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Query: UMLS:C0011849 (
diabetes
)
277,896
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
A clinical and roentgenographic analysis of 13 patients with pathologically proved xanthogranulomatous pyelonephritis (X-P) has demonstrated that many previously accepted truisms associated with this disease may not be valid. As a result of this study it is suggested that X-P: 1. Does have a prominant female distribution. 2. May arise relatively acutely. 3. Can be associated with a well-functioning kidney. 4. May destroy the kidney and collecting system. 5. Does not demonstrate neovascularity. 6. Can be distinguished angiographically from hypernephroma. 7. May be associated with
diabetes
. Other important facts were again observed: 1. X-P is still often associated with staghorn calculi and
urinary tract obstruction
. 2. Proteus mirabilis is the main offending organism.
...
PMID:New thoughts concerning xanthogranulomatous pyelonephritis (X-P). 120 Feb 8
Emphysematous pyelonephritis is a rare complication of urinary tract infection and generally occurs in patients with
diabetes mellitus
or
urinary tract obstruction
. We recently treated an 81-year-old diabetic woman with Klebsiella pneumoniae urinary tract infection and septicemia whose abdominal roentgenogram demonstrated a striking left pneumonephrogram as well as intraureteral and perirenal gas. The patient died despite intensive therapeutic efforts. Unfortunately, the prognosis for this severe necrotizing infection process remains unfavorable.
...
PMID:Emphysematous pyelonephritis. 127 61
We report a case of yeast perinephric abscess and review 11 other published cases. This rare entity occurs primarily in patients who have
diabetes mellitus
, who have recently undergone surgery, or who have
urinary tract obstruction
. The clinical illness is often subacute or chronic with nonspecific symptoms. Candida and Torulopsis species are the reported etiologic agents. Successful therapy usually consists of percutaneous or surgical drainage of the abscess. Overall mortality is 25%; however, no patient in this series died as a direct result of perinephric infection.
...
PMID:Yeast perinephric abscess: report of a case and review. 161 52
Perinephric abscess is a life-threatening but treatable process. Most infections of the perinephric space occur as a result of extension of an ascending urinary tract infection, commonly in association with nephrolithiasis or
urinary tract obstruction
. A large portion of the mortality is the result of failure to diagnose this entity in a timely fashion. This failure may be because of the frequently obscure or nonspecific nature of the clinical presentation. Blood cultures as well as urine cultures may fail to identify correctly the bacterial pathogens responsible for the abscess. Perinephric abscess should be considered in the differential diagnosis of any patient presenting with a urinary tract infection that fails to respond promptly to antibiotic therapy, particularly in those known to have anatomical abnormalities of the urinary tract or
diabetes mellitus
. Consideration of this diagnosis should enter into the differential diagnosis of fever with abdominal pain or flank pain. Early recognition of perinephric abscess and prompt drainage, either percutaneously or surgically, in combination with appropriate antibiotic coverage, should reduce dramatically the morbidity and mortality from this infection.
...
PMID:Perinephric abscess: the missed diagnosis. 304 58
Emphysematous pyelonephritis is a severe infection characterized by the presence of gas within the renal parenchyma and perirenal tissues. Two cases of this disease are presented. They were the 16th and 17th case reported in Japan. Case 1 was a 63-year-old woman with
diabetes mellitus
and liver cirrhosis. She was hospitalized for abdominal pain and anuria. Renal X-rays showed a gas shadow in and around the left kidney, but no evidence of upper
urinary tract obstruction
. Although hemodialysis was done, she died of heart failure. Case 2 was a 54-year-old man with
diabetes mellitus
was admitted with the complaint of fever and left abdominal pain. Renal X-rays showed a gas shadow in and around the left kidney but no evidence of upper
urinary tract obstruction
. He was treated with intensive antibiotic therapy, control of blood sugar, intravenous drips and percutaneous drainage. Clinical features improved, but deteriorated after 40 days of therapy. The gas shadow remained unchanged on CT scanning, and aortography showed the occlusion of the left renal artery. Nephrectomy was done after 50 days. Seventeen cases of emphysematous pyelonephritis in the literature including our cases are reviewed, especially the choice of the treatment is discussed.
...
PMID:[Two cases of emphysematous pyelonephritis--considerations on the choice of treatment]. 359 89
Review of a large renal transplant experience revealed a 17.3% incidence of posttransplant erythrocytosis. The influence of kidney source, pretransplant hematocrit, duration of pretransplant dialysis, renal transplant function, acute rejection, transplant renal artery stenosis,
urinary tract obstruction
, smoking,
diabetes
, retention of native kidneys, splenectomy, parathyroidectomy, immunosuppression, hypertension, and liver enzyme abnormalities on the development of erythrocytosis in 53 recipients was determined. Comparison was made with 49 control recipients matched for kidney function, time after grafting, age, and sex. Erythrocytosis occurred 3 to 90 months after transplantation and persisted for 1 to over 84 months. Risk factors for the development of erythrocytosis were smoking,
diabetes
, and a rejection free course. In contradistinction to previous smaller series, erythrocytosis occurred in patients with good renal function (serum creatinine 1.62 +/- 0.43 mg/dl) without prominence of graft rejection, transplant artery stenosis or obstruction. Despite therapeutic phlebotomy, 11 thromboembolic events occurred in 10 of the 53 patients with erythrocytosis, but in none of the controls (P less than 0.001). The high incidence of erythrocytosis following renal transplantation and the risk of associated thromboembolic events should encourage awareness and controlled evaluation of therapeutic modalities.
...
PMID:Postrenal transplant erythrocytosis: a review of 53 patients. 634 69
The clinical and diagnostic features of renal papillary necrosis (RPN) of 27 patients were studied.
