Publication | Closed Access
PRIMARY IDIOPATHIC MYOGLOBINURIA IN A NEGRO FEMALE: ITS IMPLICATIONS AND A NEW METHOD OF LABORATORY DIAGNOSIS
20
Citations
21
References
1959
Year
Glomerular DiseaseImmunohematologyImmunodeficienciesRenal PathologyDiagnosisPathologyHuman PathologyIts ImplicationsL. Whisnant Jr.GlomerulonephritisG. R. CooperIga GlomerulonephritisHematologyClinical DiseaseDisease DiagnosisChronic Kidney DiseaseHealth SciencesInherited Metabolic DiseaseJuly 1959UrologyMolecular Diagnostic TechniquesMedicine
Case Reports1 July 1959PRIMARY IDIOPATHIC MYOGLOBINURIA IN A NEGRO FEMALE: ITS IMPLICATIONS AND A NEW METHOD OF LABORATORY DIAGNOSISC. L. WHISNANT JR., M.D., R. H. OWINGS, M.S., C. G. CANTRELL, M.D., G. R. COOPER, Ph.D., M.D.C. L. WHISNANT JR., M.D.Search for more papers by this author, R. H. OWINGS, M.S.Search for more papers by this author, C. G. CANTRELL, M.D.Search for more papers by this author, G. R. COOPER, Ph.D., M.D.Search for more papers by this authorAuthor, Article, and Disclosure Informationhttps://doi.org/10.7326/0003-4819-51-1-140 SectionsAboutPDF ToolsAdd to favoritesDownload CitationsTrack CitationsPermissions ShareFacebookTwitterLinkedInRedditEmail ExcerptMyoglobinuria has been considered to be a relatively rare disease and has been observed only in the white race. Even when the disease is suspected, definitive diagnosis by means of identification of the pigment in the urine has always been a problem. The physician is frequently deterred from further investigation because of the difficulty encountered in obtaining laboratory confirmation. Many cases of so-called "march hemoglobinuria" may actually be unrecognized primary myoglobinuria.1 Several reviewers have questioned the diagnosis of some of the other reported cases of myoglobinuria, and have considered at least some of these cases to be dermatomyositis.1-3It...Bibliography1. ReinerKonikoffAltschuleDamminMerrill LNMDGJJP: Idiopathic paroxysmal myoglobinuria, Arch. Int. Med. 97: 537, 1956. CrossrefGoogle Scholar2. BerenbaumBirchMoreland MCCAJD: Paroxysmal myoglobinuria, Lancet 1: 892, 1955. CrossrefGoogle Scholar3. PearsonBeckBlahd CMWSWH: Idiopathic paroxysmal myoglobinuria, Arch. Int. Med. 99: 376, 1957. CrossrefGoogle Scholar4. BywatersDible EGJH: The renal lesion in traumatic anuria, J. Path. and Bact. 54: 111, 1942. CrossrefGoogle Scholar5. BywatersDible EGJH: Acute paralytic myohaemoglobinuria in man, J. Path. and Bact. 55: 7, 1943. CrossrefGoogle Scholar6. Berlin R: Haff disease in Sweden, Acta med. Scandinav. 129: 560, 1947. CrossrefGoogle Scholar7. FischerRossier HPH: Starkslromunfalle mit schweren Muskelschadigungen and Myoglobinurie (Befunde, Pathologie, Prognose and Therapie), Helvet. med. acta 14: 212, 1947. MedlineGoogle Scholar8. BywatersStead EGJK: Thrombosis of the femoral artery with myohaemoglobinuria and low serum potassium concentration, Clin. Sc. 5: 195, 1945. MedlineGoogle Scholar9. ElekAnderson SDHF: Paroxysmal paralytic myoglobinuria, Brit. M. J. 2: 533, 1953. CrossrefMedlineGoogle Scholar10. SchaarLaBreeGleason FEJWDF: Paroxysmal myohemoglobinuria with fatal renal tubular injury, J. Lab. and Clin. Med. 34: 1744, 1949. Google Scholar11. SpaetRosenthalDameshek THMCW: Idiopathic myoglobinuria in man, Blood 9: 881, 1954. CrossrefMedlineGoogle Scholar12. Schaar FE: Paroxysmal myoglobinuria, Am. J. Dis. Child. 89: 23, 1955. Google Scholar13. KreutzerStraitKerrHrenhoff FLLWJMK: Spontaneous myohemoglobinuria in man, Arch. Int. Med. 81: 249, 1948. CrossrefGoogle Scholar14. HippShukers HRCF: Spontaneous myoglobinuria; report of a case with symptoms of myotonia, Ann. Int. Med. 42: 197, 1955. LinkGoogle Scholar15. LouwNielsen AHE: Paroxysmal paralytic hemoglobinuria, Acta med. Scandinav. 