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Query: UMLS:C0034186 (
pyelonephritis
)
6,144
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Two cases of suppuration in solitary renal cyst are reported. The clinical history of acute
pyelonephritis
, avascular mass lesion of the kidney with ipsilateral pleural effusion (triad) seen in a female patient of child-bearing age is characteristic of this condition. Surgical management is satisfactory. Our Case 1 is the first reported case of solitary infected cyst that ruptured retroperitoneally, clinically mimicking a
subphrenic abscess
.
...
PMID:Solitary infected renal cyst: report of 2 cases and review of literature. 34 45
A case of emphysematous
pyelonephritis
with perinephric gas is presented. The patient was an elderly female diabetic and in addition had a
subphrenic abscess
as a complication of EPPG. Diabetes was not under control and E. coli was the sole pathogen. As the patient did not respond to conservative treatment, nephrectomy and drainage of
subphrenic abscess
were done and the patient improved rapidly.
...
PMID:Emphysematous pyelonephritis and perinephric gas in a diabetic. 37 57
Bilateral nephrectomy was performed in 53 patients on regular haemodialysis. The indications were
pyelonephritis
in 30, polycystic kidneys in 6, glomerulnephritis in 7, uncontrollable hypertension in 9 and horseshoe kidney in 1. In 87 per cent of cases the operation was carried out as a separate procedure prior to transplantation. The mortality was 9 per cent and the postoperative complications included hypotension, clotting of arteriovenous shunts, pneumonia and
subphrenic abscess
. As a result of our experience we have revised our indications for bilateral nephrectomy which now are
pyelonephritis
only when associated with persistent bacteriuria or ureteric reflux, polycystic kidneys and uncontrollable hypertension.
...
PMID:Bilateral nephrectomy prior to renal transplantation. 78 22
Twenty nine patients of an intensive care unit (9 women and 20 men), aged 63.9 +/- 15.8 years, with a mean body weight of 62.5 +/- 11.8 kg were treated during 9.4 +/- 2.1 days by aztreonam (2 x 1 g/24 h) administered by short infusion (30 min) for a severe infection due to a Gram-negative bacilli. The primary (n = 25) or nosocomial (n = 4) infection sites were a peritonitis (14), a septicaemia (6), a cholecystitis (6), a
pyelonephritis
(5), a cholangitis (2), a
subphrenic abscess
(1) or a pneumonia (2). The isolated Gram-negative bacilli were all susceptible to aztreonam, their MIC being less than or equal to 0.5 micrograms/ml, except for a Pseudomonas aeruginosa (MIC = 4 micrograms/ml). Aztreonam was administered as a single therapy to 7 patients and in association with metronidazole (18) and/or penicillin G (14) to 22 patients; in fact, anaerobes were isolated in ten patients. The mean serum concentrations of aztreonam, as measured by HPLC, before and after the 7th administration respectively were 83.2 +/- 17.5 and 6.1 +/- 5.5 micrograms/ml for peak and through levels. The treatment of the 29 infections was a success in all the cases. No complication occurred due to the presence of Gram positive cocci (n = 4) in the first bacteriological sample, or due to the emergence (n = 12) of Gram positive cocci, except for one case of sepsis of the abdominal wall by Staphylococcus aureus. Aztreonam (2 x 1 g/24 h) may be a suitable alternative for the treatment of severe infections of intensive care units, mostly due to Gram-negative bacilli.
...
