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Query: UMLS:C0034186 (
pyelonephritis
)
6,144
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
An abnormality of blood vessels was noted in a biopsy of a renal transplant. This took the form of apparent development of a new artery inside and concentric with the old, with elastic laminae and a muscular media, separated from the old internal elastic lamina by poorly cellular tissue. In a systematic study of material from another 119 renal transplants, 13 nephrectomy specimens for chronic
pyelonephritis
and hydronephrosis, 28 renal biopsies showing interstitial nephritis, and 18 renal biopsies showing small vessel vasculopathy of accelerated hypertensive type, similar arterial changes were seen in another 10 renal transplants that showed chronic vascular rejection, 1 case of chronic interstitial nephritis, and 3 cases of vasculopathy, 2 with accelerated
hypertension
and 1 with systemic sclerosis. One renal transplant also showed apparent development of new muscular veins inside old veins. Immunohistological study for smooth muscle actin confirmed that the apparently new arterial and venous structures contained smooth muscle cells. The arterial abnormality may be called arterialisation of intrarenal arteries. This change appears to be not rare, is distinctive, and has scarcely been previously recognised or reported as a response of intrarenal blood vessels to damage.
...
PMID:Arteries and veins formed within renal vessels: a previously neglected observation. 156 60
Reflux nephropathy is characterized by the presence at radiological examination of one or several segmental scars in the renal parenchyma, associated with vesico-ureteral reflux. Histology displays a variety of lesions, among which chronic and atrophic
pyelonephritis
, segmental hypoplasia and renal dysplasia can be individualized. Most of these renal lesions can be prevented by early detection of the reflux which encourages the development and recurrence of urinary tract infection and its diffusion to the upper urinary tract and the kidneys. The finding of a vesico-ureteral reflux with renal lesions, even after spontaneous or surgical regression of this reflux, requires prolonged surveillance in view of the long-term risk of arterial
hypertension
and renal failure.
...
PMID:[Reflux nephropathy]. 160 64
The clinical course of 138 children who underwent unilateral nephrectomy and had a normal contralateral kidney at the time of nephrectomy was reviewed. The diagnosis leading to nephrectomy included obstructive uropathy in 46% of the cases, reflux or
pyelonephritis
in 30%, Wilms tumor in 15%,
hypertension
in 4%, dysplastic kidney in 2% and trauma in 2%. Mean age at nephrectomy was 7.3 years and median followup was 24.7 years. Of the 138 patients 121 (88%) are well and 17 died, including 14 secondary to metastatic Wilms tumor and 1 of renal failure. Survival of nonWilms tumor patients was similar to that of an age-matched control group. In 30 patients 24-hour creatinine clearance and 24-hour urinary protein excretion were measured. Proteinuria (greater than 150 mg./24 hours) was found in 8 of the 30 patients (27%) (p less than 0.001), renal insufficiency developed in 9 (30%) (p less than 0.0001) and
hypertension
occurred in 10% (p greater than 0.10). Children with an acquired solitary kidney are at increased risk for proteinuria and renal insufficiency.
...
PMID:Prognosis of children with solitary kidney after unilateral nephrectomy. 164 May 59
The risks of acute
pyelonephritis
in infants concern microbial invasion and parenchymal damage. There is a high rate of septicemia and of urinary malformations in children under 1 yr of age; in addition, the kidney is a growing organ with a high risk of scarring. Such parenchymal injury may lead to arterial
hypertension
, and renal failure when bilateral. Vesicoureteric reflux must be evaluated by ultrasound and cystogram; long-term renal scarring needs to be assessed by scintigraphy or pyelography when children are 7 yr old. Short- and long-term risks could be limited by early intravenous biantibiotherapy.
...
PMID:[Urinary tract infections in infants: medical management]. 166 85
Felodipine, a dihydropyridine calcium antagonist, was used to treat eight patients with severe uncontrolled
hypertension
: five had essential hypertension, two had renovascular disease, and one chronic
pyelonephritis
. Mean blood pressure (BP) was 221 +/- 14/120 +/- 4 mm Hg despite treatment with three or more antihypertensive drugs. All patients experienced an immediate and pronounced lowering of BP after adding felodipine, which persisted during long-term treatment in combination with previous medication except for vasodilating drugs. In all cases, an increase in glomerular filtration rate (51Cr-EDTA clearance) after 6 and 12 months of felodipine treatment was seen (59 +/- 10 to 63 +/- 7 and 70 +/- 6 ml/min, respectively, p less than 0.05). Renal plasma flow (PAH clearance) exhibited only a slight increase (315 +/- 68 to 340 +/- 63 and 314 +/- 69 ml/min), giving a nonsignificant rise in filtration fraction (18 +/- 1 to 21 +/- 1 and 20 +/- 1%, respectively). It is concluded that felodipine decreases BP dramatically in patients with previously refractory
hypertension
and that the drug causes an improved renal function in these patients.
...
