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In recent years, the lifespan of patients with spinal cord injury (SCI) in Japan has been markedly prolonged, resulting in changes in the pattern of diseases developing after SCI and causes of death. We carried out a questionnaire survey on these problems and obtained the following results: 1. Disease pattern in SCI patients. The morbidity during 3 days in October 1987 and the past history after SCI were investigated in 426 SCI patients, and the results were compared with those in the national health survey carried out by the Japanese government in 1984. The incidence of urological complications and pressure ulcer was high, as was to be expected. In addition, the incidence of diabetes, hypertension, skin diseases, peptic ulcer, and hepatic disease were also significantly higher in the SCI patients. 2. Causes of death in SCI patients. Causes of death were analysed in 522 SCI patients who died, and the results were compared with those of the survey undertaken in 1967. The major causes of death were urinary tract infections and respiratory dysfunction in the early stage of cervical cord injury. Comparison with the results of the survey in 1967 showed a significant decrease in deaths from urinary tract infection; and a significant increase in those from CVA.
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PMID:The disease pattern and causes of death of spinal cord injured patients in Japan. 276 3

With a mean follow-up of 10.8 years, 160 female and 29 male patients were investigated after successful correction of vesicoureterorenal reflux. All patients suffered from urinary tract infection (UTI) preoperatively, while postoperatively 42% of the patients developed further UTIs but with a significantly diminished rate of febrile infections. In comparison to a group of patients without postoperative UTI (n = 16), the uroepithelial cells of those patients with a high infection rate after reflux correction showed a significantly lower bacterial growth suppression (n = 37). Renal scars were found in 22% of the investigated renal units with operated ureters (n = 211). Of the preoperatively unscarred kidneys, 3.4% developed new scars during the observation period, mainly within the first 2 years after operation. In 7 (11.5%) of the 61 patients with renal scars, moderate arterial hypertension was found.
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PMID:Long-term follow-up of children with surgically treated vesicorenal reflux: postoperative incidence of urinary tract infections, renal scars and arterial hypertension. 278 37

The factors that influence the progression of renal failure in analgesic-associated nephropathy (AAN) still remain to be clarified. In this study, the actual analgesic intake (N-acetyl-p-aminophenol, NAPAP, i.e. acetaminophen in urine) and progression of renal failure (1/crea method) in 127 outpatients with various renal diseases were investigated over a period of 7-150 months. AAN was diagnosed in 57 of the 127 patients (44%). The NAPAP test was positive in 21% of the 57 AAN patients and in 3% of the 70 control patients with other renal diseases (p = 0.0001). The AAN patients presented with more advanced renal insufficiency, lost more weight, and had more severe hypertension as well as a higher mortality rate than the control patients (univariate analysis). Progression of renal insufficiency, as measured by regression analysis of the reciprocal of serum creatinine versus time and expressed as clearance loss per year, was more rapid in the AAN patients who were found positive for NAPAP (6.9 +/- 5.5 ml/min/year) than in the AAN patients who were found negative (4.1 +/- 11.0 ml/min/year) or in control patients with other renal diseases (5.1 +/- 14.9 ml/min/year). Multivariate analysis showed the more rapid clearance loss to be the most discriminating factor between the AAN patients who continued analgesic abuse of phenacetin-or acetaminophen-containing drugs and AAN patients who stopped. We therefore conclude that continued analgesic abuse promotes renal insufficiency in AAN. The progression of renal failure in AAN patients who stopped abusing analgesics, however, cannot be explained within the parameters investigated, i.e. urinary tract infection, hypertension, hyperalimentation, or papillary necrosis.
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PMID:Progression of renal failure in analgesic-associated nephropathy. 279 44