PMID:[Aztreonam treatment of severe infections caused by gram-negative aerobic bacilli]. 304 52
Thirty patients (17 male, 13 female; age 17 to 84 years; normal renal function in 23 cases) with severe bacterial infections were treated with ceftriaxone. The infections was septicemia in 20 cases, a septicemia-like condition in 2 and a focal infection in 8 (2 abscesses of the lung, 2
pyelonephritis
, 1 abscess of the liver, 1
subphrenic abscess
, 1 meningitis developed from an abscess of the brain and 1 acute intestinal infection). 25 infections were bacteriologically documented, with recovery of the following pathogens: 20 Gram negative rods (including 10 E. coli) that were all susceptible to ceftriaxone (MIC = 0.02 to 0.5 mg/l) except 2 (1 Pseudomonas and 1 E. cloacae), 5 susceptible Gram positive cocci (3 Pneumococcus, 1 Streptococcus and 1 Staphylococcus epidermidis) and 3 susceptible anaerobes (2 B. fragilis and 1 B. melaninogenicus). Ceftriaxone was given alone in 15 cases and in association with another antibiotic in 15 cases (aminoglycoside in 10 cases, nitroimidazole in 4 and fosfomycin in 1). The dose of ceftriaxone was 1 to 2 g per day in 28 cases, 3 g per day in 1 case (meningitis with abscess of the brain) and 1 g every other day in 1 case (chronic renal failure under hemodialysis). Duration of treatment ranged from 10 to 62 days (average 17 days). The usual routes of administration were IV and IM; the SC route was used on 4 occasions. Pharmacokinetic studies of serum levels were carried out in several patients including two who had ceftriaxone subcutaneously; results were consistent with those previously reported in the literature.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:[Clinical evaluation of ceftriaxone in severe infections in adults]. 353 20
Although pancreatitis and
subphrenic abscess
frequently cause pleural effusion, renal disease rarely does so. We report a case of a young patient who presented with pleural effusion due to
pyelonephritis
and renal outflow obstruction secondary to nephrolithiasis. The effusion and the initial absence of urinary abnormalities resulted in delay in diagnosis and initiation of appropriate therapy.
...
PMID:Pyelonephritis as a cause of pleural effusion. 931 Oct 60
A 19-year-old woman was admitted to our hospital because of unexplained pain in the right upper abdomen and fever. Her medical history noted a recent uncomplicated pregnancy and birth of a healthy child. Our differential diagnosis included
pyelonephritis
, pulmonary embolism, pneumonia causing pleural pain, a gastrointestinal cause, or a
subphrenic abscess
. A vaginal culture was taken as part of a second opinion by a gynaecologist. However, after a few days PCR on the vaginal sample was positive for Chlamydia trachomatis, indicating a case of Fitz-Hugh-Curtis syndrome. This syndrome is a complication of pelvic inflammatory disease caused by a bacterial infection, most frequently Gonococcal or Chlamydia species. The patient was treated with doxycycline and recovered quickly. As a result of ignoring a possible gynaecological cause in this patient, the time to diagnosis and treatment was delayed. Left untreated, this disease might result in infertility and in complications in the newborn. A broad differential diagnosis is therefore important.
...
PMID:[A gynaecological cause of upper abdominal pain: Fitz-Hugh-Curtis syndrome]. 2714 99
The role of chemotherapy was evaluated in 2 cases of solitary multiloculated liver abscesses. Both patients were free of biliary tract diseases, liver trauma, iatrogenic causes and colorectal diseases. Angiography revealed a hypervascular abscess wall and increased flow of the hepatic artery. In the first case,
pyelonephritis
was accompanied by left renalstones, and Escherichia coli was isolated from the urine. Since a laboratory examination revealed liver dysfunction, a CT was performed which disclosed a liver abscess. A percutaneous nephrostomy and chemotherapy were performed. Pus from the abscess yielded Streptococcus sanguis, along with unidentified gram-positive rods and anaerobic gram-negative cocci. The liver abscess did not resolve in spite of percutaneous drainage and administration of imipenem, which may have been due to the presence of multiple septa. After the administration of piperacillin, the body temperature normalized, and fistulography revealed adequate drainage of the liver abscess which subsequently resolved. In the other case, the patient had pyorrhea with an accompanying right
subphrenic abscess
. Fusobacterium sp. were recovered from the pus of liver abscess. Flomoxef was administered for 17 days prior to percutaneous drainage. Serial CT examinations revealed the disappearance of septa in the liver abscess cavity, and the patient made an uneventful recovery after percutaneous drainage. Piperacillin and flomoxef are excreted into bile fairly well in the absence of biliary obstruction, which may indicate that the high biliary concentrations of these antimicrobial agents is responsible for the elimination of multiple septa and the favorable response of multiloculated liver abscesses to percutaneous drainage.
...
PMID:Significant Role of Chemotherapy in the Treatment of Multiloculated Liver Abscesses Evaluated with CT and Angiographic Examinations. 2968 83