor cells. To screen for modifiers of self-renewal/differentiation, we used the limited persistence of HSPCs under ex vivo culture conditions as a baseline for functional selection of shRNAs conferring enhanced maintenance or expansion of the stem/progenitor potential. This approach enables complex, pooled screens in large numbers of cells. Functional selection identified novel specific gene targets (exostoses 1) or shRNA constructs capable of altering human hematopoietic progenitor differentiation or stem cell expansion, respectively, thereby demonstrating the potential of this forward screening approach in primary human stem cell populations.
PMCID:2670788
PMID: 19188664
ISSN: 1528-0020
CID: 2388812