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Renal Involvement in Patients with Congenital Cyanotic Heart Disease
Author(s) -
KRULL F.,
EHRICH J. H. H.,
WURSTER U.,
TOEL U.,
ROTHGÄNGER S.,
LUHMER I.
Publication year - 1991
Publication title -
acta pædiatrica
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.772
H-Index - 115
eISSN - 1651-2227
pISSN - 0803-5253
DOI - 10.1111/j.1651-2227.1991.tb11811.x
Subject(s) - medicine , proteinuria , glomerulopathy , renal function , albuminuria , pathological , creatinine , cardiology , heart disease , gastroenterology , kidney
. Patients with congenital cyanotic heart disease may develop a glomerulopathy with proteinuria and impaired renal function. In order to investigate this problem we conducted a study on 27 patients with uncorrected cyanotic heart disease who were between 1 day and 25 years old. As a consequence of hypoxaemia haematocrit was elevated to 57%. Proteinuria was above 150 mg/day/1.73 m 2 body surface in 12 patients. Only one of 9 children under 10 years of age had pathological proteinuria presenting as isolated albuminuria. Seven out of 10 patients between 11 and 20 years had an elevated proteinuria with a glomerular pattern. Creatinine clearance was normal in these patients. All four patients above 20 years of age had a considerable glomerular proteinuria with a mean excretion of 5.7 g/24 h/1.73 m 2 body surface. These patients suffered additionally from chronic cardiac failure and creatinine clearance was below the normal range. There was a clear relationship between pathological proteinuria and age of the patients and thus duration of hypoxaemia. Patients with pathological proteinuria had a significant higher erythrocyte count (7.3±2 1.3 vs. 5.6±1.4 10 12 /l p <0.01) and a lower mean corpuscular haemoglobin. In summary, children with persistent congenital cyanotic heart disease have substantial risk of developing a glomerulopathy if the cyanosis remains unchanged for more than ten years.

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