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

A semi-quantitative screening for asymptomatic bacteriuria was carried out in the first trimester of 500 consecutive pregnant women in Benin City. The purpose was to provide baseline data and rational therapy for asymptomatic bacteriuria in pregnant women. Of the 500 women screened, 433 clinical specimens showed significant bacteriuria, representing an incidence of 86.6%. Of this number, 38 (7.4%) were of mixed bacterial colonies while 395 (91%) were of single bacterial colonies. Staphylococcus aureus (29.8%), Escherichia coli (29.1%) and Klebsiella pneumoniae (21.5%) were the most frequently isolated pathogens. The high incidence of asymptomatic bacteriuria in pregnancy correlated significantly (P < 0.05) with the observed high proportion of pyuria. On average, sensitivity of the pathogens was ciprofloxacin 99.7%; ceftazidime 81.6%; co-trimoxazole 79.4%; augmentin 71.4%; nalidixic acid 61.7%; nitrofurantoin 61.%; gentamycin 56.9% and ampicillin 25.4%. S. aureus was most sensitive, while Proteus mirabilis was least sensitive among the pathogens. Rational therapy of asymptomatic bacteriuria in pregnant women may prevent associated risks such as pyelonephritis and pre-eclampsia.
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PMID:Prevalence of asymptomatic bacteriuria among pregnant women in Benin City, Nigeria. 1252 82

The present report concerns a 38-year-old man, who had been treated with pyeloplasty and lithotomy for the improvement of urinary excretion and resolution of a kidney stone. The patient developed a biofilm infection involving Pseudomonas aeruginosa and Staphylococcus epidermidis, and had been suffering from recurrent acute pyelonephritis for one year. Combination therapy with clarithromycin (CAM) and imipenem/cilastatin (IMP/CS) consisted of administration of CAM at a dose of 400 mg/day for 1 week, followed by 500 mg/day of IMP by intravenous infusion combined with CAM (400 mg/day) for 5 days. This therapy produced an immediate antimicrobial effect and no further signs of pyuria have been seen during one year of follow-up in this patient.
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PMID:Combined effect of clarithromycin and imipenem/cilastatin against urinary biofilm infection after pyeloplasty. 1265 3

Acute urinary tract infection may be preceded by and active pyelonephritis may be associated with asymptomatic bacteriuria. Treatment of asymptomatic bacteriuria may prevent or arrest active, chronic pyelonephritis and its sequelae. Consequently, there is a need for a reliable and simple screening procedure to detect asymptomatic bacteriuria in large segments of the population.The reliability and practicability of tests advocated for the detection of bacteriuria, including the new chemical triphenyltetrazolium chloride (T.T.C.) (Uroscreen) test, were evaluated. Reliability was assessed by correlating results of these tests with bacterial counts of tested urines. Significant bacteriuria is defined as the presence of 100,000 or more organisms per ml. of urine.The T.T.C. (Uroscreen) test was positive in 92.5% of cases of bacteriuria; there were 7.5% false-negative and 2.8% false-positive results. Bacteria on Gram-stained smear were found in 95.5% of the cases of bacteriuria and in 14.6% of those with non-infected urine; pyuria (more than three leukocytes per high-power field), in 60% of those with bacteriuria and in 15.9% of those with presumably non-infected urine. Bacteria were conspicuous in the urinary sediment in 91.1% of cases of bacteriuria and in 3.7% of presumably non-infected urines.The T.T.C. (Uroscreen) test fulfilled the criteria for a reliable and simple screening procedure. It should be used concomitantly with other screening tests when the urine is examined routinely.
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PMID:A COMPARATIVE STUDY OF THE TRIPHENYLTETRAZOLIUM CHLORIDE (UROSCREEN) TEST AND CONVENTIONAL METHODS FOR THE DETECTION OF BACTERIURIA. 1428 4

