Gene/Protein
Disease
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Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Pivot Concepts:
Gene/Protein
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Target Concepts:
Gene/Protein
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Query: UMLS:C0034186 (
pyelonephritis
)
6,144
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
We relate our experience about ureteritis, especially non specific ureteritis. The traumatic, radiation ureteritis will be discussed in others chapters. Most cases of ureteritis are infective, and may be due to any of the organism normally found in urinary tract infections, particularly Escherichia Coli, staphylococci, streptococci, enterococci, proteus and pyocyaneus. It is really primary, but it usually ascending from an associated cystitis, descending from
pyelonephritis
, or due to direct spread from and adjacent inflammatory lesion such as appendicitis or
salpingitis
. The infection may also reach the ureter by lymphatic spread, particularly from the prostate and seminal vesicles. Any associated abnormalities of the ureter, such as stricture, megaloureter, ureterocele, and so on, will naturally predispose to infective ureteritis. As ureteritis is rarely primary, the first step in treatment must be toward the elucidation and cure of any underlying lesion. Thus calculi, cystitis, pyelitis, and so on, will need appropriate therapy, and this in itself will considerably improve or cure the ureteritis, and specially in the more acute cases. In the chronic cases with stricture formation, dilation or even excision of the stenosed portion may be required. For the treatment of the strictures we want emphasize the role of the ureteral stenting thinking its use is necessary to preserve the renal function.
...
PMID:[Ureteritis]. 847 90
Fever, like metrorrhagia or pelvic pain, should be a danger signal alerting women with IUDs to seek medical attention without delay. If the temperature is elevated and the clinical signs suggest
salpingitis
or pelvic infalmmation, the patient should be hospitalized to obtain a diagnostic and therapeutic laparoscopy, intravenous polyantibiotic treatment, and bed rest. A temperature of about 38 degrees Celsius associated with metrorrhagia suggests
salpingitis
, regardless of other clinical findings, particularly if the patient is under 25, has had several sexual partners, is nulliparous, or is an insulin-dependent diabetic. The diagnosis should be confirmed by laparoscopy. If a virus or flu is as likely to be the cause as a gynecological infection, blood tests and assay of sedimentation rates should be obtained; over 10,000 polynuclear forms, mainly neutrophils, and a sedimentation rate elevated beyond that expected by the fever are significant in diagnosis. A sonogram can be used to rule out endometrial or tubal infection. If doubt persists, the IUD should be removed and a careful laparoscopy performed to assess the extent and nature of lesions. If the IUD is removed, effective replacement contraception should be prescribed. The physician should not ignore a fever in a patient using an IUD, and should be available for consultation immediately. Removal of the device without further treatment is insufficient in case of gynecological infection because of the danger posed to subsequent fertility. The IUD should not be removed without a short and intensive antibiotic treatment. The possibility of a partner with urethritis should not be ignored, and the fever should not be attributed to vaginitis, even if it is a severe case. The possibility of a pregnancy with the device in place should be ruled out. If the strings are not visible, a sonogram should be obtained to locate the device. In diagnosing febrile patients, the possibility of appendicitis and
pyelonephritis
should also be considered.
...
PMID:[Dos...don'ts...in the case of unexplained high temperature in an IUD user (author's transl)]. 1233 2
Fitz-Hugh-Curtis syndrome--inflammation of the liver capsule associated with genital tract infection--occurs in up to one fourth of patients with pelvic inflammatory disease (PID). Classically presenting as sharp, pleuritic right upper quadrant pain, usually but not always accompanied by signs of
salpingitis
, it can mimic many other common disorders such as cholecystitis and
pyelonephritis
.
...
PMID:Fitz-Hugh-Curtis syndrome: a diagnosis to consider in women with right upper quadrant pain. 1505 46
The main organs in the left iliac fossa are the descending colon, sigmoid colon and, in women, internal reproductive organs. An infection of the left iliac fossa must lead the clinician firstly to suspect diverticulitis of the sigmoid colon in older patients and
salpingitis
in women of childbearing age. Other less common aetiologies are possible (inflammatory or infectious colitis, epiploic appendagitis, abscess of the psoas,
pyelonephritis
, renal abscess, etc.). Sonography as a first-line investigation may lead to diagnosis (especially in gynaecological disease), but a CT scan with intravenous injection of an iodine-containing contrast medium will allow for a full assessment of disease spread, and complications of sigmoid colitis or its differential diagnoses (abscess, fistula, perforation) to be investigated. It can also be used to guide percutaneous drainage or fine-needle aspiration for microbiology investigations.
...
PMID:Imaging in infections of the left iliac fossa. 2252 76