Comparison was made of the cost of medications between Shared Health Facilities (SHFs) or Medicaid Mills and a Neighborhood Health Center (NHC) for nine conditions in fields of adult medicine, pediatrics, and gynecology. A total of 10 cases from SHF reviews were matched by diagnosis, age, and length of time under care with those in the NHC. For otitis media and pharyngitis in children and questionable urinary tract infection and vaginitis in adult women, the average costs were significantly higher in the SHFs. Average costs for family planning services and vaginal bleeding were higher in the SHFs but not significantly so. Medication costs for children with asthma and adults with bronchitis and hypertension were approximately the same in both settings. The reasons for higher costs included greater use of more expensive antibiotics, concurrent use of decongestants and antihistamines for infectious conditions of childhood, and dispensing of medications on "shot-gun" basis without adequate diagnostic studies. The most striking difference was the additional average cost of $798 for hospitalization of the SHF patients with vaginal bleeding when D & C and surgery were performed. The NHC women had no hospitalizations as the recommended procedure of endocervical biopsy in the office was Center policy. Other quality inferences noted in the NHC, but not in SHFs, were routine performance of throat cultures for pharyngitis, wet smears for vaginitis, and deferral of treatment until cultures were received for urinary tract infection. The small number of cases for each condition and the large intersample variability were limiting factors in this study, but the findings do suggest that higher standards of care contribute to lower therapy costs.
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PMID:Medication costs in different provider settings. 298 Sep 8

Urinary tract infection is the commonest human bacterial infection. Bacteriuria alone does not appear to produce progressive renal damage or hypertension. However, it can produce considerable morbidity. Urinalysis is a simple, relatively sensitive, and reliable way of diagnosing urinary tract infection. It is not clear that routine screening should be performed in all patients, but pregnant females, patients with known anatomic abnormalities, and patients with recent genitourinary instrumentation should be screened. The major determinant of therapeutic success in patients with urinary tract infections is the anatomic site of infection. Superficial mucosal infection of the bladder is well treated with a single dose of an appropriate antibiotic, whereas deep tissue infection of the kidney or prostate should be treated with a prolonged and intensive course of therapy. Urinalysis is an insensitive tool in the localization of infection. However, the presence of white cell casts on the examination of the urinary sediment is pathognomonic of upper tract infection and would lead one to pursue an aggressive course of therapy. Examination of the concentrating ability is of limited help in this regard because of the wide range of overlap of concentrating ability in patients with upper and lower tract infections. In selected instances, urinalysis is of help in guiding therapy of urinary tract infections. This is particularly true of the patients with acute urethral syndrome where therapy is guided by the presence or absence of pyuria. Urinalysis, a simple front-line test, is of paramount importance in the evaluation and management of the patient with urinary tract infection.
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PMID:Urinalysis in the diagnosis of urinary tract infections. 304 58

The manner of presentation and tumour stage in 52 consecutive patients with renal carcinoma who were treated surgically between 1974 and 1979 (group I) and 112 patients treated similarly between 1980 and 1985 (group II) were reviewed. In group I 16 cases (31%) were discovered incidentally compared to 50 cases (45%) in group II. Before the year 1980 most of the tumours were discovered incidentally at the time of intravenous urography (IVP) or angiography performed for examinations of urinary tract infection or hypertension. After 1980 most incidentally discovered tumours were found at ultrasound or computed tomography (CT) examinations. The tumour stage was lower in the incidentally discovered cases than in cases where the diagnosis was suspected. Routine use of excretory urography, computed tomography, ultrasound, bone scans and other effective diagnostic studies has led to earlier diagnosis, lower stage and possibly better survival in incidentally found cases of renal carcinoma than in cases when the diagnosis was suspected.
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PMID:Incidentally detected renal carcinoma. 306 75

National survey data were used to describe and analyze the treatment of selected illnesses: hypertension, heart condition, hernia, gynecological infection, menstrual disorder, other gynecological conditions, pneumonia, and urinary tract infection. The number of office visits, the rate of diagnostic testing, the average charge, and the use of inpatient and outpatient hospital services were analyzed in an econometric model of treatment. Differences in the treatment of patients with similar illnesses were associated with comprehensive insurance, the availability of hospital and physician resources, and other economic considerations. There was also evidence that hospital and ambulatory services were substituted for each other, as a result of economic as well as medical considerations.
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PMID:Hospital and ambulatory services for selected illnesses. 310 2

