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Query: UMLS:C0034186 (
pyelonephritis
)
6,144
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
We evaluated the diagnostic utility of urinary alpha1-microglobulin, alpha2-macroglobulin and albumin in the diagnosis of acute
prostatitis
. We studied 133 men (43 +/- 17 years) with, and a reference population (n=36, 41 +/- 16 years) without, urinary tract infection. Prostatectomy samples were used to study the potential interference between prostatic proteins and protein analysis. Urinary alpha2-macroglobulin/albumin ratio was significantly lower in
prostatitis
compared to the reference population, cystitis or acute
pyelonephritis
(p < 0.0001). Low alpha2-macroglobulin concentrations in
prostatitis
are due to inhibition (p = 0.0001) of the immune reaction between alpha2-macroglobulin in presence of polyclonal rabbit antibodies (used for immunonephelometry) by soluble prostatic proteins (+/- 60 kDa) which appear in urine in acute
prostatitis
. The urinary alpha1-microglobulin/creatinine ratio diagnoses acute
pyelonephritis
(sensitivity 100% and specificity 87%) and the urinary alpha2-macroglobulin/albumin ratio diagnoses acute
prostatitis
(sensitivity 100% and specificity of 90%). Stepwise multinomial logistic regression analysis reveals that urinary alpha1-microglobulin, alpha2-macroglobulin, albumin and creatinine provide optimal differentiation between acute
pyelonephritis
and acute
prostatitis
(pseudo R2=0.83; Loglikelihood -30.55, p < 0.000001). In conclusion, the combination of hematuria and absence of urinary alpha-2-macroglobulin is diagnostic for acute
prostatitis
. Even without hematuria, alpha2-macroglobulin remains lower compared to patients without
prostatitis
.
...
PMID:Urinary plasma protein patterns in acute prostatitis. 1263 54
Prostatilen was used in 1115 patients with chronic
pyelonephritis
and
prostatitis
. It is shown that prostatilen has a corrective effect on hemocoagulation and immunity disorders, restores microcirculation, suppresses inflammation in the kidney and prostate. Thus, prostatilen is a pathogenetically sound drug for treatment in urogenital inflammation while in chronic
prostatitis
it can be used as a basic therapy.
...
PMID:[Our experience in the use of prostatilen in urology]. 1470 43
Anaerobes have been involved in many different types of urinary tract infection. This review describes the microbiology, diagnosis and management of urinary tract and genito-urinary suppurative infections caused by anaerobic bacteria. The types of infections of the urinary tract in which anaerobes have been involved include para- or periurethral cellulitis or abscess, acute and chronic urethritis, cystitis, acute and chronic
prostatitis
, prostatic and scrotal abscesses, periprostatic phlegmon, ureteritis, periureteritis, pyelitis,
pyelonephritis
, renal abscess, scrotal gangrene, metastatic renal infection pyonephrosis, perinephric abscess, retroperitoneal abscess and other infections. The anaerobes recovered in these studies were Gram-negative bacilli (including Bacteroides fragilis and pigmented Prevotella and Porphyromonas sp.), Clostridium sp., anaerobic Gram-positive cocci and Actinomyces sp. In many cases, they were recovered mixed with coliforms or streptococci. The recovery of anaerobes requires the administration of antimicrobial therapy that is effective against these organisms. These antimicrobials include metronidazole, chloramphenicol, clindamycin, a carbapenem, cefoxitin and the combination of a penicillin and a beta-lactamase inhibitor. Percutaneous drainage, open surgical drainage or nephectomy might be indicated for abscesses.
...
PMID:Urinary tract and genito-urinary suppurative infections due to anaerobic bacteria. 1500 60
Siderotic granules were recognized in blood erythrocytes from a male Boxer dog with suppurative
prostatitis
, cystitis and
pyelonephritis
that was being given high dosage chloramphenicol therapy. Siderotic inclusions were recognized in the cytoplasm of 96% of the rubricytes and metarubricytes in a bone marrow aspirate. Siderotic inclusions were numerous and in some cases formed a ring around the nucleus. This perinuclear location suggested that pathologic mitochondrial iron accumulation had occurred, resulting in the formation of "ringed" sideroblasts. The occurrence of pathologic sideroblasts was confirmed by electron microscopy. Blood siderocytes and bone marrow sideroblasts disappeared after cessation of chloramphenicol therapy.
