clozapine has been researched along with Nephritis--Interstitial* in 12 studies
3 review(s) available for clozapine and Nephritis--Interstitial
Article | Year |
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Clozapine-induced interstitial nephritis in a patient with schizoaffective disorder in the forensic setting: a case report and review of the literature.
We present a rare case of Acute Interstitial Nephritis (AIN) that occurred following a re-trial of clozapine in a 56-year-old lady with schizoaffective disorder. On initial trial of clozapine, this patient felt generally unwell with respiratory symptoms. Her inflammatory markers were raised and her renal function showed a mild, transient deterioration which normalised on the day of cessation of clozapine. Two years later, clozapine was re-trialled due the refractory nature of her psychiatric symptoms. She subsequently developed renal failure and AIN was confirmed by renal biopsy. Renal function improved after cessation of clozapine; however, she never fully regained normal renal function. Topics: Clozapine; Female; Humans; Male; Middle Aged; Nephritis, Interstitial; Psychotic Disorders | 2022 |
Hepatitis, Interstitial Nephritis, and Pancreatitis in Association With Clozapine Treatment: A Systematic Review of Case Series and Reports.
Clozapine is the criterion standard in treatment-resistant schizophrenia. We sought to review data on several inflammatory effects associated with clozapine, specifically interstitial nephritis, hepatitis, and pancreatitis.. We conducted a systematic review to identify studies, published up until December 2017, describing clozapine-induced hepatitis, nephritis, and pancreatitis. The primary objective was to characterize the clinical characteristics associated with each of the specific inflammatory reactions to clozapine.. We identified 42 cases of inflammatory reactions associated with clozapine treatment- 20 :cases of clozapine-induced hepatitis, 11 cases of nephritis, and 11 of pancreatitis. The mean (SD) age was 38.8 (11.9) years. The mean (SD) dose of clozapine used was 252.4 (133.7) mg. Time to onset of pancreatitis (17.9 [11.2] days; range 4-35 days) was shorter than that for hepatitis (34.2 [20.1] days; range, 12-90 days) and nephritis (27.9 [27.0]; range, 8-90 days) but was not statistically significant (F = 2.267, P = 0.117). The mean (SD) time to recovery was shorter for cases of pancreatitis (15.7 [18.4] days) compared with cases of hepatitis (25.9 [16.5] days) and nephritis (24.5 [18.9] days). Three cases with hepatitis died. Seven of the cases had a clozapine rechallenge (hepatitis [n = 3], nephritis [n = 1], pancreatitis [n = 3]), with 5 having a recurrence at a mean (SD) onset of 3.5 (2.5) days (range, 1-7 days); 2 hepatitis cases were successfully rechallenged.. Clozapine-induced hepatitis, nephritis, and pancreatitis are uncommon adverse events, reflected in the paucity of case studies in the literature. Early recognition of the signs and symptoms of clozapine-associated hepatitis, nephritis, and pancreatitis is important, as when identified, clozapine should be urgently discontinued. Clozapine is associated with evidence of benign inflammatory processes; the extent to which hepatitis, and other inflammatory reactions, may be on a continuum with these more benign and self-limiting reactions is unclear, and this can only be resolved by prospectively following cohorts of clozapine-treated patients. Topics: Antipsychotic Agents; Chemical and Drug Induced Liver Injury; Clozapine; Humans; Nephritis, Interstitial; Observational Studies as Topic; Pancreatitis; Treatment Outcome | 2018 |
[Acute interstitial nephritis caused by clozapine].
We are reporting a case of a 69 years old man developed acute renal failure due to interstitial nephritis during treatment with the drug clozapine, and that improve after to discontinuation of this drug. The clozapine is a new antipsychotic drug that may produce severes adverses reactions, like medullary toxicity. Recently 10 cases of clozapine-induced AIN have been reported. We want to associate to the cases publicated with a new case because it is a severe adverse reaction. Topics: Aged; Antipsychotic Agents; Clozapine; Humans; Male; Nephritis, Interstitial | 2002 |
9 other study(ies) available for clozapine and Nephritis--Interstitial
Article | Year |
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[Clozapine-induced Tubulointerstitial Nephritis].
