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Query: UMLS:C0004623 (bacterial infection)
15,226 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Kidneys obtained by nephrectomy from 85 patients with chronic nephropathy were examined by bacterial culture and by immunofluorescence for a content of E. coli antigen. A panel of 10 E. coli 0-antisera, representing the strains most commonly causing urinary tract infection, and antiserum against common enterobacterial antigen (CA), were used. Bacteria could be cultured from the nephrectomy specimens in 24 cases, mainly in cases of obstructive chronic pyelonephritis, analgesic nephropathy and congenital renal disease. By immunofluorescence, type-specific 0-antigen was found in whole bacteria and amorphously in macrophages, CA only in whole bacteria. Whole bacteria could be visualized in 12 cases, macrophages only in two cases. Amorphous bacterial antigen was no observed outside phagocytizing cells. On the basis of these results, it seems unlikely that progression of the renal lesions in chronic renal disease is due to persistant bacterial antigen in the absence of viable bacteria. Chronic pyelonephritis, defined as an interstitial nephritis due to the effects of bacterial infection in the renal parenchyma and pelvic mucosa, appears always to be a secondary manifestation following obstruction or primary renal disease, such as analgesic nephropathy or congenital renal disease.
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PMID:Bacteria and bacterial antigen in the kidney in human chronic renal disease. Bacteriological and immunofluorescence Studies. 34 94

Chronic pyelonephritis is, by definition, a chronic interestial nephritis due to immediate or late effects of bacterial infection of the renal parenchyma. The main diagnostic criterion is recurrent or permanent bacteriuria. As a rule, bacteriuria follows as a secondary symptom a primary renal disturbance such as malformations of the urinary tract, stones, gout, analgesic abuse, diabetes mellitus or pregnancy. It is most important to eradicate predisposing factors, if possible, for successful antimicrobial therapy. In some cases, permanent intensive chemotherapy might be more harmful to the patient than untreated chronic bacteriuria, in itself.
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PMID:[Pyelonephritis]. 122 May 15

Chronic pyelonephritis (c.p.) is by definition an infectious tubulo-interstitial nephritis. It has to be differentiated from other etiologic forms of tubulo-interstitial nephritis. Therefore strict morphological criteria are needed for diagnosis. The characteristic lesion is a large cortico-medullary scar overlying a dilated chronically inflammed calyx. The macroscopic aspect and the histologic survey picture are more important than histologic details. A diagnosis on renal biopsies is therefore not warranted. Vesico-renal reflux and papillary morphology play an important pathogenetic role. Beside the more common focal scar a diffuse form of scarring can be observed. A limited number of conditions only have to be considered in differential diagnosis. The Ask-Upmark kidney seems to be a special form of c.p. related to urinary tract infection and reflux in early infancy. Pelvi-calyceal lithiasis without superimposed infection causes a picture very similar to a pyelonephritic scar. A reliable differentiation between c.p. and analgesic nephropathy may cause problems in endstage kidneys with sloughed off papillae. Various mechanisms of renal damage such as bacterial infection, immunological mediated inflammation, leakage of urinary constituents into the interstitium especially Tamm-Horsfall-protein and ischemia have to be considered. Despite the frequency of urinary tract infections chronic progressive pyelonephritis is rare. Predisposing factors are needed for progression of the disease. These include congenital or acquired urinary tract obstruction, vesico-renal reflux and papillary damage with intrarenal obstruction to the urinary flow. Other important factors are focal and segmental glomerulosclerosis and hypertension.
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PMID:[Chronic pyelonephritis and its differential diagnosis. A disease changing with time]. 248 12

Many pathogens are thought to be involved in the development and progression of chronic kidney disease (CKD). The mechanism of kidney damage due to infection includes direct invasion of pathogens and deposition of antigen-antibody complex by immunological reaction. As to renal dysfunction induced by bacterial infection, some cases of poststreptococcal glomerulonephritis present progressive decline of glomerular filtration rate (GFR). Methicillin resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA)-related glomerulonephritis and infectious endocarditis are known to cause acute renal failure, which clinicians often find difficulty in the treatment. Chronic pyelonephritis by repetitive vesicoureteral reflux or nephrolithiasis also cannot be disregarded. Hepatitis B virus (HBV) and hepatitis C virus (HCV) infections are the most recognized etiology of virus associated nephropathy, and the representative histological changes are membranous nephropathy and membranoproliferative glomerulonephritis, respectively. Furthermore, morbidity of human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) associated nephropathy is increasing, reflecting the prolonged survival of HIV-infected patients. Thorough preventive/therapeutic strategies should be taken against these infections for improving clinical outcome.
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PMID:[Infection and chronic kidney disease]. 1878 11

Acute pyelonephritis is a bacterial infection of the renal parenchyma and collecting system. Diagnosis is based on clinical findings of fever, flank pain, and urinary tract infection. Computed tomography findings include renal enlargement with wedge-shaped heterogeneous areas of decreased enhancement, known as a "striated nephrogram." Imaging is primarily used to diagnose complications such as emphysematous pyelonephritis, renal abscess, and pyonephrosis. Chronic pyelonephritis can have varying appearances on imaging ranging from xanthogranulomatous pyelonephritis or, in extreme cases, renal replacement lipomatosis.
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PMID:Imaging of Renal Infections and Inflammatory Disease. 3279 23