PMID:Long-term effects of felodipine on blood pressure and renal hemodynamics in severe hypertension. 169 10
Obstetric complications recorded prospectively were assessed retrospectively in 150 women with gestational diabetes mellitus (GDM) and 305 control subjects matched for age, parity, and ethnicity. Intensive diet therapy and self-monitoring of capillary blood glucose were used to obtain postprandial euglycemia; 22% of GDM subjects required insulin. GDM and control subjects were grouped by body mass index to detect any influence of maternal prepregnancy weight on outcome. Polyhydramnios, preterm labor, and
pyelonephritis
were not more frequent in GDM, but
hypertension
without proteinuria (7.3 vs. 3.3%) and preeclampsia (8 vs. 3.9%) were more frequent in GDM. The frequency of hypertensive complications in GDM was not totally attributable to being overweight. Abnormalities of labor, birth trauma, and fetal macrosomia were not more common in GDM; 6.7% of the infants of mothers with GDM weighed greater than 4200 g at birth compared with 3.6% of control infants (NS), and 10% were large for gestational age and sex compared with 6.6% of control infants (NS). Despite this, cesarean delivery was more common in GDM (35.3 vs. 22%, P less than 0.01), mostly due to significantly more cesarean births without labor.
...
PMID:Obstetric complications with GDM. Effects of maternal weight. 174 71
196 cases with vesicoureteral reflux (VUR) from multiple centers were analysed to examine the relationship between VUR and reflux nephropathy. The high correlation (p less than 0.01) was observed between reflux and renal scarring. Even in cases in whom VUR was not demonstrated at the time of testing, renal scarring of various degrees was recognized, suggesting either co-existed hypoplastic kidney or pre-existed infection. The renal scarring, but not VUR, had a significant correlation with proteinuria and
hypertension
. Retrospective analysis shows that the surgical treatment was closely related to the degree of renal scarring but not to the degree of reflux. Renal scarring progressed even when reflux did not become worse, which is probably accounted for by the presence of
pyelonephritis
. Although frequency of
pyelonephritis
decreased significantly (p less than 0.01) from 0.60 +/- 0.89 to 0.084 +/- 0.305 times/patient. year after anti-reflux surgery, renal scarring progressed in 13 kidneys (5.8%). Seven of the 13 kidneys became worse due to the surgical failure. The scar progression was recognized in the remaining six kidneys (three patients) including adult cases despite the successful surgical correction of reflux. Our study points to the urged need for a prospective clinical trial designed for the study of the pathological and clinical background of progressive renal failure in VUR.
...
PMID:[Vesicoureteral reflux and renal scarring. Report of cooperative study of "Progressive renal disease" of Ministry of Health and Welfare]. 187 71
Eighteen patients with senile
pyelonephritis
and nephrogenic arterial
hypertension
were examined for the effect of trental monotherapy (600 mg/day) on intrarenal hemodynamics, the rate of glomerular filtration (effective renal blood flow, the intensity of blood flow in the medullary layer of the kidney), activity of the renin-angiotensin-aldosterone system (plasma renin activity, plasma and urine aldosterone), prostaglandin synthetic capacity of the kidneys (PGE and PGF2 alpha), water-electrolyte balance (circulating blood volume, sodium content in the serum and its excretion with urine), and on arterial pressure and general vascular peripheral resistance. Prolonged administration of the drug (from 3 weeks to 6 months) led to a significant improvement of the medullary blood flow, increase (p less than or equal to 0.05) of excretion of natriuretic PGE [correction of RGE] and lowering (p less than or equal to 0.05) of diurnal excretion of PGF2 alpha, which was accompanied by a rise of natriuresis (p less than or equal to 0.05) and diuresis.
...
PMID:[Senile pyelonephritis with the arterial hypertension syndrome: the use of trental]. 194 44
Forty patients with end-stage renal failure, who had undergone simultaneous bilateral native nephrectomy before a subsequent renal transplant operation, were reviewed with particular reference to the indications and surgical approach for bilateral nephrectomy and to the complications of the procedure. The main indications for bilateral nephrectomy are
hypertension
resistant to medical therapy, persistent symptomatic renal infection, severe renal protein loss and occasionally polycystic kidneys or bilateral renal tumours. In this consecutive series of 40 patients both kidneys were removed because of chronic
pyelonephritis
with reflux (n = 28), glomerulonephritis with reflux (n = 9) and uncontrolled
hypertension
(n = 3). Surgical morbidity was less in patients who had bilateral nephrectomy performed through bilateral vertical lumbotomy incisions. There was no surgical mortality.
...
PMID:Bilateral nephrectomy before transplantation: indications, surgical approach, morbidity and mortality. 202 44
Hypertension
complicates chronic
pyelonephritis
. Since arterial narrowing is common in the damaged kidney, activation of the renin-angiotensin system due to renal ischaemia has been suggested as a pathogenetic mechanism. We used an antiserum to human renin and an immunoperoxidase technique to study the anatomy of renin-containing cells (RCC) in 18 kidneys removed for pyeloneophritis. We independently assessed the degree of arterial narrowing and correlated these variables with the clinical findings. There was histological evidence of hyperplasia of RCC in 5 of the 6 hypertensive patients and in 7 of the 12 non-hypertensive cases. There was no difference in the apparent number or distribution of RCC between the hypertensive and the non-hypertensive cases. Also, the degree of arterial narrowing did not correlate with either the hyperplasia of RCC or the blood pressure of the patients. Our results do not support the hypothesis that narrowing of the intrarenal arteries is important in the pathogenesis of
hypertension
in
pyelonephritis
. In our cases, the renal veins were more severely damaged than the arteries and their lumina were often obliterated by organized thrombus. We suggest that such widespread obliteration of the renal venous tree could impair blood flow and contribute to the tissue damage in the pyelonephritic kidney.
...
PMID:Chronic pyelonephritis: the significance of renal renin and the vascular changes in the human kidney. 203 93
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