Disease | proteinuria |
Phenotype | C0013537|eclampsia |
Sentences | 15 |
PubMedID- 26513453 | Earlier pre-eclampsia onset was associated with early-onset proteinuria and multiple gestation. |
PubMedID- 26105608 | Results: there was a trend showing a positive correlation between increased central retinal thickness and increasing proteinuria in patients with pre-eclampsia antepartum (left eye r=0.52, p=0.04) and postpartum (left eye r=0.60, p=0.01). |
PubMedID- 22335428 | Conclusions: the urine pcr is highly accurate in predicting significant proteinuria in women with pre-eclampsia using the recommended cut-off of 30 mg/mmol. |
PubMedID- 22848831 | Postpartum preeclampsia (occurrence of hypertension and proteinuria) or postpartum eclampsia (occurrence of hypertension, proteinuria, and seizures) after delivery challenges the concept of the primacy of placental ischemia as the critical determinant of the occurrence of this syndrome. |
PubMedID- 24019891 | To reduce the possibility of misdiagnosis of uti among women with pre-eclampsia due to identification of proteinuria, we repeated the analyses for uti and antibiotics among cases who developed pre-eclampsia in the third trimester and their matched controls, and assessed the effect of exposure to uti or antibiotics in the first and second trimesters only versus no exposure at any time in pregnancy. |
PubMedID- 24130760 | Women were allocated into one of four groups: pre-eclampsia with maximal quantified proteinuria of 300-499 g/24h (pe300, n=60), pre-eclampsia with proteinuria of at least 500 mg/24h (pe500, n=161), non-proteinuric chronic hypertension without pre-eclampsia (cht, n=615), non-proteinuric gestational hypertension (gh, n=110). |
PubMedID- 22384039 | Preeclampsia (with documented proteinuria and edema) was reported in 18% of women, and eclampsia in 3%, and these did not differ by hiv status. |
PubMedID- 21887038 | [3] an important distinction between the two is that pre-eclampsia is associated with proteinuria (≥300 mg.day-1) and hypertension occurring after the twentieth week of gestation. |
PubMedID- 23446427 | This issue is however of great interest, particularly with respect to the differential diagnosis with pre-eclampsia and other causes of pregnancy-induced proteinuria, including a vast array of chronic kidney diseases. |
PubMedID- 24591913 | Here, we report four atypical cases: eclampsia in the absence of hypertension and proteinuria (case 1), a partial seizure following eclampsia with antecedent proteinuria, but no hypertension (case 2), a case presenting with fetal distress, but no hypertension (case 3), and a case with unusually rapid progression and massive proteinuria that was unresponsive to therapy (case 4). |
PubMedID- 25057338 | There was a trend towards more podocyturia and proteinuria in patients with eclampsia, comparing to those with preeclampsia. |
PubMedID- 24703162 | Objective: to study whether pre-eclampsia and hypertension without proteinuria during pregnancy are associated with adaptive functioning, and psychiatric and psychological problems, of older offspring. |
PubMedID- 24712704 | Post-partum trend in blood pressure levels, renal function and proteinuria in women with severe preeclampsia and eclampsia in sub-saharan africa: a 6-months cohort study. |
PubMedID- 24418012 | Antepartum haemorrhage (aph – bleeding from the genital tract after 24 weeks of gestation); pregnancy-induced hypertension (pih – raised blood pressure >140/90 mmhg after 20 weeks of gestation); pre-eclampsia (pih criteria with proteinuria of >300 mg/l in a 24–hour urine collection or persistent ++ proteinuria); eclampsia (pre-eclampsia with major convulsive seizures); gestational diabetes; preterm prelabour rupture of membranes (pprom – spontaneous rupture of membranes prior to 37 weeks of gestation in the absence of regular painful contractions); preterm labour (labour prior to 37 weeks of gestation); postpartum haemorrhage (pph – blood loss greater than 500 ml at vaginal delivery or 1000 ml at caesarean section); and thromboembolism. |
PubMedID- 24600275 | The spectrum of hypertension during pregnancy includes pre-eclampsia (more common, associated with proteinuria), eclampsia (less common, associated with proteinuria and seizures), and gestational hypertension (no proteinuria). |
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