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1

Potter, Simon M. Nonlinear impulse response functions. Federal Reserve Bank of New York, 1999.

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2

Hall, Alastair. Information criteria for impulse response function matching estimation of DSGE models. Federal Reserve Bank of Atlanta, 2007.

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3

Bayoumi, Tamim. Macroeconomic adjustment under Bretton Woodsand the post-Bretton-Woods float: An impulse-response analysis. Centre for Economic Policy Research, 1992.

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4

Bayoumi, Tamim A. Macroeconomic adjustment under Bretton Woods and the post-Bretton-Woods float: An impulse-response analysis. National Bureau of Economic Research, 1992.

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5

James, P. P. Evolution of the energy impulse response in the case of two very weakly coupled systems: a mathematical model. University of Southampton, Institute of Sound and Vibration Research, 1995.

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6

Kumar, K. Ravi. Attack-defense marketing strategies: A full equilibrium analysis based on response function models. College of Commerce and Business Administration, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, 1985.

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7

Fabiani, Silvia. The effects of technology shocks on output fluctuations: An impulse response analysis for the G7 countries. Banca d'Italia, 1997.

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8

Vogel, Johannes. Impulse oscillometry: Analysis of lung mechanics in general practice and the clinic, epidemiological and experimental research. pmi Verlagsgruppe, 1994.

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9

Kumar, K. Ravi. Supplemental appendices to defensive marketing strategies: An equilibrium analysis based on decoupled response function models. College of Commerce and Business Administration, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, 1987.

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10

Wang, Yinkun. Energy dispersive x-ray diffraction system: A response function for the CZT detector and an analysis of noise a low momentum transfer arguments. Laurentian University, School of Graduate, 2006.

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11

Q, Yang H., and United States. National Aeronautics and Space Administration., eds. Coupled fluid-structure model for improved evaluation of vestibular function during in-flight conditions: A final report. CFD Research Corp., 1995.

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12

Q, Yang H., and United States. National Aeronautics and Space Administration., eds. Coupled fluid-structure model for improved evaluation of vestibular function during in-flight conditions: A final report. CFD Research Corp., 1995.

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13

Q, Yang H., and United States. National Aeronautics and Space Administration., eds. Coupled fluid-structure model for improved evaluation of vestibular function during in-flight conditions: A final report. CFD Research Corp., 1995.

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14

United States. National Aeronautics and Space Administration., ed. Study of one- and two-dimensional filtering and deconvolution algorithms for a streaming array computer: Final report. National Aeronautics and Space Administration, 1985.

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15

United States. National Aeronautics and Space Administration., ed. Study of one- and two-dimensional filtering and deconvolution algorithms for a streaming array computer: Final report, appendix 5. National Aeronautics and Space Administration, 1985.

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16

United States. National Aeronautics and Space Administration., ed. Study of one- and two-dimensional filtering and deconvolution algorithms for a streaming array computer: Final report, appendix 5. National Aeronautics and Space Administration, 1985.

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17

United States. National Aeronautics and Space Administration., ed. Study of one- and two-dimensional filtering and deconvolution algorithms for a streaming array computer: Final report : [appendices]. National Aeronautics and Space Administration, 1985.

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18

Bedford, Michael R., Gary G. Partridge, Milan Hruby, and Carrie L. Walk, eds. Enzymes in farm animal nutrition. 3rd ed. CABI, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.1079/9781789241563.0000.

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Abstract This third edition explores considerable advances such as the use of enzymes in fish and shrimp diets, new understanding of how phytases function in the animal, NSPase research and enzymes' extended use in ruminant markets. This book also provides comprehensive coverage of all topics relating to the production, use, cooperativity and analysis of feed enzymes. It is fully updated throughout, revealing significant developments such as new methods to deliver enzymes (formulations, encapsulations, and liquid spray systems) and advances in enzyme analysis. It also includes brand new chapters on combinations of enzymes, antibiotic-free diets and how to measure response in feed-enzyme trials. Covering biochemistry, enzymology and characteristics relevant to animal feed use, this book forms a valuable resource for academics and students of animal nutrition and production, as well as professionals in the animal feed industry.
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19

Plümmer, Franziska. Rethinking Authority in China’s Border Regime. Amsterdam University Press, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.5117/9789463726351.

