Chrysiasis can ultimately lead to acute renal failure ( such as tubular necrosis, nephrosis, glomerulitis ), severe heart conditions, and hematologic complications ( leukopenia, anemia ).
12.
This sounds like diabetes insipidus . ( ATN is acute tubular necrosis; GFR is glomerular filtration rate . ) talk ) 09 : 19, 5 April 2008 ( UTC)
13.
Acute kidney injury due to acute tubular necrosis ( ATN ) was recognized in the 1940s in Vietnam wars, the incidence of AKI decreased due to better acute management and administration of intravenous fluids.
14.
It is a useful parameter in acute renal failure and oliguria, with a value below 1 % indicating a prerenal disease and a value above 3 % indicating acute tubular necrosis or other kidney damage.
15.
The condition is " usually caused by significantly diminished arterial perfusion of the kidneys due to spasms of the feeding arteries, microvascular injury, or disseminated intravascular coagulation " and is the pathological progression of acute tubular necrosis.
16.
Decreased specific gravity ( hyposthenuria, i . e . decreased concentration of solutes in urine ) may be associated with renal failure, pyelonephritis, diabetes insipidus, acute tubular necrosis, interstitial nephritis, and excessive fluid intake ( e . g ., psychogenic polydipsia ).
17.
Karras more generally notes that symptoms of poisoning include " burning of the mouth, dysphagia, nausea, hematemesis, gross hematuria, and dysuria, " that acute tubular necrosis and glomerular destruction can result in renal dysfunction, and that erosion and hemorrhaging of the mucosa can be seen in the upper gastrointestinal tract ( GI tract ).