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Bright's disease

Bright's disease is a historical classification of kidney diseases that would be described in modern medicine as acute or chronic nephritis. The term is no longer used, as diseases are now classified according to their more fully-understood etiologies. more...

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It is typically denoted by the presence of albumin (blood plasma) in the urine, and frequently accompanied by edema (tissue particulate).

These associated symptoms in connection with kidney disease were first described in 1827 by noted English physician Dr. Richard Bright. Since that time, it has been established that the symptoms, instead of being, as was formerly supposed, the result of one form of disease of the kidneys, may be dependent on various morbid conditions of those organs. Thus, the term Bright's disease, which is retained in medical nomenclature in honor of Dr. Bright, must be understood as having a strictly historical application.

The symptoms are usually of a severe nature. Back pain, vomiting and fever commonly signal an attack. Edema, varying in degree from slight puffiness of the face to an accumulation of fluid sufficient to distend the whole body, and sometimes severely restrict breathing, is a very common ailment. The urine is reduced in quantity, is of dark, smoky or bloody color, and exhibits to chemical reaction the presence of a large amount of albumin, while, under the microscope, blood corpuscles and casts, as above mentioned, are found in abundance.

This state of acute inflammation may severely limit normal daily activities, and if left unchecked, may lead to one of the chronic forms of Bright's disease. In many cases though, the inflammation is reduced, marked by increased urine output and the gradual disappearance of its albumen and other abnormal by-products. A reduction in edema and a rapid recovery of strength usually follows.

Acute Bright's disease was treated with local depletion, warm baths, diuretics, and laxatives. There was no successful treatment for chronic Bright's disease, though dietary modifications were sometimes suggested.

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Chessman, Harriet Scott. Lydia Cassatt reading the morning paper, a novel - Brief Article - Young Adult Review - Book Review
From Kliatt, 3/1/03 by E.B. Boatner

Plume. 164p. c2001. 0-452-28350-2 $13.00. SA

This is a love story, in effect, between noted painter Mary Cassatt and her sister, Lydia. Against the background of 19th-century Paris. Chessman captures the careful balance of affection and tension between the two. Lydia, delicate now in 1878, fatally ill with Bright's disease, and May, robust. dancing her own dance with the more famous Edgar Degas, refusing outwardly to recognize the seriousness of Lydia's condition as she works to capture Lydia on her canvasses. The story is laid on the framework of four of the younger sister's paintings of Lydia: "Woman Reading" (1878). "The Cup of Tea" (1880). "Lydia Crocheting in the Garden" (1880), and "Woman and Child Driving" (1881). Despite herself, Cassatt captures the decline of her sister's health through her choice of postures, facial expressions and skin tones for her beloved model.

The background of the novel is richly painted with flashbacks to their childhood, Lydia's suitors and what might have been, as well as the tantalizing relationship between May and Degas. Lydia's yearning, in the face of death, for a husband and children is palpable, and her determination to spend her waning energies posing to help her sister, isolated among loved ones who will not recognize or discuss her imminent death, rises to the heroic. She looks at the woman in the paintings, wanting to be that person May has painted. "Remember me," she thinks, "Don't allow me to be forgotten." And through her own courage and the genius of her sister's brush strokes she will not.

Chessman, author of Girl With a Pearl Earring, handles strong emotions with a delicate yet revealing hand, her prose painting a picture as revealing as the paintings, skillfully insinuating herself into the minds of characters, the spirit of the times and the breathing entity of Paris. A novel that vibrates with life. E.B. Boatner, Writer, Twin Cities, MN

COPYRIGHT 2003 Kliatt
COPYRIGHT 2004 Gale Group

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