Tubulointerstitial nephritis is a common cause of acute renal failure, in two thirds of cases it is associated with drugs (mostly antimicrobials and NSAIDs), in 5-10% of cases it is associated with infections (bacterial/viral/parasitic), in 5-10% of cases it is idiopathic (this is the case of the TINU syndrome characterized by interstitial nephritis and bilateral uveitis, and the anti-glomerular basal membrane antibody syndrome), and finally in 10% of cases it is associated with systemic diseases (sarcoidosis, by Sjogren, LES). The pathogenesis is based on a cell-mediated immune response and in most cases removing the causative agent is the gold standard of therapy. However, a percentage of patients, in a variable range from 30% to 70% of cases, do not fully recover renal function, due to the rapid transformation of the interstitial cell infiltrate into vast areas of fibrosis. Clozapine is a second generation atypical antipsycothic usually used for the treatment of schizophrenia resistant to other types of treatment; it can cause severe adverse effects among which the best known is a severe and potentially fatal neutropenia, furthermore a series of uncommon adverse events are recognized including hepatitis, pancreatitis, vasculitis. Cases of acute interstitial tubular nephritis associated with the use of clozapine have been described in the literature, although this complication is rare. Medical personnel using this drug need to be aware of this potential and serious side effect. We describe the case of a 48-year-old man who developed acute renal failure after initiation of clozapine. Topics: Acute Kidney Injury; Clozapine; Drug-Related Side Effects and Adverse Reactions; Humans; Male; Middle Aged; Nephritis, Interstitial; Uveitis | 2023 |
[Acute interstitial nephritis, a rare yet potentially dangerous complication of clozapine].
Topics: Acute Disease; Clozapine; Dangerous Behavior; Female; Humans; Male; Nephritis, Interstitial | 2022 |
Clozapine-induced acute interstitial nephritis.
Acute interstitial nephritis is a common cause of acute kidney injury. Acute interstitial nephritis is most commonly induced by drug although the cause may also be infective, autoimmune, or idiopathic. Although eosinophilia and eosinophiluria may help identify this disease entity, the gold standard for diagnosis remains renal biopsy. Prompt diagnosis is important because discontinuation of the culprit drugs can reduce further kidney injury. We present a patient with an underlying psychiatric disorder who was subsequently diagnosed with clozapine-induced acute interstitial nephritis. Monitoring of renal function during clozapine therapy is recommended for early recognition of this rare side-effect. Topics: Adult; Antipsychotic Agents; Bipolar Disorder; Clozapine; Female; Humans; Kidney; Nephritis, Interstitial; Schizophrenia, Paranoid | 2015 |
Clozapine induced tubulointerstitial nephritis in a patient with paranoid schizophrenia.
We describe the development of tubulointerstitial nephritis after starting clozapine therapy in a patient with treatment-resistant schizophrenia. A 54-year-old mixed-race patient with a longstanding history of paranoid schizophrenia was started on the antipsychotic clozapine. Two months after starting clozapine he developed fevers, cough and acute renal failure which initially responded to 7 days of prednisolone but recurred after completing the steroid course. Renal biopsy confirmed acute tubulointerstitial nephritis and he was started on a course of steroids with renal recovery in 72 h. Clozapine was later stopped. This case highlights a serious and potential life-threatening complication of an important antipsychotic used in treatment-resistant schizophrenia. Topics: Antipsychotic Agents; Clozapine; Humans; Male; Middle Aged; Nephritis, Interstitial; Schizophrenia, Paranoid | 2014 |
Why is clozapine unique?
Topics: Antipsychotic Agents; Clozapine; Female; Humans; Kidney Function Tests; Nephritis, Interstitial | 2013 |
Clozapine-induced nephritis and monitoring implications.
Topics: Antipsychotic Agents; Clozapine; Female; Humans; Kidney Function Tests; Nephritis, Interstitial | 2013 |
Clozapine-induced acute interstitial nephritis.
Topics: Acute Disease; Adult; Antipsychotic Agents; Clozapine; Humans; Male; Nephritis, Interstitial; Schizophrenia, Paranoid | 2004 |
An unexpected and serious complication of treatment with the atypical antipsychotic drug clozapine.
A 49-year-old man developed acute renal failure due to interstitial nephritis during treatment with the drug clozapine. Referral and diagnosis were delayed through a failure to consider complications of treatment other than neuroleptic malignant syndrome. Although this association has not previously been reported in the literature, we include details of a further 7 cases of acute renal failure in association with clozapine therapy reported to the Committee On Safety Of Medicines in the UK. Topics: Acute Kidney Injury; Aged; Antipsychotic Agents; Clozapine; Humans; Male; Nephritis, Interstitial | 2000 |
Clozapine-induced acute interstitial nephritis.
Drug hypersensitivity reactions commonly cause acute interstitial nephritis (AIN). Clozapine, a new antipsychotic, can cause fatal bone-marrow toxicity. We report clozapine-induced AIN as another serious adverse drug reaction. Topics: Acute Disease; Adult; Antipsychotic Agents; Clozapine; Creatinine; Female; Humans; Nephritis, Interstitial; Renal Dialysis | 1999 |