• Latest
  • Trending
  • All
  • Featured Urology
  • Female Urology
  • Urologic Oncology
  • What is Urology?
  • Pediatric Urology
  • Urology

Protein in urine can forecast kidney disease: study

September 8, 2020
Yoga for Prostate Cancer: Best Yoga exercises to combat prostate growth in men

Yoga for Prostate Cancer: Best Yoga exercises to combat prostate growth in men

November 14, 2022
New treatment can more than double life expectancy for people with prostate cancer: doctor

New treatment can more than double life expectancy for people with prostate cancer

November 14, 2022
Study finds that use of yoga app can reduce urinary incontinence

Study finds that use of yoga app can reduce urinary incontinence

November 9, 2022
Urinary Incontinence: Types and Treatments

Urinary Incontinence: Types and Treatments

November 9, 2022
Low Rates of PSA Screening Linked to Increase in Metastatic Prostate Cancer

Low Rates of PSA Screening Linked to Increase in Metastatic Prostate Cancer

November 4, 2022
Can Erectile Dysfunction Drugs Reduce Dementia Risk?

Can Erectile Dysfunction Drugs Reduce Dementia Risk?

November 4, 2022
New PSA test examines protein structures to detect prostate cancers

New PSA test examines protein structures to detect prostate cancers

November 2, 2022
A better way to image metastatic prostate cancer

A better way to image metastatic prostate cancer

November 2, 2022
Newly discovered protein may protect kidney cells from injury

Newly discovered protein may protect kidney cells from injury

November 2, 2022
A person’s diet, acidity of urine may affect susceptibility to UTIs

A person’s diet, acidity of urine may affect susceptibility to UTIs

November 2, 2022
Award-winning agent developed for prostate cancer diagnosis and treatment

Award-winning agent developed for prostate cancer diagnosis and treatment

November 2, 2022
New treatment for polycystic kidney disease

New treatment for polycystic kidney disease

November 2, 2022
Wednesday, November 30, 2022
Urology Today
  • Home
  • Featured Urology
    Yoga for Prostate Cancer: Best Yoga exercises to combat prostate growth in men

    Yoga for Prostate Cancer: Best Yoga exercises to combat prostate growth in men

    Study finds that use of yoga app can reduce urinary incontinence

    Study finds that use of yoga app can reduce urinary incontinence

    Urinary Incontinence: Types and Treatments

    Urinary Incontinence: Types and Treatments

    Low Rates of PSA Screening Linked to Increase in Metastatic Prostate Cancer

    Low Rates of PSA Screening Linked to Increase in Metastatic Prostate Cancer

    Kidney failure impacts survival of sepsis patients

    Kidney failure impacts survival of sepsis patients

    Urine-based test improves on PSA for detecting prostate cancer

    Urine-based test improves on PSA for detecting prostate cancer

    Unemployment linked to rise in prostate cancer deaths

    Unemployment linked to rise in prostate cancer deaths

    Unemployment linked to rise in prostate cancer deaths

    Advanced viral gene therapy eradicates prostate cancer in preclinical experiments

    prostate cancer

    Recurrence of prostate cancer detected earlier with innovative PSMA-ligand PET/CT

    Two major studies strengthen case for prostate cancer drug before chemotherapy

    Two major studies strengthen case for prostate cancer drug before chemotherapy

    Trending Tags

    • Donald Trump
    • Future of News
    • Climate Change
    • Market Stories
    • Election Results
    • Flat Earth
  • Lifestyle
    • All
    • Female Urology
    • Male Urology
    • Pediatric Urology
    Yoga for Prostate Cancer: Best Yoga exercises to combat prostate growth in men

    Yoga for Prostate Cancer: Best Yoga exercises to combat prostate growth in men

    Study finds that use of yoga app can reduce urinary incontinence

    Study finds that use of yoga app can reduce urinary incontinence

    Urinary Incontinence: Types and Treatments

    Urinary Incontinence: Types and Treatments

    New PSA test examines protein structures to detect prostate cancers

    New PSA test examines protein structures to detect prostate cancers

    A better way to image metastatic prostate cancer

    A better way to image metastatic prostate cancer

    Award-winning agent developed for prostate cancer diagnosis and treatment

    Award-winning agent developed for prostate cancer diagnosis and treatment

    New treatment for polycystic kidney disease

    New treatment for polycystic kidney disease

    Urine-based test improves on PSA for detecting prostate cancer

    Urine-based test improves on PSA for detecting prostate cancer

    Unemployment linked to rise in prostate cancer deaths

    Advanced viral gene therapy eradicates prostate cancer in preclinical experiments

    Two major studies strengthen case for prostate cancer drug before chemotherapy

    Two major studies strengthen case for prostate cancer drug before chemotherapy

    Trending Tags

    • Golden Globes
    • Mr. Robot
    • MotoGP 2017
    • Climate Change
    • Flat Earth
No Result
View All Result
Urology Today
No Result
View All Result
Home Urology / Nephrology News

Protein in urine can forecast kidney disease: study

by Urology Today
September 8, 2020
in Urology / Nephrology News
0
491
SHARES
1.4k
VIEWS
Share on FacebookShare on Twitter

Doctors may be able to watch for kidney injury and protect patients by looking for protein in urine, researchers reported on Thursday.

