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Query: UMLS:C0034186 (
pyelonephritis
)
6,144
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Urinary cyclic AMP excretion per 24 h or per g creatinine in
primary hyperparathyroidism
(1 degrees HPT) has been evaluated by several authors with conflicting results. In 50 patients with 1 degrees HPT, 25 patients with secondary (2 degrees) HPT and 35 healthy control persons we determined urinary cyclic AMP per 24 h or per g creatinine. These parameters did not satisfactorily discriminate patients from controls, especially when glomerular filtration rate (GFR) as determined by creatinine clearance was reduced. Since urinary cyclic AMP is derived from plasma by glomerular filtration and from kidney by tubular production-the amount of tubules is reflected by GFR-the cyclic nucleotide was related to GFR. In controls urinary cyclic AMP correlated better with GFR than with creatinine excretion. Additionally, in 45 of 50 patients with 1 degrees HPT and in all with 2 degrees HPT, urinary cyclic AMP/GFR was raised. In 1 degrees HPT serum levels of parathyroid hormone correlated closer with urinary cyclic AMP/GFR than with urinary cyclic AMP/g creatinine. The ratio cyclic AMP/GFR decreased to normal or subnormal values after removal of adenomatous or hyperplastic glands in 1 degrees HPT and during infusion of calcium in 2 degrees HPT. In 50 patients with renal lithiasis caused by diseases other than 1 degrees HPT (anatomical variations,
pyelonephritis
, immobilization after tetraplegia) the ratio cyclic AMP/GFR was not raised. Urinary cyclic AMP/GFR, therefore, reflects parathyroid hormone excess more reliably than cyclic AMP/g creatinine.
...
PMID:Hyperparathyoidism: influence of glomerular filtration rate on urinary excretion of cyclic AMP. 19 82
Based on the experience of surgical treatment in 124 patients with renal form of
primary hyperparathyroidism
, the author gives a description of peculiarities of parathyroidectomy technic. Positive results of the treatment were obtained in 32 of 35 patients with spontaneous discharge of concretions. In bilateral nephrolithiasis postoperative recurrences, solitary stones the effect of the treatment depends both on renal surgery and therapy of
pyelonephritis
, nevertheless postoperative recurrences in these patients were 2.5 times as rare as in routine therapy.
...
PMID:[Characteristics of surgical treatment of the renal form of primary hyperparathyroidism]. 101 68
The term "renal osteodystrophy" is used to include skeletal disorders of patients with chronic renal failure: osteitis fibrosa, osteomalacia, osteosclerosis, osteoporosis and the frequently associated extraskeletal calcifications. It is the chronic glomerular disease with phosphate retention and resultant hyperphosphatemia on one hand and deficient 1,25 (OH)2 D3 and resultant hypocalcemia on the other to induce secondary hyperparathyroidism. The three most common causes of chronic renal failure in our patients are chronic glomerulonephritis, diabetic nephropathy, hypertensive nephropathy in decreasing frequency, polycystic renal disease occurs in five patients. Other miscellaneous causes include nephrotic syndrome, chronic
pyelonephritis
, systemic lupus erythematosus, periarteritis nodosa, interstitial nephritis and renal stones. The bone changes are similar in primary and secondary hyperparathyroidism and the incidence of brown tumor is about 3% in the former and 1.5 to 1.7% in the latter. We present one among the 94 dialyzed patients who has long-standing severe chronic renal failure from polycystic kidney disease and develops brown tumor in the mid ulna after 7 years on maintenance hemodialysis. The incidence of brown tumor in our series is about 1.1%. Because of increased longevity of the dialyzed patients, brown tumor from secondary hyperparathyroidism is now more commonly observed. Hyperphosphatemia with serum calcium-phosphate products exceeding plasma solubility of 60 to 75 mg/dl may induce soft tissue and vascular calcification. This explains the much higher incidence of soft tissue calcification in secondary than
primary hyperparathyroidism
; two of our patients with generalized Monckeberg's type arterial calcification and multiple periarticular calcifications in five patients have been observed.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Renal osteodystrophy. 164 77
During 1974-1984 altogether 481 patients were treated for end-stage renal disease (ESRD). Eight patients, five women and three men, with chronic
pyelonephritis
as the primary cause of ESRD, had staghorn urinary calculi as a predisposing factor for renal failure. These eight patients were studied retrospectively concerning epidemiological and bacteriological aspects, the treatment of the stone disease, and the development of uraemia. Anatomical and metabolic abnormalities such as bladder outlet disturbances,
primary hyperparathyroidism
, phenacetin abuse or metabolic stone disease were found in six patients. The women had all been infected with Proteus mirabilis, whereas the men had been infected with various microorganisms. The average time taken for the development of ESRD, estimated from the first sign of renal impairment, was 7.4 +/- 2.9 (SD) years. Five patients had died before this study commenced. One of the patients still alive was on dialysis treatment. Two patients who were doing well without dialysis were stone free and had sterile urine after successful pyelolithotomy. It is concluded that the prevalence of infectious urinary calculi as a cause of uraemia in patients with ESRD is low. The time taken for uraemia to develop is short in these patients and they often have anatomical abnormalities. Proteus is commonly found in this group of patients. Patients with staghorn calculi, urinary tract infection and impairment of renal function are at risk of developing uraemia.
