Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0034186 (pyelonephritis)
6,144 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

The proliferation of imaging methods for the kidney and urinary tract, combined with advances in technology and the introduction of new techniques, has created uncertainty in selecting the most efficient method for evaluating many problems encountered in clinical medicine. The main advantage of nuclear medicine lies in demonstrating the pathophysiology involved. Recent developments in Doppler ultrasound and magnetic resonance imaging with different pulse sequences and paramagnetic contrast agents also have shown promise for imaging physiological processes. However, there is little literature to support their advantage over nuclear medicine procedures in many common clinical situations. The complementary nature of nuclear medicine studies in the imaging evaluation of hydronephrosis, renal artery stenosis, flank pain, renal mass, pyelonephritis, and the transplant kidney is reviewed.
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PMID:Correlative imaging of the kidney. 797 58

The erythrocyte Na+/Li(+)-countertransport activity was studied in patients with essential hypertension (n = 59), chronic glomerulonephritis (n = 30), chronic pyelonephritis (n = 26), renovascular hypertension (n = 35) and pheochromocytoma (n = 3). The erythrocyte Na+/Li(+)-countertransport (SLC) activity was on average higher (p < 0.02) in the patients with essential hypertension as compared to those with secondary hypertension, although a clear distinction between both groups was not possible. After surgical treatment of the patients with atherosclerotic renal artery stenosis, fibromuscular dysplasia or pheochromocytoma, no change in erythrocyte SLC activity was observed. However, blood pressure was significantly reduced.
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PMID:Red blood cell sodium-lithium countertransport in patients with essential and renal hypertension. 800 44

Renal failure following transplantation can be classified in two groups: initial non function characterized by the absence of renal function after transplantation and delayed secondary non function after an initial improvement. In the first group, the most frequent etiology is an acute tubular necrosis (30 to 50% of the cases) which usually heals within three weeks. Arterial thrombosis are rare but of very bad prognosis. In the second group, the most frequent cases are acute rejection, urological complications, renal artery stenosis, urinary infections and cyclosporine, intoxication. Diagnostic imaging, and especially the color Doppler flow, is very effective in obtaining diagnosis. Vascular or urological complications are to be confirmed by contrasted opacifications. In the absence of vascular or urological obstruction renal failure must be related to a renal parenchymal disease. This may be acute tubular necrosis, a rejection, a pyelonephritis or a medicinal intoxication depending on clinical symptoms, the time of their apparition and the results of biological examinations.
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PMID:[The transplanted kidney. Role of imaging in early non-functioning grafts]. 815 35

Renal tubular dysgenesis (RTD), with hypoplasia especially of renal proximal convoluted tubules and clinical neonatal anuria or oliguria, has been reported as a congenital familial (autosomal recessive) disease, variably with features of oligohydramnios, Potter syndrome, or pulmonary hypoplasia. A similar tubular lesion due to antenatal tubular atrophy has been reported for conjoined twins with twin-twin transfusion syndrome or acardia and in infants of mothers given antihypertensive agents, including angiotensin-converting enzyme (ACE) inhibitors, during pregnancy, and it has been seen as a unilateral lesion in young infants with renal artery stenosis due to arteritis or medial arterial calcinosis. The renal tubular changes in RTD are very like those of the "endocrine kidney" in experimental animals and resemble those of the renal tubular atrophy of end-stage kidney diseases such as glomerulonephritis, tubulointerstitial kidney disease, obstructive uropathy/pyelonephritis, graft rejection of transplanted kidneys, or the renal parenchymal changes seen with protracted dialysis therapy. Labeled lectins that differentially mark proximal convoluted, distal convoluted and connecting, and collecting tubules showed no distinctive differences in staining patterns of the hypoplastic renal tubules of infants and children with RTD, postnatal renal artery obstruction, or the various types of end-stage renal disease with the lectins used (PNA, GSLI, UEA, and LTA). The findings suggest that the renal tubular changes in some if not all the conditions studied are the result of renal ischemia. The reported familial RTD with hypernephronic nephromegaly may be a specific disorder, but other forms could reflect renal ischemia acquired in utero or in early or later postnatal life.
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PMID:Labeled lectin studies of renal tubular dysgenesis and renal tubular atrophy of postnatal renal ischemia and end-stage kidney disease. 815 24