Diabetes mellitus
was the most frequent (56%) condition associated with RPN. Analgesic abuse, sickle hemoglobinopathy and
urinary tract obstruction
were present in 4 patients each; in 6 of these 12 patients these conditions were present as a coexistent disease with
diabetes mellitus
. There was evidence of an acute or chronic infection of the urinary tract in 18 patients, as a coexistent condition with another underlying disease that itself can cause RPN in 14 patients and as the only cause of RPN in another 4. Thus, the presence of more than one diagnostic condition which might be implicated in the causation of RPN was present in 15 patients or 55% of the cases in this series. When infection was excluded, six patients or 22% of the cases had two coexisting diseases, each of which has been implicated as a cause of RPN. This observation underlines the multifactorial nature of this entity and might explain why RPN is not encountered more frequently in each of the various primary diseases with which it has been associated. The average age of the patients at the time of diagnosis was 53 years for women and 56 years for men. Only six of the patients were younger than 40 years, and three of these had sickle hemoglobinopathy. The diagnosis of RPN was based on x-ray findings in eight patients, on the histologic examination of papillary tissue in urine in one, and on autopsy findings in the rest. Papillary necrosis was bilateral in three-fourths of the cases. The clinical picture varied. Most of the patients (67%) presented with chills and fever. Flank pain and dysuria were present in 11 patients (41%). As a rule oliguria was rare and progressive uremia was uncommon. In cases diagnosed at post-mortem, the patients had succumbed to infection or to a primary severe extrarenal disorder with the possibility of RPN having been entertained clinically in only half these cases prior to autopsy.
...
PMID:Renal papillary necrosis: an update. 703 74
62 men with prostatic hypertrophy and bladder obstruction and 31 age matched women without lower
urinary tract obstruction
, underwent urodynamic testing which included uroflowmetry, gas cystometry, urethral pressure measurement: electromyography and pressure flow study was only performed to the patients with prostatic hypertrophy. No patient with neurological disease,
diabetes mellitus
, pelvic operation, neoplasm or stone of the bladder was admitted to the study. Involuntary detrusor contractions (unstable detrusor) were found in 74.2% of male patients and in 25.8% of female patients. In male patients aged over 72 the percentage was 81.8% while in the female patients of the same age was 60%. All the 62 male patients underwent prostatectomy. Two months after surgery, acystometry was done. Unstable detrusor was found in 63.1% of cases. Patients over 80 had a percentage of 100%. These data suggest obstructive prostatic hypertrophy as an important factor in development of involuntary bladder contractions, but the primary pathophysiological factor appears to be age of patients.
...
PMID:[Bladder instability in the elderly patient with obstructive prostatic hypertrophy: comparative urodynamic study using non-obstructed women of the same age]. 751 83
1. Approximately half of the pediatric patients received grafts from their parents and half from cadaver donors. Pediatric recipients accounted for only 5% of cadaver-donor transplants. 2. Pediatric patients differed from adults in the incidence of primary disease, principally in the occurrence of
diabetes
(almost no juvenile diabetics had progressed to renal failure compared with 30% among adults).
Obstructive uropathy
and dysplasia were the primary diseases for about 37% of pediatric patients compared with 3% in adults. 3. Pediatric patients under the age of one had a markedly lower graft survival with cadaver donors. Such patients had much higher survival rates with parental donor kidneys. 4. Pediatric retransplants from parents had a graft survival comparable to adult grafts. Regraft survival in children given cadaveric kidneys were significantly lower than adult grafts. 5. Patients under the age of 18 with no diuresis on the first day or who required dialysis in the first week had a markedly lower graft survival rate compared with that of adults with comparable early dysfunction. 6. Kidneys from donors under 2 years old yielded a 67% one-year graft survival rate in infants, but an 87% survival in patients 16-18 years of age at 6 selected individual centers. These centers, that had performed more than 20 infant-donor renal transplants, achieved results comparable to those of transplants using grafts from older donors in recipients aged over 11 years. 7. Pediatric patients who received grafts mismatched for 5- and 6-HLA antigens had a significantly lower graft survival rate than those with better matches. 8. Black patients ages 11-18 years old had a lower graft survival rate than White patients in the same age group.
...
PMID:Pediatric renal transplantation. 754 71
This study sought to characterize patients with renal papillary necrosis seen at one tertiary referral center by reviewing medical records of patients with a confirmed diagnosis between January 1, 1976 and September 1, 1992. One hundred sixty-five cases were identified. The mean age at diagnosis was 57 yr (SD 15). The female-to-male ratio was 1.1:1.0. Ninety-two percent of patients were white. Seventy-seven percent of cases were unsuspected before diagnosis, and 16% were diagnosed at autopsy. The most common associated conditions were urinary tract infection, analgesic abuse,
urinary tract obstruction
,
diabetes mellitus
, and sickle cell disease. There was considerable overlap in the presence of these conditions, with two or more identified in 36% of patients. In addition, 11% of patients had none of these well-recognized risks. Other diagnoses in this group included lupus nephritis, Wegener's granulomatosis, and renal artery stenosis. A decline in case numbers of approximately 50% was demonstrated over the last 10 yr studied. This period was associated with a 57% reduction in the number of excretory urograms carried out, suggesting that changes in diagnostic imaging preference may have contributed. Vital status and renal outcome data after diagnosis were obtained in 93% of cases. Of those diagnosed while living, survival was lowest among diabetic patients. Ten-year survival for nondiabetics was not significantly different from the expected survival of an age- and sex-matched cohort. The overall risk for requiring renal replacement therapy after the diagnosis of renal papillary necrosis in surviving patients was low (7% of 136 patients at risk).(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Renal papillary necrosis--a sixteen-year clinical experience. 757 92
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