...
PMID:Infection-induced urinary calculi and renal failure. 332 3
Severe secondary hyperparathyroidism is still observed at present in 5-10% of haemodialysis patients. It requires surgical correction. Fifty-eight haemodialysis patients had neck surgery and their 222 parathyroid glands analysed. The individual gland weight was comprised between 22 and 3880 mg (mean +/- SEM, 689 +/- 62 mg). Mean total parathyroid gland weight per patient was comprised between 2 and 3 g. Schematically, 4 types of gland architecture could be distinguished: diffuse hyperplasia alone; diffuse hyperplasia associated with incipient nodule formation; hyperplasia with pronounced nodule formation; and nodule formations alone. Total gland weight was significantly higher for the latter two histological forms than for the former suggesting transformation with time of pure hyperplasia to nodular hyperplasia. Patients with chronic
pyelonephritis
had a mean gland weight higher than that of patients with chronic glomerulonephritis (3308 +/- 498 mg versus 1824 +/- 358 mg, p less than 0.01). No relation was found between total gland weight and plasma calcium, phosphate or alkaline phosphatases. However, a weak relation existed between total gland weight and plasma immunoreactive parathyroid hormone. In addition, a negative relation was observed between highest prior plasma aluminium and gland weight when considering only patients with a gland weight less than 2000 mg. Parathyroid gland aluminium content was significantly higher in haemodialysis patients than in nonuraemic patients with
primary hyperparathyroidism
. A direct relation was found between parathyroid gland and bone aluminium. In conclusion, in haemodialysis patients with evolving hyperparathyroidism initially diffuse gland hyperplasia appears to be associated progressively with nodule formation. Circulating immunoreactive parathyroid hormone is positively related to total gland weight.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:[Hyperparathyroidism secondary to renal insufficiency: anatomo-clinical relations and the potential role of an aluminum overload]. 648 74
Chronic renal failure associated with hypercalcemia and hypophosphatemia was diagnosed in 6 horses. The renal lesions in 5 of the horses were classified as chronic glomerulonephritis and in the sixth, as chronic interstitial nephritis/
pyelonephritis
. There was no evidence of
primary hyperparathyroidism
or pseudohyperparathyroidism, thus suggesting that hypercalcemia associated with advanced renal failure in horses is related to a unique role of the equine kidney in calcium homeostasis.
...
PMID:Paradoxic hypercalcemia and hypophosphatemia associated with chronic renal failure in horses. 706 1
An elderly lady was diagnosed with
primary hyperparathyroidism
after being admitted to hospital with
pyelonephritis
and constipation. A sestamibi parathyroid scan demonstrated increased uptake in the upper mediastinum, suggesting an ectopic mediastinal parathyroid adenoma. The 4-mm adenoma was successfully removed through a mini-sternotomy incision using a gamma probe to identify the gland from the surrounding tissue. The patient made an uneventful recovery.
...
PMID:Excision of an Elusive Tiny Ectopic Parathyroid Adenoma. 2943 Feb 34