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

Strains of Escherichia coli isolated from patients with suspected pyelonephritis had a strong predilection for growth in kidney tissue. Viable bacterial counts in experimentally infected mice showed that after 96 hours approximately 98% of the total-body count was found in the kidney. Strains of E. coli isolated from cases of gastroenteritis in man and animals had little or no tendency to grow in the kidney. Treatment of male and female mice with oestrogen significantly enhanced the growth of "pyelonephritic" strains in the kidney, but had no effect of any kind on the growth of "gastroenteritis" strains. These preliminary results suggest that oestrogen may predispose to the development of kidney infection in the female and that there is an important link with the virulence of the E. coli concerned. Only those strains that have a natural predilection for growth in the kidney are likely to be influenced by oestrogen.
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PMID:Influence of oestrogen on experimental pyelonephritis caused by Escherichia coli. 5 May 4

Although gentamicin is known to accumulate and persist in the kidneys after systemic administration, its antibacterial activity at this site has not been determined. In the present study the accumulation of gentamicin in rat kidneys before infection prevented obstructive pyelonephritis due to Escherichia coli despite heavy urinary tract infection on the obstructed pelvis; thus the kidneys were protected against infection in the absence of effective levels of gentamicin in the urine. Stored gentamicin also protected pyelonephritic rats from relapse after complete obstruction of the kidneys. The level of antimicrobial activity of gentamicin in whole kidney tissue was 95% less than that anticipated on the basis of levels measured after dilution of kidney tissue homogenates; this low level of activity apparently was due in part to high concentrations of solutes. In view of these results in rats, the possibility must be considered that despite reduced activity, gentamicin storage might be useful in the prophylaxis of kidney infection in patients with abnormalities of the urinary tract. In the treatment of established kidney infection, the dose of gentamicin could be reduced and the interval of its administration increased for minimal toxicity.
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PMID:Prevention of pyelonephritis due to Escherichia coli in rats with gentamicin stored in kidney tissue. 37 43

Whether chronic interstitial nephritis (pyelonephritis) mainly results from kidney infection is widely debated. We studies 101 patients with interstitial nephritis, selected from 320 patients with newly diagnosed chronic renal disease, for frequency of etiological factors. Eleven had no etiologic factor(s) identified; 89 had clearcut factor(s): anatomic abnormalities 31, analgesic abuse 20, hyperuricemia 11, nephrosclerosis 10, stones 9, sickle cell disease1, tuberculosis 1, multiple causes7. Bacterial infection (present in 27%) was found only with another preceding primary cause of renal damage. Analgesic abusers frequently denied drug ingestion; 15% had urinary tract infection and 20% classical papillary necrosis. Two had family histories of analgesic abuse with nephropathy. We conclude that interstitial nephritis is a common form of chronic renal disease, is seldom idiopathic, rarely results from bacterial infection alone in adults, and frequently results from analgesic abuse in the United States.
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PMID:Chronic interstitial nephritis: etiologic factors. 111 62

Urinary lactic dehydrogenase (U-LDH) isoenzyme assays were performed on ch2) as well as normal controls (N = 24). Docuemntation of bladder and kidney infection was accomplished by means of the bladder washout test, culture of ureteric urine (in patients with urinary diversion), kidney function studies including the maximal urine concentration test, clinical symptomatology and radiologic appearance of the urinary tract. Total U-LDH in normal children (10.8 +/- 1 mU/ml) was lower than in patients with bladder (27.0 +/- 3.9 mU/ml) or kidney (226 +/- 67.3 mU/ml) infections (P less than 0.005). In normal children isoenzymes 1 and 2 predominated (LDH-1 migrates fastest to anode -- fast zone pattern). In patients with bladder infections, the isoenzyme patterns varied but the concentration of isoenzyme 5 (3.1 +/- 0.8 mU/ml) was lower (P less than 0.005) than in patients with kidney infections (120 +/- 39 mU/ml). In the latter, isoenzymes 4 and 5 predominated (slow zone pattern). Since overlap between kidney and bladder infections regarding isoenzyme 5 concentrations (at 3 SD) occurred in only one individual (patient 37), a correct differential diagnosis using U-LDH-5 alone would have been possible in 94% of the children with pyelonephritis or 97% of the total patient population (kidney + bladder).
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PMID:Urinary lactic dehydrogenase isoenzyme 5 in the differential diagnosis of kidney and bladder infections. 117 77

Renal scars have been considered to occur in later stages of chronic pyelonephritis. In our experimental pyelonephritis model, bacteria which possessed mannose-sensitive (MS) pili on the surface promoted renal scarring following inoculation to the renal parenchyma. Polyethylene glycol-modified superoxide dismutase (PEG-SOD) and 2-O-octadecylascorbic acid (CV3611) significantly suppressed scarring when administered orally or parenterally during the early stage of kidney infection with MS-piliated bacteria. These findings suggest that the superoxide and other active oxygens play an important role in renal scarring following infection and that PEG-SOD and CV3611 may be agents capable of preventing renal scarring following bacterial pyelonephritis.
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PMID:Antioxidant effect on renal scarring following infection of mannose-sensitive-piliated bacteria. 134 8