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In the 21st century, governments around the globe are faced with the question on how to tackle new migratory mobilities. Governments increasingly become aware of irregular immigration and are forced to re-negotiate the dilemma of open but secure borders. Rethinking Authority in China’s Border Regime: Regulating the Irregular investigates the Chinese government’s response to this phenomenon. Hence, this book presents a comprehensive analysis of the Chinese border regime. It explores the regulatory framework of border mobility in China by analysing laws, institutions, and discourses as part of an ethnographic border regime analysis. It argues that the Chinese state deliberately creates ‘zones of exception’ along its border. In these zones, local governments function as ‘scalar managers’ that establish cross-border relations to facilitate cross-border mobility and create local migration systems that build on their own notion of legality by issuing locally valid border documents. The book presents an empirically rich story of how border politics are implemented and theoretically contributes to debates on territoriality and sovereignty as well as to the question of how authority is exerted through border management. Empirically, the analysis builds on two case studies at the Sino-Myanmar and Sino-North Korean borders to illustrate how local practices are embedded in multiscalar mobility regulation including regional organizations such as the Greater Mekong Subregion and the Greater Tumen Initiative.
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20

The Frequency Response, Impulse Response, and Transfer Function of an Ocean Waveguide. Storming Media, 2004.

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21

Lee, Li-Chu. Empirical Bayes estimation of the response function and multivariate regression model. 1989.

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22

Pan, Jianhua. Nonparametric analysis and design of control systems based on nonparametric impulse response models. 1994.

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23

Shifting preferences at the Fed: Evidence from rolling dynamic multipliers and impulse response analysis. Madras School of Economics, 2011.

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24

Macario, Ana L. G. Frequency response function analysis of the equatorial margin of Brazil using gravity and bathymetry. 1990.

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25

Addison, Tony, and Atanu Ghoshray. Pandemics and their impact on oil and metal prices. UNU-WIDER, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.35188/unu-wider/2020/914-3.

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We examine the effect of pandemics on selected commodity prices—in particular, those of zinc, copper, lead, and oil. We set up a vector autoregressive model and analyse data since the mid-nineteenth century to determine how prices reacted to pandemics such as the 1918 Spanish Flu, 1957 Asian Flu, and 1968 Hong Kong Flu. We control for demand and supply fundamentals to generate forecasts from the point of outbreak, and we consider whether any pattern can be deduced in reactions to adverse global shocks. Results are varied, depending on choice of commodity and magnitude and type of response. No clear conclusions are possible from past pandemics, and we conclude that at the time of writing, forecasts are difficult to make in the ongoing current pandemic too. We conclude by estimating impulse response functions to assess likely impact and the subsequent response of commodity prices to the shock.
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26

Compston, Alastair. Multiple sclerosis and other demyelinating diseases. Oxford University Press, 2011. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/med/9780198569381.003.0871.

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The oligodendrocyte–myelin unit subserves saltatory conduction of the nerve impulse in the healthy central nervous system. At one time, many disease processes were thought exclusively to target the structure and function of myelin. Therefore, they were designated ‘demyelinating diseases’. But recent analyses, based mainly on pathological and imaging studies, (re)emphasize that axons are also directly involved in these disorders during both the acute and chronic phases. Another ambiguity is the extent to which these are inflammatory conditions. Here, distinctions should be made between inflammation, as a generic process, and autoimmunity in which rather a specific set of aetiological and mechanistic conditions pertain. And there are differences between disorders that are driven primarily by immune processes and those in which inflammation occurs in response to pre-existing tissue damage.With these provisos, the pathological processes of demyelination and associated axonal dysfunction often account for episodic neurological symptoms and signs referable to white matter tracts of the brain, optic nerves, or spinal cord when these occur in young people. This is the clinical context in which the possibility of ‘demyelinating disease’ is usually considered by physicians and, increasingly, the informed patient. Neurologists will, with appropriate cautions, also be prepared to diagnose demyelinating disease in older patients presenting with progressive symptoms implicating these same pathways even when there is no suggestive past history. Both in its typical and atypical forms multiple sclerosis remains by far the commonest demyelinating disease. But acute disseminated encephalomyelitis, the leucodystrophies, and central pontine myelinolysis also need to be considered in particular circumstances; and multiple sclerosis itself has a differential diagnosis in which the relapsing-remitting course is mimicked by conditions not associated with direct injury to the axon–glial unit. Since our understanding of the cause, pathogenesis and features of demyelinating disease remains incomplete, classification combines aspects of the aetiology, clinical features, pathology, and laboratory components. Whether the designation ‘multiple sclerosis’ encapsulates one or more conditions is now much debated. We anticipate that a major part of future studies in demyelinating disease will be further to resolve this question of disease heterogeneity leading to a new taxonomy based on mechanisms rather than clinical empiricism. But, for now, the variable ages of onset, unpredictable clinical course, protean clinical manifestations, and non-specific laboratory investigations continue to make demyelinating disease one of the more challenging diagnostic areas in clinical neurology.
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27

Study of one- and two-dimensional filtering and deconvolution algorithms for a streaming array computer: Final report : [appendices]. National Aeronautics and Space Administration, 1985.