117: 424, 1944. CrossrefGoogle Scholar16. BowdenFraserJacksonWalker DHDSHNF: Acute recurrent rhabdomyolysis, Medicine 35: 335, 1956. CrossrefMedlineGoogle Scholar17. Biorck G: On myoglobin and its occurrence in man, Acta med. Scandinav. Supp. 226, 133: 1, 1949. MedlineGoogle Scholar18. Millikan GH: Muscle hemoglobin, Physiol. Rev. 19: 503, 1939. CrossrefGoogle Scholar19. Hed H: En familjar form av paroxysmal myoglobinuri, Nord. med. 35: 1586, 1947. Google Scholar20. McKusick VA: Mechanisms in genetic diseases of men, Am. J. Med. 22: 676, 1957. CrossrefMedlineGoogle Scholar21. HolzelKomrowerSchwarz AGMV: Galactosemia, Am. J. Med. 22: 703, 1957. CrossrefMedlineGoogle Scholar22. KnoxHsia WED: Pathogenetic problems in phenylketonuria, Am. J. Med. 22: 687, 1957. CrossrefMedlineGoogle Scholar23. FletcherPrankard WDTA: Paroxysmal myoglobinuria, Letters to Editor, Lancet 1: 1072, 1955. CrossrefGoogle Scholar24. SingerAngelopoulosRamot KBB: Studies on human myoglobin; its identification and its replacement by adult myoglobin during infancy, Blood 10: 987, 1955. CrossrefMedlineGoogle Scholar25. Rossi-FanelliCavalliniDeMarco ADC: Fetal myoglobin. I. The crystallization of human and cow's myoglobin extracted by the heart and fetal muscles, Arch. Biochem. and Biophys. 50: 496, 1954. CrossrefMedlineGoogle Scholar26. Flink EB: Blood transfusion studies. III. The relationship of hemoglobinemia and of the pH of the urine to renal damage produced by injection of hemoglobin solutions into dogs, J. Lab. and Clin. Med. 32: 223, 1947. MedlineGoogle Scholar27. Smith HW: The kidney, structure and function in health and disease, 1951, Oxford University Press, New York. Google Scholar28. Oliver J: Correlations of structure and function and mechanisms of recovery in acute tubular necrosis, Am. J. Med. 15: 535, 1953. CrossrefMedlineGoogle Scholar29. Oliver J: Ciba foundation symposium on the kidney, 1954, Little, Brown & Co., Boston. Google Scholar This content is PDF only. To continue reading please click on the PDF icon. Author, Article, and Disclosure InformationAffiliations: Chamblee, Georgia*Received for publication November 6, 1957.From the Communicable Disease Center, Public Health Service, U. S. Department of Health, Education, and Welfare, the Department of Medicine, Emory University School of Medicine, and the Grady Memorial Hospital, Atlanta, Georgia.Requests for reprints should be addressed to G. R. Cooper, M.D., Post Office Box 185, Chamblee, Georgia. PreviousarticleNextarticle Advertisement FiguresReferencesRelatedDetails Metrics Cited byMuscle DiseasesSymptomatology, Pathology and Treatment of the Bites of Sea SnakesMyoglobin: Methods and Diagnostic UsesAzoturia in a Greyhound: clinical pathology aids to diagnosisThe detection of myoglobin in urine and its distinction from normal and variant haemoglobinsMyoglobinuriaMyoglobinuric Myopathy A Clinical, Histological, and Biochemical StudyCONSTANTINE L. HAMPERS, M.D., DAVID PRAGER, M.D.Idiopathic recurrent rhabdomyolysis with myoglobinuriaPrimary Myoglobinuria A Case Report Emphasizing Recent Diagnostic TechniquesRICHARD JOSEPH DUMA, M.D., JACK W. TRIGG, M.D., WILLIAM J. HAMMACK, M.D.Idiopathic Paroxysmal MyoglobinuriaDAVID E. COMINGS, M.D., HARRY ROSENFELD, M.D.Der Nachweis von Myoglobin mittels St�rkeblock-ElektrophoreseIdiopathic Recurrent Rhabdomyolysis Associated with MyoglobinuriaIdiopathic paroxysmal myoglobinuriaPrimary myoglobinuria (Meyer-Betz disease)Myoglobinuria after Acute Arterial Occlusion 1 July 1959Volume 51, Issue 1Page: 140-150KeywordsHemoglobinHospital medicineMedical servicesMyalgiaNecrosisProteinsRacial and ethnic issuesResearch laboratoriesUltracentrifugationUrine ePublished: 1 December 2008 Issue Published: 1 July 1959 PDF downloadLoading ...
| Year | Citations | |
|---|---|---|
Page 1
Page 1