Patients with the highest levels of protein, or albuminuria, had an almost five-fold increase in the risk of developing acute kidney injury, the researchers reported in the Journal of the American Society of Nephrology.

The cheap and easy test may provide a way to watch for kidney damage and improve upon the current method, called estimated glomerular filtration rate, the team at Johns Hopkins University in Baltimore said.

Acute kidney injury, common when people are in hospital, is seen in 1.6 percent of all hospital patients and occurs when kidneys suddenly lose the ability to filter waste products from blood.

Acute kidney injury can be reversible if a patient is otherwise healthy, but often results in chronic kidney disease and kidney failure requiring dialysis or a kidney transplant.

“It’s potentially reversible, but not always. And the reason we worry so much about acute kidney injury is that it can lead to bad things in the future, put people at much higher risk for death, put them at risk for chronic kidney disease,” said Dr. Morgan Grams, who worked on the study.

Grams and colleagues studied 11,200 patients, looking at their medical records. They had the albuminuria test as part of their care.

Even low levels of albuminuria indicated that a patient would go on to develop acute kidney injury, the researchers found.

Kidney injury can happen when patients receive medication or intravenous contrast dyes to make their internal organs visible during computed tomography or CAT scans or procedures on coronary arteries.

“Often it’s a trade-off. You have to do a CAT scan, but you can try to minimize the amount of contrast that is given or give a better kind of contrast,” said Grams.

Nearly 30 million Americans, or 10 percent of the population, have chronic kidney disease, says the American Society of Nephrology. More than 100,000 Americans are diagnosed with kidney failure each year, with diabetes the most common cause.

Doctors have a clear way to measure risk factors for chronic kidney disease. They examine levels of serum creatinine, a byproduct of muscle breakdown, in the blood. They adjust the measurement for demographic risk factors such as age, gender, and race.

“This misses a whole population of people who are at risk for acute kidney injury,” Grams said.

There may be a genetic connection. Scientists at Decode Genetics in Iceland found a link between a single letter variation in the genetic code and concentrations of serum creatinine, the protein that indicates chronic kidney disease.

The finding could lead to better ways to treat and prevent kidney disease, they wrote in the Public Library of Science journal PLoS Genetics.

SOURCES:  Journal of the American Society of Nephrology, online July 29, 2010, and PLoS Genetics, online July 29, 2010.

Share196Tweet123Share49
Urology Today

Urology Today

  • Trending
  • Comments
  • Latest

Urethral pressure profilometry

September 8, 2020
Low Rates of PSA Screening Linked to Increase in Metastatic Prostate Cancer

Low Rates of PSA Screening Linked to Increase in Metastatic Prostate Cancer

November 4, 2022
Kidney failure impacts survival of sepsis patients

Kidney failure impacts survival of sepsis patients

November 2, 2022

Genetic basis of genitourinary malformations

0
Embryogenesis -Paediatric Urology

Embryogenesis -Paediatric Urology

0
Upper urinary tract

Upper urinary tract

0
Yoga for Prostate Cancer: Best Yoga exercises to combat prostate growth in men

Yoga for Prostate Cancer: Best Yoga exercises to combat prostate growth in men

November 14, 2022
New treatment can more than double life expectancy for people with prostate cancer: doctor

New treatment can more than double life expectancy for people with prostate cancer

November 14, 2022
Study finds that use of yoga app can reduce urinary incontinence

Study finds that use of yoga app can reduce urinary incontinence

November 9, 2022
Urology Today

Copyright © 2022 Urology Today.

Navigate Site

  • About
  • Advertise
  • Privacy & Policy
  • Contact

Follow Us

No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • Featured Urology
    • Urologic Oncology
    • Female Urology
    • Pediatric Urology
    • What is Urology?
  • Lifestyle

Copyright © 2022 Urology Today.

Welcome Back!

Login to your account below

Forgotten Password?

Retrieve your password

Please enter your username or email address to reset your password.

Log In