Internal medicine
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Case Reports
A Case of Autoimmune Pulmonary Alveolar Proteinosis that Improved after a COVID-19 Episode.
Autoimmune pulmonary alveolar proteinosis (APAP) is caused by macrophage dysfunction owing to the presence of anti-granulocyte-macrophage colony-stimulating factor (GM-CSF) autoantibodies. A 77-year-old man with APAP was referred to our hospital for whole-lung lavage (WLL) due to oxygenation exacerbation and pulmonary shadows. ⋯ About three months after COVID-19 resolved, his oxygenation and shadow reflecting APAP had obviously improved, thus avoiding the need for WLL. We suspected that the improvement in APAP was due to various immunological reactions induced by COVID-19.
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A 16-year-old Japanese girl developed a fever, thrombocytopenia, and renal dysfunction. Treatment was started with steroids, but cervical lymphadenopathy and ascites developed. A lymph node biopsy indicated TAFRO syndrome. ⋯ A kidney biopsy showed malignant nephrosclerosis-like microangiopathy and glomerular collapse due to narrowing of the small arteries. The majority of TAFRO syndrome cases are adult-onset, with glomerular microangiopathy. To our knowledge, this is the first report of adolescent-onset TAFRO syndrome presenting with malignant nephrosclerosis-like lesions associated with hypertension.
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Observational Study
Elevated Crude Mortality in Obese Chronic Kidney Disease Patients with Loss of Exercise Habit: A Cohort Study of the Japanese General Population.
Objective The relationship between obesity and risk of death in chronic kidney disease (CKD) patients remains controversial. In addition, no clear evidence has been accumulated regarding whether or not exercise improves mortality in CKD patients. Methods The original cohort was based on a Japanese general population of 685,889 people from 40 to 74 years old who had undergone annual specific health checkups. ⋯ In the obese CKD population, mortality was higher with loss of exercise habits (0.96%) than in those continuously maintaining exercise habits (0.52%). The age- and sex-adjusted hazard ratio for all-cause death was 2.23 in the group with weight gain compared to the group with stable weight (p<0.01) and 2.08 in the group with loss of exercise habits compared to those who maintained exercise habits (p<0.01). Conclusion This observational cohort study suggested that loss of exercise habits as well as weight gain of more than 1 kg/m2/year might worsen all-cause mortality in the obese CKD population.
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Objective The cardiac function, blood distribution, and oxygen extraction in the muscles as well as the pulmonary function determine the oxygen uptake (VO2) kinetics at the onset of exercise. This factor is called the VO2 time constant, and its prolongation is associated with an unfavorable prognosis for heart failure (HF). The mitochondrial function of skeletal muscle is known to reflect exercise tolerance. ⋯ Results Patients with a low VO2 time constant/FFMI value had a lower abnormal mitochondria ratio than those with a high VO2 time constant/FFMI value. A multiple linear regression analysis revealed that the ratio of abnormal cardiac mitochondria was independently associated with a high VO2 time constant/FFMI. Conclusion An increased abnormal cardiac mitochondria ratio might be associated with a high VO2 time constant/FFMI value in patients with NICM.