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Licensed Unlicensed Requires Authentication Published by De Gruyter July 5, 2005

Physiopathology of Proteinuria and Laboratory Diagnostic Strategy Based on Single Protein Analysis

  • Walter G. Guder , Miroslav Ivandic and Walter Hofmann

Abstract

A quantification of proteins of different molecular size has been shown to be useful in characterizing the mechanism and medical causes of proteinuria. By analyzing urine albumin, α1-microglobulin, immunoglobulin G and α2-macroglobulin together with total protein, prerenal, glomerular, tubular and postrenal causes of proteinuria can be detected and differentiated by their specific urine protein patterns. Using automated turbidimetric procedures, prerenal proteinurias are characterized by an albumin/total protein ratio below 0.4. Tubulo-interstitial diseases which are negative in the protein test strip procedure are detected and clearly differentiated from other causes of proteinuria by their high α1-microglobulin/albumin ratios. In postrenal proteinuria, α2-macroglobulin proved to be a useful marker, when albumin excretion exceeds 100 mg/l urine. This protein exhibits plasma-like ratios to albumin in postrenal causes, whereas it is much lower in renal proteinurias.

The new strategy, which has been evaluated in more than 500 clinically and partly histologically proven cases of renal diseases, more sensitively detects glomerular and tubulo-interstitial diseases when applied in urine screening and allows us to distinguish all clinically important causes from analysis of a morning spot urine sample.

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Published Online: 2005-07-05
Published in Print: 1998-12-05

Copyright © 1999 by Walter de Gruyter GmbH & Co. KG

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