...
PMID:Pathologic sideroblasts and siderocytes associated with chloramphenicol therapy in a dog. 1522 91
Background: Although the clinical diagnosis of urinary tract infection (UTI) is straightforward, the precise localization of the urogenital organ affected by the infection is often difficult to establish. Methods: To evaluate this, we prospectively studied 20 males with a clinical diagnosis of acute
pyelonephritis
(APN), acute
prostatitis
(AP) and febrile UTI (FUTI), as well as seven control females with APN. (111)Indium-labelled leukocyte scintigraphy (ILS) was performed during the febrile episode and repeated when patients were free of symptoms. Results: ILS showed an abnormal uptake in a urinary organ in every case. All patients with AP showed uptake in the pelvic area. Four male patients presented AP, one of them had uptake in the lumbar area, one in the lumbar and pelvic area, and two in the area of the prostate only. Six out of seven patients with FUTI presented uptake in the pelvic area. All female patients showed kidney uptake. After the clinical resolution of the UTI, no residual uptake was found in any case except for one. Conclusions: These results suggest that ILS is very useful in localizing the affected organ in febrile UTI. Most male patients with a febrile UTI presented a prostatic involvement, suggesting that many cases of APN or FUTI in males may actually be cases of AP not recognized by standard clinical evaluation.
...
PMID:Accurate topographical diagnosis of urinary tract infection in male patients with (111)indium-labelled leukocyte scintigraphy. 1524 17
The aim of imaging in urinary tract infections (UTI) is to detect conditions that must be corrected to avoid imminent deterioration of kidney function, or to prevent recurrent infections and long-term kidney damage. The most threatening conditions are obstruction of an infected upper tract and abscesses of the genitourinary system. An image-guided percutaneous drainage can be lifesaving. The role of imaging in small children with UTI is controversial in terms of the importance of anatomical and functional disorders in relation to the preventive measures to be taken. In newborns identified with hydronephrosis during pregnancy or by neonatal screening, vesicoureteral reflux (VUR) and renal scarring are congenital and not caused by infection. Most of these patients are males and the VUR is of a higher grade than VUR detected in girls after the first UTI. Imaging in children with UTI should only be ordered after a thorough evaluation of the risk of renal damage and the benefits of preventive measures. In adult females, no imaging is necessary in cystitis, while ultrasonography and plain films are recommended in acute
pyelonephritis
. Since uncomplicated UTI in men is rare, diagnostic imaging should be started early to rule out complicating factors in the urinary tract. In
prostatitis
, vesiculitis, epididymitis and orchitis the role of imaging is to rule out abscess formation and testicular malignancies.
...
PMID:The role of imaging in urinary tract infections. 1529 Feb 4
Molecular analysis of 63 Escherichia coli urine isolates showed that
pyelonephritis
(n=23) and
prostatitis
(n=17) isolates exhibited more virulence factors (VFs) among the 35 sought than did cystitis isolates (n=23). Several nontraditional VFs--including bmaE (M fimbriae), gafD (G fimbriae), fyuA (yersiniabactin receptor), ireA and iroN (novel siderophore receptors), cvaC (colicin [microcin] V), traT (serum-resistance associated), ibeA (invasion of brain endothelium), ompT (outer membrane protease T), and malX (pathogenicity island marker)--either differentiated significantly between syndromes (despite small numbers of isolates and possible multiple-comparison artifacts) or were broadly prevalent. Thus, interventions that target conserved uro-VFs may be possible, despite the likely existence of syndrome-specific pathogenetic mechanisms and/or host defense systems.
...
