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Query: UMLS:C0034186 (pyelonephritis)
6,144 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Pyelonephritis followed ureteral inoculation of bacteria in both infant and adult monkeys. Because of the frequency of reflux in infants this was done by bladder inoculation, although ureteral inoculation was necessary in adults. The longer duration of bacteriuria in infants may be attributable to a relative immunodeficiency.
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PMID:Experimental pyelonephritis in the monkey. VI. Infection of infants versus adults. 10 79

The Acquired Immunodeficiency Syndrome (AIDS) has involved the pediatric age group and is especially prevalent in babies born of mothers who are intravenous drug abusers or prostitutes. Approximately 30% of children born to mothers who are seropositive for the human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) will develop HIV infection. There are several important differences in children and adults with AIDS. The incubation period of the disease is shorter, and initial clinical manifestations occur earlier in children. In addition, certain infections are more common in children, and the different types of malignancy, especially Kaposi's sarcoma, are unusual in the pediatric age group. The altered immune system involves both T cells and humoral immunity and increases susceptibility to a variety of infections, particularly opportunistic organisms. In this publication the complications of pediatric AIDS involving the lungs, cardiovascular system, gastrointestinal tract, genitourinary system, and neurological system are described. The most common pulmonary complications in our experience are Pneumocystis carinii pneumonia and pulmonary lymphoid hyperplasia. The spectrum of cardiovascular involvement in pediatric AIDS includes myocarditis, pericarditis, and infectious endocarditis. Gastrointestinal tract involvement is usually due to opportunistic organisms that produce esophagitis, gastritis, and colitis. Abdominal lymphadenopathy is a common finding either due to disseminating Mycobacterium avium-intracellulare infection or nonspecific lymphadenopathy. Although cholangitis is more commonly seen in adults, it may occur in children with AIDS and, in most cases, is due to related opportunistic infections. Genitourinary infections may be the first evidence of HIV disease. Cystitis, pyelonephritis, renal abscesses, and nephropathy with renal insufficiency are complications of pediatric AIDS. A variety of neurological abnormalities may occur in pediatric AIDS. The most common cause of neurological dysfunction in children with AIDS is HIV neuropathy. We present the many complications of AIDS in children demonstrated by a variety of imaging modalities, emphasizing the importance of diagnostic imaging in children with this disease.
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PMID:Radiology of AIDS in the pediatric patient. 157 31

Although genitourinary tract disorders are common in acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS), little attention has been paid to their manifestations on computed tomographic (CT) scans. The authors reviewed the CT scans of 86 patients infected with the human immunodeficiency virus for CT manifestations of primary or secondary involvement of the genitourinary tract. Genitourinary tract abnormalities identified in the 86 patients included nephromegaly in 34 (40%), hilar adenopathy in 30 (35%), bladder wall thickening in 19 (22%), medullary hyperattenuation in 12 (14%), renal calcifications in seven (8%), adnexal masses in five (6%), hydronephrosis in four (5%), pyelonephritis in three (3%), renal abscesses in three (3%), and solid renal masses in three (3%). Although these abnormalities are seen on CT scans in many other diseases, in the AIDS patient they often indicate the presence of an AIDS-related renal disease or involvement of the genitourinary tract by an AIDS-related neoplasm or infection.
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PMID:Retroperitoneal and pelvic CT of patients with AIDS: primary and secondary involvement of the genitourinary tract. 185 38

Between May 1987 and November 1988 we performed the human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) antibody serological test on 586 patients of the Urology and Nephrology Services, and it was positive in 14 cases. Of these, 6 came on account of urological pathology: bilateral cryptorchidism, giant condylomata acuminata, acute pyelonephritis and three acute orchi-epididymitis. All the patients were intravenous drug addicts. Although it is a case of common urological pathology and not secondary to the acquired immunodeficiency syndrome, it takes on a different significance as regards the risk population in which it occurs.
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PMID:[Urologic pathology in patients positive for anti-HIV antibodies]. 259 58

A homosexual man, seropositive for human immunodeficiency virus, developed back and leg pain that evolved, over three weeks, into a T-10 anesthetic, areflexic paraplegia. Spinal fluid examination showed lymphocytosis, markedly elevated spinal fluid protein, and hypoglycorrhachia. A spinal cord biopsy specimen disclosed an intramedullary granuloma containing acid-fast bacilli. The patient was treated with antituberculous drugs and had no progression of neurologic deficit. He died, eight months after first becoming ill, of Klebsiella pyelonephritis and septicemia. Mycobacterial meningomyelitis is presently the only known acquired immunodeficiency syndrome-related myelopathy responsive to specific treatment.
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PMID:Mycobacterial meningomyelitis associated with human immunodeficiency virus infection. 274 40

After-treatment immune effects of therapy were assessed in 57 pregnant females with pyelonephritis. Eleven patients received standard antibacterial treatment (ABT), 25 patients ABT plus plasmapheresis, 21 patients underwent UV irradiation of blood and ABT. ABT alone resulted in improved general condition of the patients, in reduced renal inflammation, but it failed to remove completely signs of immunodeficiency, B-lymphocyte and Ig levels remained low. The combined treatment with UV blood irradiation and plasmapheresis promoted rapid disappearance of clinical and laboratory evidence indicating pyelonephritis. UV irradiation could not correct deficiency of cellular immunity, while adjuvant plasmapheresis led to a complete cure of immune deficiency symptoms.
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PMID:[The use of efferent methods in the combined treatment of pyelonephritis in pregnant women]. 794 Nov 38