Two children in the same household with symptomatic arterial hypertension simulating pheochromocytoma were found to be intoxicated with elemental mercury. The first child was a 4-year-old boy who presented with new-onset seizures, rash, and painful extremities, who was found to have a blood pressure of 171/123 mm Hg. An extensive investigation ensued. Elevated catecholamines were demonstrated in plasma and urine; studies did not confirm pheochromocytoma. Mercury levels were elevated. These findings prompted an evaluation of the family. A foster sister had similar findings of rash and hypertension. Both had been exposed to elemental mercury in the home. The family was temporarily relocated and chelation therapy was started. A Medline search for mercury intoxication with hypertension found 6 reports of patients ranging from 11 months to 17 years old. All patients showed symptoms of acrodynia. Because of the clinical presentation and the finding of elevated catecholamines, most of the patients were first studied for possible pheochromocytoma. Subsequently, elevated levels of mercury were found. Three children had contact with elemental mercury from a broken thermometer, 2 had played with metallic mercury and 1 had poorly protected occupational exposure. All responded to chelation therapy. Severe systemic arterial hypertension in infants and children is usually secondary to an underlying disease process. The most frequent causes of hypertension in this group include renal parenchymal disease, obstructive uropathy, and chronic pyelonephritis associated with reflux and renal artery stenosis. Less frequent causes include adrenal tumors, pheochromocytomas, neurofibromas, and a number of familial forms of hypertension. Other causes include therapeutic and recreational drugs, notably sympathomimetics and cocaine, and rarely, heavy metals. In children with severe hypertension and elevated catecholamines, the physician should consider mercury intoxication as well as pheochromocytoma. The health hazards of heavy metals need to be reinforced to the medical profession and the general public.
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PMID:Mercury intoxication and arterial hypertension: report of two patients and review of the literature. 1069 36

Routine 99Tcm-dimercaptosuccinic acid (DMSA) scintigraphy was performed in a series of 24 kidney transplant recipients with impaired renal function. Diagnostic findings on planar and tomoscintigraphic acquisitions obtained 3 and 4 h after the injection of 130-140 MBq 99Tcm-DMSA were compared with the diagnosis established by fine-needle biopsy in 13 patients and by clinical course and other examinations (ultrasonography, bacteriology) in 11 patients. Renal scintigraphy demonstrated segmental defects in patients with rejection (n = 2/6), immunosuppressor nephrotoxicity (n = 2/6), acute pyelonephritis (n = 3/3), renal artery stenosis (n = 1/1) and obstructive lymphocele (n = 1/1). Diffuse lack of uptake was observed in one patient with severe renal failure. The scintigram was normal in 14 patients, including three with lesions histologically compatible with graft rejection or immunosuppressor nephrotoxicity. 99Tcm-DMSA was thus found to contribute little to the differential diagnosis between graft rejection and immunosuppressor nephrotoxicity. However, it may be useful for identifying specific disease states, particularly acute pyelonephritis, seen as well-delimited systematized defects. 99Tcm-DMSA scintigraphy could also be used in late follow-up after pyelonephritis in renal transplant recipients.
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PMID:Contribution of 99Tcm-DMSA scintigraphy to aetiological diagnosis in renal transplant recipients with impaired renal function. 1071 6

Acute Renal Failure (ARF) is characterized by a rapid decline of the glomerular filtration rate, due to hypotension (prerenal ARF), obstruction of the urinary tract (post-renal ARF) or renal parenchymal disease (renal ARF). The differential diagnosis among different causes of ARF is based on anamnesis, clinical symptoms and laboratory data. Usually ultrasound (US) is the only imaging examination performed in these patients, because it is safe and readily available. In patients with ARF gray scale US is usually performed to rule out obstruction since it is highly sensitive to recognize hydronephrosis. Patients with renal ARF have no specific changes in renal morphology. The size of the kidneys is usually normal or increased, with smooth margins. Detection of small kidneys suggests underlying chronic renal pathology and worse prognosis. Echogenicity and parenchymal thickness are usually normal, but in some cases there are hyperechogenic kidneys, increased parenchymal thickness and increased cortico-medullary differentiation. Evaluation of renal vasculature with pulsed Doppler US is useful in the differential diagnosis between prerenal ARF and acute tubular necrosis (ATN), and in the diagnosis of renal obstruction. Latest generation US apparatus allow color Doppler and power Doppler evaluation of renal vasculature up to the interlobular vessels. A significant, but non specific, reduction in renal perfusion is usually appreciable in the patients with ARF. There are renal pathologic conditions presenting with ARF in which color Doppler US provides more specific morphologic and functional information. In particular, color Doppler US often provides direct or indirect signs which can lead to the right diagnosis in old patients with chronic renal insufficiency complicated with ARF, in patients with acute pyelonephritis, hepatic disease, vasculitis, thrombotic microangiopathies, and in patients with acute thrombosis of the renal artery and vein. Contrast enhanced US is another useful diagnostic tool in patients with ARF which has been recently introduced in clinical practice. Microbubble administration may reduce technical failure in the evaluation of the renal artery. Moreover, perfusion defects due to stenosis or thrombosis of the renal segmentary vessels are better recognized. New diagnostic possibilities of enhanced US include evaluation of both cortical and medullar vessels, and functional evaluation of renal perfusion. Measuring the transit time of the microbubbles is useful for the diagnosis of renal artery stenosis and, in transplanted kidneys, for differential diagnosis between ATN and acute rejection.
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PMID:[Current role of color Doppler ultrasound in acute renal failure]. 1177 81