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28

Study of one- and two-dimensional filtering and deconvolution algorithms for a streaming array computer: Final report. National Aeronautics and Space Administration, 1985.

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29

Connor, John T. Mid-Century Romance. Oxford University PressOxford, 2024. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/9780191953057.001.0001.

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Abstract Mid-Century Romance chronicles a revival of the historical novel at the intersection of British late modernism and international communist culture. It frames this mid-century renovation of the genre as a response to a national turn in world politics, and this turn as a function of realignment in the imperial and literary world-systems. Confronted with the turbulence of mid-century history, writers embraced the historical novel to float narratives of national becoming and to locate their readers in the pattern of social change. Many were mindful of the genre’s romantic-era history: they saw themselves following in the footsteps of Sir Walter Scott and his heirs in other countries, and they drew on the same rescued remains of primitive poetry and popular antiquities that romanticism first used to construct its versions of national identity, of national culture and tradition. The study shows how the impulse to salvage traces of ancestral culture and to press them to new purpose links the mid-century historical novel to the rise of two of the most important post-war critical and creative projects: history from below and magical realism. It argues for the period-centrality of the mid-century national-historical novel and situates its cast of British writers—the modernists Hope Mirrlees and Virginia Woolf, the communists Sylvia Townsend Warner and Jack Lindsay, the oddball modernist and onetime fellow traveller John Cowper Powys, and many others in less detail—in a comparative, transnational perspective.
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30

MAHESHA, Dr C. R., Dr S. BASKARAN, Dr RAJU T N, and Smt SUPRABHA R. SALES AND DISTRIBUTION MANAGEMENT. KAAV PUBLICATIONS, DELHI, INDIA, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.52458/9789391842420.2022.tb.

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Business leaders know that accurate sales & distribution management is a critical organizational capability. Proper sales management is predicting the future, and the list of what needs to be predicted to run a world-class organization and its supply chain is virtually endless. Accurate sales management and distribution system is essential for identifying new market opportunities, forecasting risks, events, supply chain disruptions, innovation, competition, market growth and trends. It also includes the ability to conduct 'what-if' analysis to understand the tradeoff implications of decisions. Over the past few years the ability to adopt accurate and useful sales distribution has become particularly challenging due to a spike in the competitiveness of global markets coupled with a global economic recession. Customers are demanding increasingly shorter response times, improved quality, and greater product choice. Increased competition is exacerbated by a downward global economy and rising fuel prices, which increase uncertainty, risk, and operating costs. The purpose of this book is to familiarise readers with the principles, strategies and skills of selling ,managing and the distribution function. This book also provides an understanding of the tools & techniques necessary to effectively manage the sales function, the sales forecasting and the distribution management.
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31

Gyure, Dale Allen. The Schoolroom. ABC-CLIO, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.5040/9798216011446.

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School attendance is nearly universal in our society, yet very little is known about the history of the classrooms we occupy and the objects we encounter and use in our educational lives. Why are our school classrooms designed as they are? When was the blackboard invented? When did computers start appearing in schools? Through analysis of classrooms and objects within them, The Schoolroom: A Social History of Teaching and Learning details the history of American education, describing how architects, in collaboration with educators, have shaped learning spaces in response to curricular and pedagogical changes, population shifts, cultural expectations, and concern for children's health and well-being. It illustrates connections between form and function, showing how a well-designed school building can encourage learning, and reveals little-known histories of ubiquitous educational objects such as blackboards, desks, and computers.
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32

Finlay, Stephen, and David Plunkett. Quasi-Expressivism about Statements of Law. Oxford University Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780198828174.003.0002.