The results of pyelonephritis treatment in 48 pregnant patients are analyzed. Twenty-three patients were administered routine antibacterial therapy, in 25 ones plasmapheresis was added to it. Immunity status of all the patients was examined. Antibiotic therapy was conducive to improvement of the patients' status, to a reduction of the renal inflammation severity, though it did not completely eliminate immunodeficiency signs. B lymphocyte and immunoglobulin levels persisted reduced. Plasmapheresis promoted a more swift elimination of clinical and laboratory signs of pyelonephritis and virtually completely liquidated immunodeficiency.
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PMID:[The use of plasmapheresis in the combined treatment of pregnant patients with pyelonephritis]. 825 Jan 30

The renal pathologic features of 120 consecutively autopsied patients affected by acquired immunodeficiency syndrome was investigated by light microscopic analysis. Variously associated renal changes were found in 82 patients (68.3%). Glomerular changes were present in 25. The following diagnoses were made: mesangial glomerulonephritis (16 patients), defined by the presence of deposits in the mesangium and/or mesangial cell proliferation; membranous glomerulonephritis (4 patients), cirrhotic glomerulosclerosis (2 patients); and lupuslike glomerulonephritis (3 patients). Glomerular diseases seemed to be significantly associated with chronic hepatitis or liver cirrhosis. Interstitial inflammation was present in 19 cases: chronic pyelonephritis (2 patients), focal nephritis (5 patients), multiple cortical abscesses (7 patients), granulomatous nephritis (5 patients). Cryptococci were found in one and undetermined microorganisms in two cases of multiple cortical abscesses. Atypical mycobacteria were found in two cases of granulomatous nephritis. Mycotic infections were identified in another 6 patients, in whom they did not elicit any inflammatory response. It is worth stressing that, although various generalized infections are common in patients with acquired immunodeficiency syndrome, only cryptococci and atypical mycobacteria also frequently involve the kidney. Focal tubular necrosis was observed in 15 patients. Benign nephrosclerosis was the most common vascular change (27 patients). Changes recalling hemolyticuremic and localized intravascular coagulation were found in three and six patients, respectively. Our data, dealing with a European Caucasian population, considerably differ from those reported in North American literature, in as much as we found no cases of human immunodeficiency virus nephropathy. Conversely, immune-mediated glomerular diseases were frequent, in agreement with recent studies on renal biopsy specimens from AIDS patients with acquired immunodeficiency syndrome. This type of infections, supplies multiple sources of antigens that may stimulate immune complex formation and, therefore, glomerular diseases.
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PMID:Renal changes in patients with acquired immunodeficiency syndrome: a post-mortem study on an unselected population in northwestern Italy. 907 21

To study the role in AIDS pathogenesis of the human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1) Tat protein, a transactivator of viral and cellular genes, we generated transgenic mice with a recombinant DNA containing BK virus (BKV) early region and the HIV-1 tat gene, directed by its own promoter-enhancer. DNA hybridization revealed that the transgene is stably maintained in all organs of transgenic mice as a tandem insertion in a number of copies ranging from 5 to 20 per cell. In addition, tat and BKV RNA were expressed in all tissues. Transgenic mice developed three types of lesions: 1) tumors, 2) hyperplastic and dysplastic lesions, and 3) non-neoplastic lesions. Tumors of different histotypes, such as lymphomas, adenocarcinomas of skin glands, leiomyosarcomas, skin squamous cell carcinomas, hepatomas, hepatocarcinomas, and cavernous liver hemangiomas, developed in 29% of transgenic animals. The majority of tumors were malignant, invasive, and producing metastases. Conversely, tumors of only two histotypes (lymphomas and adenocarcinomas of skin glands) appeared in control mice. Hyperplastic and dysplastic lesions were more frequent in transgenic than in control mice and involved the skin or its adnexes, the liver and the rectum, indicating multiple targets for the activity of the transgene. Pyelonephritis, frequently complicated with hydronephrosis, inflammatory eye lesions, and amyloid depositions represented the most frequent non-neoplastic lesions detected in transgenic mice. Many of the pathological findings observed in this animal model are comparable to similar lesions appearing in AIDS patients, suggesting a relevant role for Tat in the pathogenesis of such lesions during the course of AIDS.
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PMID:Morphological, histochemical, immunohistochemical, and ultrastructural characterization of tumors and dysplastic and non-neoplastic lesions arising in BK virus/tat transgenic mice. 1023 61

We report a case of staghorn nephrolithiasis that evolved into xanthogranulomatous pyelonephritis with perinephric abscess, nephrobronchial fistula, and lung abscess. The patient was an intravenous drug abuser who tested positive for human immunodeficiency virus, without evidence of acquired immunodeficiency syndrome. He presented with a 2-month history of untreated repeated episodes of left flank pain and hyperpyrexia. Treatment involved left nephrectomy, debridement of abscess, tube drainage, and intravenous antibiotics. The patient illustrates the need to consider untreated nephrolitiasis as a predisposing factor for pulmonary complications.
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PMID:Nephrobronchial fistula secondary to xantogranulomatous pyelonephritis. 1058 69


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