Two women with spontaneous hypokalemia (1 normotensive, 1 hypertensive in the absence of renal artery stenosis), underwent unilateral nephrectomy because of angiographic and/or split renin-based suspicion of a reninoma. The normotensive patient clinically resembled Bartter syndrome but had some elements suggestive of a renin-secreting tumour, justifying surgical exploration and resection. The hypertensive patient presented clinically as a typical reninoma except for negative angiography. Surprisingly, the histology of the kidneys in both cases demonstrated juxtaglomerular hyperplasia without evidence of reninoma. The postoperative follow-up (8 and 19 yrs, respectively) has shown in the normotensive patient a considerable improvement in the hyper-reninism and previously uncontrollable hypokalaemia and in the hypertensive patient a complete normalisation of BP, renin and electrolyte status. Although the histological condition of the contralateral kidneys remains unknown in both patients the preoperative lateralisation of hyper-reninism to one kidney, the postoperative complete relief of the hyper-reninism in the hypertensive patient after uninephrectomy and its decrease, exceeding that corresponding to the removal of one kidney in the normotensive patient, suggest that the juxtaglomerular hyperplasia might have been unilateral or asymmetrical and that nephrectomy may, unexpectedly, relieve the hyper-reninism caused by juxtaglomerular hyperplasia. An increased unilateral susceptibility to trophic or renin-releasing factors or an asymmetrical abnormality in the macula densa-initiated mechanism of juxtaglomerular hyperplasia may be implicated in this disorder.
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Nephron
November 2023
Division of Nephrology and Hypertension, Department of Internal Medicine, The Jikei University School of Medicine, Tokyo, Japan.
A 39-year-old woman with end-stage renal failure of unknown origin was on peritoneal dialysis for 10 years. One year ago, she underwent ABO-incompatible living-donor kidney transplantation from her husband. After the kidney transplantation, her serum creatinine level remained around 0.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Endocr Soc
July 2022
Academic Endocrine Unit, Oxford Centre for Diabetes, Endocrinology & Metabolism (OCDEM), Churchill Hospital, University of Oxford, Oxford OX3 7LJ, UK.
Bartter syndrome (BS) and Gitelman syndrome (GS) are renal tubular disorders affecting sodium, potassium, and chloride reabsorption. Clinical features include muscle cramps and weakness, in association with hypokalemia, hypochloremic metabolic alkalosis, and hyperreninemic hyperaldosteronism. Hypomagnesemia and hypocalciuria are typical of GS, while juxtaglomerular hyperplasia is characteristic of BS.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFCureus
August 2021
internal Medicine/Nephrology, Shifa International Hospital, Islamabad, PAK.
Bartter syndrome is a rare autosomal recessive, salt-losing disorder characterized by hypokalemic hypochloremic metabolic alkalosis. We are reporting a case of 21 years old patient, who presented with lower limb weakness, marked hypokalemia, proteinuria, and renal impairment detected on laboratory evaluation. The diagnosis of Bartter syndrome was suspected by marked hypokalemia and was supported by renal biopsy which showed evidence of Juxtaglomerular (JG) hyperplasia.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBiomed Res Int
September 2021
Shengli Clinical Medical College of Fujian Medical University, Fuzhou 350001, China.
Gitelman syndrome (GS) is an autosomal recessive inherited salt-losing renal tubular disease, which is caused by a pathogenic mutation of encoding thiazide-sensitive Na-Cl cotransporter, which leads to disturbance of sodium and chlorine reabsorption in renal distal convoluted tubules, resulting in phenotypes such as hypovolemia, renin angiotensin aldosterone system (RAAS) activation, hypokalemia, and metabolic alkalosis. In this study, two GS families with proteinuria or Hashimoto's thyroiditis were analyzed for genetic-phenotypic association. Sanger sequencing revealed that two probands carried compound heterozygous mutations, and proband A carried two pathogenic mutations: missense mutation Arg83Gln, splicing mutation, or frameshift mutation NC_000016.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBartter syndrome (BS), a rare autosomal recessive disorder affecting renal tubular potassium handling, is characterized by hypokalemia, metabolic alkalosis, and renal salt wasting. In this report, we describe an adult patient with longstanding clinical symptoms of fatigue, polyuria, polydipsia, mental retardation, and physical dysplasia along with hypokalemia and metabolic alkalosis as laboratory findings. With these clinical symptoms, a patient can be diagnosed with BS type III.
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