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Speech and thought about what the law is commonly function in practical ways to guide or assess behavior. These functions have often been seen as problematic for legal positivism in the tradition of H.L.A. Hart. One recent response is an expressivist analysis of legal statements. This paper advances a rival, positivist-friendly account of legal statements which the authors call “quasi-expressivist”. It combines a descriptivist, “rule-relational” semantics with a pragmatic account of the expressive and practical functions of legal discourse. This approach is at least as well-equipped as expressivism to explain the practical features of “internal” legal statements and a fundamental kind of legal disagreement, while handling better “external” legal statements. The chapter develops this theory in a Hartian framework, and also argues (against Kevin Toh’s expressivist interpretation) that Hart’s own views in The Concept of Law are best reconstructed along quasi-expressivist lines.
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33

Mantzari, Despoina. Courts, Regulators, and the Scrutiny of Economic Evidence. Oxford University PressOxford, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780198851608.001.0001.

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Abstract This book explores the interaction of courts and regulators with economic evidence in the realm of utilities regulation in two common law jurisdictions: the US and the UK. Adopting the error-correction function of judicial review as a starting point, it unveils how the increasing reliance of regulators on economic inputs affects the legal outputs of regulation and transforms administrative discretion and judicial review. After delineating how positive law has responded to the challenges posed by economic evidence, the book engages in a normative debate on the appropriate scope of judicial review of discretionary economic assessments and the optimal institutional response to the pervasiveness of economic evidence in economic regulation. Building on comparative institutional analysis, the book rejects single-factor explanations, such as that judges do not understand economics, in favour of a richer set of macro-level and micro-level factors that shape the relationship between courts and regulators in the regulatory enterprise. Mantzari argues that the ‘recipe’ for adjudicating economic evidence requires a balance to be struck, in which deference is accorded to regulatory agencies on institutional competencies grounds and a degree of epistemic diversity is introduced in courts. The book combines theoretical, doctrinal, comparative, and empirical analysis and it is written to be accessible to lawyers, economists, judges, regulators, policymakers, and political scientists.
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34

Prakash, Tara. Ancient Egyptian Prisoner Statues. Lockwood Press, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.5913/2022884.

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During the Old Kingdom, the ancient Egyptians constructed elaborately decorated mortuary monuments for their pharaohs. By the late Old Kingdom (ca. 2435-2153 BCE), these pyramid complexes began to contain a new and unique type of statue, the so-called prisoner statues. Despite being known to Egyptologists for decades, these statues of kneeling, bound foreign captives have been only partially documented, and questions surrounding their use, treatment, and exact meaning have remained unanswered. Ancient Egyptian Prisoner Statues-the first comprehensive analysis of the prisoner statues-addresses this gap, demonstrating that the Egyptians conceived of and used the prisoner statues differently over time as a response to contemporary social, cultural, and historical changes. In the process, the author contributes new data and interpretations on topics as diverse as the purpose and function of the pyramid complex, the ways in which the Egyptians understood and depicted ethnicity, and the agency of artists in ancient Egypt. Ultimately, this volume provides a fuller understanding of not only the prisoner statues but also the Egyptian late Old Kingdom as a whole.
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35

Dudai, Ron. Penality in the Underground. Oxford University PressOxford, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780198759409.001.0001.

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Abstract Secret informers are often the biggest threat faced by underground rebel groups, which must respond to this challenge in order to survive. Using the IRA as a case-study, Penality in the Underground offers a systematic, in-depth, analysis of this phenomenon, providing an empirical and theoretical account of the causes, forms, functions and effects of the underground response to informers. While superficial media images tend to depict only ruthless killings, the book argues—using the lens of ‘punishment and society’ and drawing on rich interviews with IRA members and on archival sources—that groups such as the IRA develop complex systems of punishment and social control in their pursuit of informers. The book demonstrates how such systems are not only a mechanical response to a security problem, but are also shaped by other goals, risks and imperatives, such as maintaining legitimacy, projecting a state-like image and supporting governance efforts. This work thus identifies and explains some remarkable features of the IRA’s pursuit of informers, such as the establishment of ‘courts-martial’, the granting of ‘amnesties’, the expansion of social control, the productive function of labelling ‘treason’ in asserting sovereignty and the long-term consequences of the issue during transition out of conflict. By exploring the penal logics, practices and discourses of armed rebel groups—engaged in direct struggle with the state agencies that normally carry out criminal justice—the book aims to expand the study of punishment and society and demonstrate its utility to the understanding of non-state actors.
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36

Mease, Philip. Biologic treatments for psoriatic arthritis apart from TNF inhibition. Oxford University Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/med/9780198737582.003.0030.