Reflux nephropathy is one of the most frequent renal diseases encountered in women of childbearing age. Patients with severe bilateral atrophy are the most likely to develop proteinuria, hypertension, focal glomerular sclerosis and progressive chronic renal failure, and those with persistent vesicoureteral reflux are the most likely to suffer recurrent pyelonephritic episodes. Often the disease is clinically latent and first manifests itself in pregnancy, mainly by urinary tract infection but also by proteinuria, hypertension, pre-eclampsia or renal failure. Pregnancy is most often successful and uneventful whenever renal function is normal or near normal and hypertension is absent at conception. Urinary tract infection accounts for frequent morbidity but rarely results in fetal mortality. By contrast, when renal function is significantly impaired, that is in patients whose plasma creatinine concentration is in excess of 0.18-0.20 mmol/l at conception, especially when hypertension is also present, there is clearly a high risk of severe fetal growth retardation or intrauterine death. Moreover, there is a striking risk of rapid worsening of renal function and hypertension, with accelerated progression towards end-stage renal failure. Thus, women with reflux nephropathy should attempt to conceive before the plasma creatinine concentration has reached 0.18 mmol/l, and patients with values higher than these should be clearly advised of the high risk for both the pregnancy and the progression of the disease.
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PMID:Reflux nephropathy and pregnancy. 333 Apr 95

The highest figure for first-time UTI is found in infants below one year of age. These early infections are often pyelonephritic in character, but they are easily overlooked because symptoms are unspecific, high fever and failure to thrive being the most important. It has been shown that delay in start of treatment increases the risk of the child developing pyelonephritic scarring. There is reason to believe that undetected and therefore untreated attacks of pyelonephritis may be associated with renal scarring revealed later in life. This type of renal damage is associated with development of hypertension in about 10 per cent of children and it accounts for around 20 per cent of the children entered into dialysis and transplant programs. Prevention of such long-term problems would be of great value and pyelonephritic scarring is a potentially preventable disease. The majority of infants and young children with UTI are probably managed at the primary care level. It is therefore essential that general practitioners are well informed about the epidemiology of UTI in infancy and childhood and that adequate diagnostic facilities are provided. For example, suprapubic aspiration to obtain uncontaminated urine is a technique that may well be used in an outpatient setting, and dipslide cultures are accurate and inexpensive. In addition to young age, vesicoureteric reflux and repeated attacks of pyelonephritis are risk factors associated with development of renal scarring. Therefore, diagnostic imaging to detect children with anomalies within the urinary tract are especially important in the very young. Furthermore, long-term supervision should be provided and the parents advised to consult the doctor when there is suspicion of a new infection to avoid delay in treatment. There is no reason to perform general screening for bacteriuria in healthy infants. Although bacteriuria may be found in 1 to 2 per cent, asymptomatic children have a very high rate of spontaneous clearing of the bacteriuria and they seem to constitute a low-risk group. Instead, frequent culturing of urine from febrile infants would be much more important.
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PMID:The natural history of bacteriuria in childhood. 333 55

Subcapsular or perirenal bleeding is the most commonly experienced adverse effect directly attributable to externally applied shock waves. The first consecutive 3,620 extracorporeal shock wave lithotripsy treatments with the HM3 Dornier lithotriptor at our institution resulted in 24 hematomas in 21 patients, for an incidence of 0.66 per cent. Various factors associated with treatment were examined. The number of shock waves (up to 2,000) and voltage up to 24 kv. did not correlate with the development of hematoma. Coagulation studies were normal in all patients with hematomas. There was no correlation of patients size and weight, or stone size, number or location with the occurrence rate of perinephric hematoma. Patients with pre-existing hypertension, particularly those with unsatisfactory control of hypertension, had a significantly increased incidence of perinephric hematoma. The incidence of hematoma in hypertensive patients was 2.5 per cent and it increased to 3.8 per cent in patients with unsatisfactory control of hypertension. Therefore, pre-existing hypertension is a significant risk factor in the occurrence of post-extracorporeal shock wave lithotripsy bleeding. The incidence of perinephric hematoma also was increased in patients with pre-treatment urinary tract infection and those who underwent simultaneous bilateral treatment. Management of post-extracorporeal shock wave lithotripsy bleeding generally is conservative although a third of the patients required transfusion.
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PMID:Extracorporeal shock wave lithotripsy-induced perirenal hematomas. 335 25


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