PMID:Extended virulence genotypes and phylogenetic background of Escherichia coli isolates from patients with cystitis, pyelonephritis, or prostatitis. 1559 2
Recommendations for antimicrobial treatment and prophylaxis of urinary tract infections (UTI) have been made according to the results of investigation of resistance of the most frequent causative agents of UTI to antimicrobial drugs. This investigation has been conducted for the past seven years by the Committee for monitoring bacterial resistance to antibiotics in the Republic of Croatia, with consensus of eight professional societies of the Croatian Medical Association. Uncomplicated cystitis is treated 1, 3, or 7 days, complicated 7 days,
pyelonephritis
10-14 days, and complicated UTI 7 to 14 days, rarely longer. For the treatment of cystitis fluorokinolons, nitrofurantoin, betalactam antibiotics, and in the fields of lower resistance trimethoprim/sulfamethoxazol are being used. Single treatment with fluorokinolons is administered to otherwise healthy young women with normal urinary tract in whom cystitis symptoms have been present for less than 7 days. Empiric antimicrobial treatment of
pyelonephritis
, recurrent and all complicated UTI must be reviewed after urine culture finding is obtained. In the treatment of bacterial
prostatitis
and febrile UTI in males, the drug of first choice is ciprofloxacin. Asymptomatic bacteriuria (AB) is treated in pregnant women, newborns, preschool children with urinary tract abnormalities, before invasive urologic and gynecologic procedures, in kidney transplant recipients, and in the first days of short term urinary bladder catheterization. Recommendations for the treatment of AB in patients with diabetes mellitus have been controversial in the past two years. Antimicrobial prophylaxis is administered mostly one hour prior to the diagnostic or therapeutic invasive urological procedure, using selected antimicrobial agents.
...
PMID:[Guidelines for antimicrobial treatment and prophylaxis of urinary tract infections]. 1658 44
Uropathogenic Escherichia coli is the most common cause of urinary tract infection (UTI). Cystitis in women is by far the most common UTI;
pyelonephritis
in both sexes and
prostatitis
in men are more severe but are less frequent complaints. The ability of E. coli to cause UTI is associated with specific virulence determinants, some of which are encoded on pathogenicity islands (PAI). One such PAI (PAI IICFT073), of the prototypical uropathogenic E. coli strain CFT073, contains 116 open reading frames, including iron-regulated genes, carbohydrate biosynthetic genes, the serine protease autotransporter picU, a two-partner secretion system, a type I secretion system, mobility genes, and a large number of hypothetical genes. To determine the association of PAI IICFT073 with UTI, PCR was used to examine the prevalence of the five virulence-associated loci among the ECOR collection and a collection of E. coli isolated from patients with cystitis,
pyelonephritis
,
prostatitis
, or septicemia. All PAI IICFT073 loci were found to be more prevalent among the B2 phylogenetic group than any other group within the ECOR collection and among invasive
prostatitis
strains than were cystitis or
pyelonephritis
strains. These data support the theory that clinical isolates causing
prostatitis
are more virulent than those producing cystitis or
pyelonephritis
in women.
...
PMID:Prevalence of pathogenicity island IICFT073 genes among extraintestinal clinical isolates of Escherichia coli. 1587 76
In the outpatient setting, genitourinary infections (GUIs) remain costly to treat and are a significant cause of morbidity. Recent evidence supports more substantial roles for pathogens other than Escherichia coli, particularly gram-positive pathogens, in the pathogenesis of GUIs. Broad-spectrum agents should be considered in order to address this etiologic change appropriately. Criteria for antimicrobial selection set forth by the Council for Appropriate and Rational Antibiotic Therapy (CARAT) recommend using antibiotics that are supported by strong clinical evidence, have good susceptibility profiles, are safe, are cost-effective, and are used for the optimal duration. Evidence-based guidelines recommend considering local E coli resistance rates to trimethoprim-sulfamethoxazole and using fluoroquinolones as second-line therapy when resistance is high. Fluoroquinolones are recommended for the treatment of
pyelonephritis
and
prostatitis
. Among the fluoroquinolones, levofloxacin and gatifloxacin offer coverage for the gram-negative and gram-positive pathogens, which may make them preferable in treating urinary tract infections empirically in such patient groups. For the treatment of bacterial
prostatitis
, only trimethoprim and the fluoroquinolones possess both the appropriate bactericidal activity and the ability to diffuse into the prostate. Levofloxacin shows particularly good penetration into prostatic tissue. Safety issues to consider include imbalances in intestinal microflora caused by antimicrobial agents that may lead to overgrowth of vancomycin-resistant enterococci and Clostridium difficile-associated diarrhea. Once the optimal agent is identified, the optimal duration of treatment should be determined to maximize treatment success while minimizing the potential for resistance. Finally, cost considerations include the costs of treatment failure due to inappropriate therapy or nonadherence to the therapeutic regimen.
...
PMID:Rational antibiotic treatment of outpatient genitourinary infections in a changing environment. 1599 72
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