Acute pyelonephritis is frequent. Its usual signs and symptoms comprise renal pain, fever, inflammation, and pyuria. Simple acute E. coli pyelonephritis is frequent in the young female and in most cases is a benign condition. A typical pyelonephritis may be painless, or without high fever, or lacking bacterial growth in the urine due to previous inappropriate treatment. Severe, complicated pyelonephritis is mainly observed in diabetic, alcoholic or immunocompromised patients. In occasional cases, a common form of pyelonephritis may progress to formation of a renal abscess requiring drainage. When secondary to urinary tract abnormalities, pyelonephritis may be complicated with septicemia and can induce early and severe renal tissue damage. This form warrants emergency urologic treatment. Simple pyelonephritis of the young female without febrile UTI history requires little imaging. Conversely, extensive imaging workup is mandatory in the male, the elderly, when treatment is not rapidly effective or in case of early relapse. In some cases, acute pyelonephritis leads to the development of cortical scars, the long-term prognosis of which remains to be determined.
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PMID:[Acute pyelonephritis]. 1470 20

We retrospectively studied the occurrence of vesicoureteral reflux (VUR)-associated pyelonephritis using renal biopsies obtained from the transplanted kidneys, and correlated the histological changes with clinical parameters. Out of a total of 131 renal biopsies performed between 1990 and 2001 on renal transplant patients at the department of Urology of Nagasaki University Graduate School of Biomedical Sciences, 12 patients showed pyuria more than twice in a single year. Seven of these 12 patients were available for determining VUR by voiding cystourethrography (VCUG). Cystoureterography demonstrated VUR in three of seven studied patients with pyuria. A histopathological examination revealed dilatation of both proximal and distal tubules in renal biopsies of transplant patients with VUR, compared to renal biopsies of transplant patients without VUR, or non-transplanted patients with thin membrane disease. One of the patients with VUR showed advanced features of chronic pyelonephritis in four consecutive biopsies at different time points, suggesting a late stage of reflux nephropathy in the transplanted kidney. We conclude from our study that the occurrence of VUR-related pyelonephritis may be one of the important long-term complications in the survival of renal allografts.
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PMID:Clinicopathological study of vesicoureteral reflux (VUR)-associated pyelonephritis in renal transplantation. 1519 71

Because spinal epidural abscess is usually ignored in the preliminary differential diagnosis of low back pain, appropriate treatment may be delayed. Adult spinal epidural abscess is sparsely caused by the pathogen known as group B Streptococcus. In this paper, we report the case of a diabetic woman with lumbar epidural abscess and vertebral osteomyelitis caused by group B Streptococcus. Owing to the main manifestations of fever, pyuria and low back pain, which originally led us to suspect acute pyelonephritis, empirical antibiotics were applied. When the symptoms and signs persisted, other focal infections were considered. Magnetic resonance imaging led to the correct diagnosis. Group B Streptococcus was isolated from the blood but not from the abscess itself, probably due to the prior antibiotic treatment. The patient recovered well after surgical debridement followed by prolonged intravenous penicillin therapy. Therefore, despite the potential for fatality, our results suggest that epidural abscess can be successfully treated with surgery and antibiotic therapy provided that it is detected early enough.
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PMID:Spinal epidural abscess caused by group B Streptococcus in a diabetic woman presenting with febrile low back pain. 1597 12

Diagnosis of the location of upper and lower urinary tract infection (UTI) is necessary in defining the therapeutic conduct that has a different period and intensity according to the infection location and in prognosis. Many studies show the lack of clinical criteria peculiarity in revealing the different location of UTI. As a result, the correct location of the level in which UTI develops is the necessity of paraclinical investigations. Urinary sample examination, in which urinary sediment microscopy is essential, is a reliable technique in fast detection and localization of UTI. Finding, in pyuria context, the classic significant bacteriuria (> or = 10(5) CFU/ml) or lower value bacteriuria (< or = 10(4) CFU/ml) confirms the UTI diagnosis. The upper tract infection prognosis increases when leukocyte cylinders, characteristic for pyelonephritis, appear together with intact or degraded leukocytes, single or grouped. We settled an algorithm to examine the urine samples in order to: Concentrate and preserve the structural integrity of leukocytes and cylinders, examining the conventional urinary sediment Precisely identify and differentiate these elements by vital coloration (leukocyte peroxidase coloration and Sternheimer - Malbin coloration) to establish more accurate the UTI level. The vital coloration for leukocyte peroxidase has cytological specificity, confirming the pyuria and the cylinders that contain leukocytes (leukocytary, granular, mixed) and obviously ameliorates the reliability and reproducibility of the urinary sediment cytological exam.
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PMID:A study for the improvement of the cytological urine examination performances in upper tract infection diagnosis. 1600 43