67 renal biopsies obtained in the course of adrenalectomy from patients with primary hyperaldosteronism, hypercorticism and pheochromocytoma were studied. Sclerotic affection of the arterioles and renal interstitium were found in long lasting adrenal arterial hypertension. This may cause residual postoperative hypertension. Endocrine nephropathy in primary hyperaldosteronism due to hypopotassemia and alcalosis manifests with vacuolar distrophy and atrophy of the epithelium, dilatation of tubular lumen, intratubular calcinosis and tubulointerstitial nephritis. Primary hyperaldosteronism was characterized by hypoplasia of the juxtaglomerular apparatus (JGA) but in massive spironolacton therapy signs of enhanced renin-secreting function of the glomerular efferent arteriola may be observed. In hypercorticism pyelonephritis is rather frequent. In patients with pheochromocytoma hypercatecholaminemia may result in JGA activation this being particularly evident in renal artery stenosis. Recurrent hypertension after pheochromocytoma removal in the absence of renal pathology may indicate recurrent tumor or missed second tumor.
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PMID:[Morphology of the kidneys in arterial hypertension of adrenal genesis (according to biopsy findings)]. 1240 52

The application of UCAs to the kidney is still in its infancy; however, there are several areas of great promise. UCAs may replace CT in complex renal cyst evaluation and follow-up, eliminating the need for costly CT scans with their attendant potential contrast nephrotoxicity. This approach may decrease patient and physician uncertainty and improve diagnostic confidence. The use of UCAs is likely to be clinically useful in the evaluation of the indeterminate small renal mass on CT or MR imaging. Another probable useful application will be in renal artery stenosis. Routine application of UCAs may increase the percentage of diagnostic examinations, increase diagnostic confidence, and decrease examination times. It also will likely become the first line of evaluation in pyelonephritis, and be useful in immediate assessment of residual tumor after radiofrequency ablation. Of course, substantial additional work needs to be performed in large groups of patients to prove this currently optimistic outlook.
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PMID:Renal imaging with ultrasound contrast: current status. 1452 Dec 4

Conventional ultrasonography of the kidney is faced by limitations due to the poor contrast of B-mode imaging for parenchymal disease and limited sensitivity of color Doppler for the detection of intracortical capillaries and deep pedicular vessels. Ultrasound contrast agents (USCAs) overcome these limitations, allowing the development of new applications for renal blood flow imaging and quantification. These improvements result from the increased acoustic response obtained from the microbubbles, as well as from the development of pulse sequences for bubble-specific imaging. In radiology, the liver has been considered as the primary target for contrast because USCAs allow both detection and characterization of focal lesions. The kidney has been less studied because USCA kinetics do not provide the same obvious potential for tumor characterization, and most clinical trials for contrast-enhanced renal imaging were conducted using color Doppler. Despite this, the kidney offers promising applications as USCAs improve the detection of abnormal microvascular and macrovascular disorders. Contrast-enhanced US may become the modality of choice for diagnosis of renal artery stenosis and detection of a perfusion deficit, as well as for characterization of indeterminate renal lesions, atypical cystic lesions, and the identification of acute pyelonephritis.
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PMID:The kidney: imaging with microbubble contrast agents. 1664 94


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