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Psoriatic arthritis (PsA) is an immunologically mediated inflammatory disease characterized by arthritis, enthesitis, dactylitis, spondylitis, and psoriasis. Prior to the introduction of targeted biologic medications, such as TNF inhibitors, the ability to control disease activity was limited, with only modest effects noted with traditional oral medications such as methotrexate and sulfasalazine. The introduction of TNF inhibitors substantially changed the outlook of PsA patients, yielding significant response in all relevant clinical domains and demonstrating the ability to inhibit progressive structural damage of joints. However, not all patients responded to these agents and many patients displayed initial response which waned over time, partly due to immunogenicity (development of antibodies which blocked full therapeutic effect of the biologic protein), or because of tolerability and side effect issues. Thus, it has been important to develop new medicines which target other key cytokines and immunologic pathways. Several medicines with a different mechanism of action have been approved or are in development for the treatment of PsA. Ustekinumab inhibits both IL12 and IL23 and thus is felt to work in both the TH1 and TH7 pathways of inflammation. The oral medicine apremilast inhibits phosphodiesterase 4, thus modulating the cyclic AMP pathway in immunologic cells, yielding an anti-inflammatory effect. Both of these medicines have been approved for the treatment of PsA as well as psoriasis. An emerging group of therapies, the IL17 inhibitors, has demonstrated significant effectiveness in psoriasis and PsA and one of these, Secukinumab, has been approved for psoriasis, PsA, and AS. Other medicines in development include the co-stimulatory blockade agent, abatacept, oral Janus Kinase (JAK) inhibitors, and an emerging group of therapies which inhibit IL23. As modulators of immune cell function, these agents have the potential to increase risk for infection, as well as other side effects. These must be discussed with the patient and considered when determining overall risk benefit analysis regarding their use. The emergence of medicines with a different mechanism of action than TNF inhibition has broadened and strengthened our ability to effectively treat PsA.
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37

Hall, Andrew, and Shamima Rahman. Mitochondrial diseases and the kidney. Edited by Neil Turner. Oxford University Press, 2015. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/med/9780199592548.003.0340.

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Mitochondrial disease can affect any organ in the body including the kidney. As increasing numbers of patients with mitochondrial disease are either surviving beyond childhood or being diagnosed in adulthood, it is important for all nephrologists to have some understanding of the common renal complications that can occur in these individuals. Mitochondrial proteins are encoded by either mitochondrial or nuclear DNA (mtDNA and nDNA, respectively); therefore, disease causing mutations may be inherited maternally (mtDNA) or autosomally (nDNA), or can arise spontaneously. The commonest renal phenotype in mitochondrial disease is proximal tubulopathy (Fanconi syndrome in the severest cases); however, as all regions of the nephron can be affected, from the glomerulus to the collecting duct, patients may also present with proteinuria, decreased glomerular filtration rate, nephrotic syndrome, water and electrolyte disorders, and renal tubular acidosis. Understanding of the relationship between underlying genotype and clinical phenotype remains incomplete in mitochondrial disease. Proximal tubulopathy typically occurs in children with severe multisystem disease due to mtDNA deletion or mutations in nDNA affecting mitochondrial function. In contrast, glomerular disease (focal segmental glomerulosclerosis) has been reported more commonly in adults, mainly in association with the m.3243A<G point mutation. Co-enzyme Q10 (CoQ10) deficiency has been particularly associated with podocyte dysfunction and nephrotic syndrome in children. Underlying mitochondrial disease should be considered as a potential cause of unexplained renal dysfunction; clinical clues include lack of response to conventional therapy, abnormal mitochondrial morphology on kidney biopsy, involvement of other organs (e.g. diabetes, cardiomyopathy, and deafness) and a maternal family history, although none of these features are specific. The diagnostic approach involves acquiring tissue (typically skeletal muscle) for histological analysis, mtDNA screening and oxidative phosphorylation (OXPHOS) complex function tests. A number of nDNA mutations causing mitochondrial disease have now been identified and can also be screened for if clinically indicated. Management of mitochondrial disease requires a multidisciplinary approach, and treatment is largely supportive as there are currently very few evidence-based interventions. Electrolyte deficiencies should be corrected in patients with urinary wasting due to tubulopathy, and CoQ10 supplementation may be of benefit in individuals with CoQ10 deficiency. Nephrotic syndrome in mitochondrial disease is not typically responsive to steroid therapy. Transplantation has been performed in patients with end-stage kidney disease; however, immunosuppressive agents such as steroids and tacrolimus should be used with care given the high incidence of diabetes in mitochondrial disease.
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