Although pyelonephritis is a common disease, it escapes clinical detection in an undesirably high proportion of patients. The present unsatisfactory diagnostic position would be much improved by widespread screening of patients by simple yet reasonably accurate methods. Bacterial counts by the pour-plate technique and estimates of the white cell excretion per hour or day, while undoubtedly of diagnostic value, are probably unsuitable for use on a wide scale. In an attempt to find more convenient procedures a simplified stroke-plate method of bacterial counting and a simplified quantitative white cell count method were devised and applied to over 1,000 mid-stream urine samples from 398 patients. Good correlation was obtained between the simpler stroke-plate method of bacterial counting and the more time-consuming pour-plate method. The quantitative white cell procedure was a much more sensitive index of pyuria than wet-film microscopy, and comparison with the bacterial count results showed that it gave a useful indication of urinary infection. It is suggested that a quantitative bacterial count should replace non-quantitative culture methods when urinary infection is suspected and that the quantitative white cell count should be performed as a routine part of the initial clinical and laboratory assessment of all patients, followed by a bacterial count if pyuria is revealed. Experience has shown that routine urine microscopy by a precise method leads to the detection of many cases of occult urinary infection.
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PMID:Simplified quantitative methods for bacteriuria and pyuria. 1681 Sep 93

Aortic dissection is a life-threatening illness requiring early diagnosis and treatment. Uncommon early presentations mimicking various illnesses can delay diagnosis. This case study describes a 44-year-old woman with type B aortic dissection initially presenting as acute pyelonephritis (APN). Early clinical manifestations were sudden onset of left flank pain, fever, hematuria and pyuria, and following admission, severe abdominal pain, nausea, vomiting, reduced urine output and renal function deterioration. Abdominal computed tomography showed type B aortic dissection complicated with a small bowel infarct, ischemic ascending colon and left renal infarct. Emergency surgical interventions of small bowel resection, ileoduodenostomy and cholecystectomy were performed; a second laparotomy was subsequently performed for anastomosis leakage. The patient died due to septic shock with multiorgan failure. Aortic dissection initially mimicking APN is rare. Accurate early diagnosis of aortic dissection with indeterminate presentation is crucial. Early surgical intervention for visceral organ ischemia is important to preventing morbidity and mortality.
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PMID:Type B aortic dissection with early presentation mimicking acute pyelonephritis. 1687 95

In the Chilandar monastery (Mount Athos, Greece) library, a collection of medical texts written in the Old Serbian Slavonic language was discovered in 1952. Because of its size and comprehensiveness, this manuscript was named the Chilandar Medical Codex. The Collection contains several manuscripts, which according to modern medical terminology, the manuscripts can be classified as texts on Internal Medicine, Infectious diseases, Toxicology, Pediatrics, Pharmacology and Surgery, belonging to different time periods. The oldest part, Text on uroscopy, is considered to have been written in 13th or 14th century and consists of 35 text pages divided into 62 paragraphs. Following the popular uroscopy methodology of macroscopic examination of urine, this text contains detailed descriptions of urine characteristics (color, consistency, sediment, odor), as well as a convincing Hippocratic description of urine formation from the filtration of metabolic and waste materials (involving the four humors) rather than blood and fumes (toxic metabolites) according to the theory of Theophilus Protospatharius and Isaac Israeli. Precise descriptions of normal and pathological urine characteristics are provided. Although kidney anatomy and function is unclear, the urinary bladder is very undoubtedly described as an organ for urine collection. In the Chilandar Medical Codex, there are about one hundred descriptions of kidney and urinary tract diseases and disorders. Many symptoms and syndromes such as hematuria, dysuria, pyuria, renal colic, anuria, polyuria, edema and dropsy, urine retention and fever, are incorporated in the broader clinical pictures of lithiasis of the kidney and/or bladder, pyelonephritis, cystitis, necrotic renal disease indicative of renal tuberculosis and tumors, acute and chronic nephritis, renal failure, and gout. Specific pharmacological prescriptions, mostly simple or compound herbal medicines, are given for each of those renal ailments.
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PMID:Kidney disease in medieval Serbian manuscripts from the Chilandar monastery (Mount Athos, Greece). 1687 11


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