In acute "primary" pyelonephritis (APP), kidney infection occurs despite normal urinary tract morphology. Typical features of APP are spiking fever and chills, loin pain, pyuria, bacteriuria, isolation of uropathogenic strains of E. coli, and specific renal CT scan images. APP may be atypical when lacking pain, or fever, or when urine cultures are negative, or when urinary bacteria do not exhibit characters of uropathogenicity, or when CT scan examination is negative. Such atypical features entail loss of time in diagnosis, and thereby delayed treatment and increased risk of cortical scar formation. However, they are virtually never observed simultaneously in a given patient.
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PMID:[Atypical forms of primary acute pyelonephritis]. 235 34

Bacterial pyelonephritis was induced in mice by direct microinoculation of Pseudomonas aeruginosa in the kidney. In the acute phase of P. aeruginosa pyelonephritis, a state of cell-mediated immunity impairment, evaluated both in vitro as lymphocyte reactivity to concanavalin A and in vivo as host versus graft reaction has been observed. Furthermore, delayed-type hypersensitivity to specific bacterial antigen has been detected only when the kidney infection was subsiding, i.e., 3 weeks after bacteria inoculation. When investigating the mechanism of such T-cell impairment, we were unable to transfer the immunodepression, suggesting that suppressor cells are not involved in vivo. The role of P. aeruginosa inhibition of cell-mediated immunity in the pyelonephritic host is discussed.
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PMID:Impairment of cell-mediated immunity in Pseudomonas aeruginosa pyelonephritis: lack of suppressor cell activity in vivo. 621 76

In the presence of temporary obstruction (20 h), ascending Escherichia coli urinary infection leads to irreversible acute exudative pyelonephritis (AEP) in rats. The purpose of the present study was to investigate the early inflammatory events which take place in response to the presence of bacteria in the kidney parenchyma and lead to the development of AEP. Rats were given indomethacin before and during the obstructive phase of kidney infection and were sacrificed at different times thereafter. Although renal infection (as defined by bacterial counts) was equally frequent (76%) and severe in indomethacin-treated and control rats sacrificed at the end of the obstructive period, it was found that the incidence of AEP (as defined by the inflammatory response of the kidney elicited by bacteria) 2 days after removal of the obstruction was significantly reduced from 74% in controls given water to 48% in indomethacin-treated animals (P = 0.02). Rat kidneys without AEP had bacterial counts of 10(2)/g. Since indomethacin apparently had no direct antibacterial activity against E. coli and no effect on urine osmolalities, it is likely that the reduction in the incidence of AEP and the concomitant eradication of bacteria after removal of the obstruction was due to an effect of indomethacin that is related to the renal response to infection. This was possibly due to decreased inflammation, as indicated by the fact that when pyelonephritis developed in indomethacin-treated rats it was less severe than in controls. These results suggest that if inflammation can be mitigated when bacteria are present in the kidney during obstruction, the bacteria may be cleared spontaneously once the normal urinary flow is restored.
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PMID:Effect of indomethacin on the incidence of experimental Escherichia coli pyelonephritis. 634 Dec 40

Experimental pyelonephritis was produced in mice by the intravenous injection of Pseudomonas aeruginosa. Immune response to infection was studied by passive hemagglutination antibody titers. Vaccination of mice with live P. aeruginosa or culture filtrates (Pseudomonas antigen) induced antibodies and resulted in a high degree of protection against death and pyelonephritis following subsequent hematogenous challenge with the homologous strain. Transfer of immune serum protected mice against death following infection with the homologous strain and with a heterologous strain. However, immune serum failed to protect mice from kidney infection by the heterologous strain. These data indicate that immune serum seemed to protect against early, overwhelming bacteremia but did not prevent a chronic course of kidney infection by a heterologous strain.
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PMID:Effect of active and passive immunization on the development of experimental Pseudomonas aeruginosa pyelonephritis in mice. 678 87

Gentamicin, because it is stored in renal tissues, can prevent acute retrograde pyelonephritis. Since different aminoglycosides accumulate and persist to various degrees in the kidney parenchyma, the prophylactic activities of gentamicin, tobramycin, amikacin, and netilmicin were compared. The four antibiotics were given intramuscularly to rats 3 days before initiating ascending unilateral pyelonephritis with Escherichia coli. Despite different degrees of renal accumulation at the time of infection (tobramycin and amikacin accumulated significantly less), all four aminoglycosides displayed similar protection against ascending pyelonephritis. This protection was conferred in the absence of active antibiotic detectable in the urine and was therefore attributed to antibiotic stored in the renal parenchyma. Those animals that developed pyelonephritis despite aminoglycoside prophylaxis had less severe acute kidney infection and inflammation. This resulted 3 months later in an almost complete protection against renal scarring (chronic pyelonephritis). These results in rats suggest that renal accumulation and persistence of aminoglycosides may be used to advantage in the prophylaxis or in the treatment of kidney infections.
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PMID:Prevention of acute and chronic ascending pyelonephritis in rats by aminoglycoside antibiotics accumulated and persistent in kidneys. 724 65


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