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 various parts of the bovine urinary tract, the renal pelvis, the ureter, the urinary bladder, the urethra, the vaginal vestibule and the vulva, were examined for the capacity of the epithelial cells to bind Corynebacterium renale and C. pilosum. C. renale adhered best to the epithelial cells of the vulva, and then to those of the ureter and renal pelvis. C. pilosum also adhered best to the epithelial cells of the vulva, followed by those of the vaginal vestibule. The results indicate that the most important target tissue for these bacteria may be the vulva, and the results correlate with the fact that C. renale frequently causes pyelonephritis and ureteritis, while C. pilosum causes the same diseases less frequently and behaves like normal flora of the vaginal vestibule.
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PMID:Adhesion of Corynebacterium renale and Corynebacterium pilosum to the epithelial cells of various parts of the bovine urinary tract from the renal pelvis to vulva. 400 9

Urinary undiversion is an accepted technique in a highly selective patient population. We reconstructed the urinary tract in six female mongrel dogs. A 15 cm. segment of ileum was isolated, both ends were closed and bowel continuity re-established. The proximal two-thirds of each ureter were anastomosed to the proximal end of the ileal segment. The distal one-third right ureteral segment, in continuity with the bladder, was anastomosed end-to-side to the distal ileal segment. Information from the intravenous pyelograms, renal function tests, electrolytes and pathological studies showed normal upper tracts without dilatation or obstruction, preservation of renal function and normal electrolytes except for mild hyperchloremia in all 6 animals. There was chronic pyelonephritis in one animal and mild focal renal inflammation in two animals. The uretero-ileal anastomoses were patent and the ureters were not dilated. The interposed ileum functions well as a conduit and does not become a reservoir over time. We believe incorporating ileum into the urinary tract in this technique of undiversion is a safe and effective clinical alternative in selected patients.
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PMID:Urinary undiversion using the existing ileal loop and distal right ureter. 403 97

The results of urethrocystography in 193 patients with urodynamically and clinically confirmed recurrent incontinence were analyzed. Severe displacement of the vesical cervix and the proximal section of the urethra predisposes the patient to recurrent stress incontinence. The roentgenological findings (difference of over 30 mm in the distance between the vesical cervix and the ischium, outflow of contrast medium next to the catheter under stress with differential values between 20 and 40 mm, angle of inclination of the proximal urethra of over 45 degrees) are significantly more frequent in cases of recurrent stress incontinence than in cases of first occurrence (132 patients). Of the 193 patients 164 (84%) had previously undergone a vaginal operation. In 60% of these 164 patients the difference in the distance between the vesical cervix and the ischium was 30 mm or more under "resting" stress, and in a further 19% it was between 26 and 30 mm, often with outflow of contrast medium during "pressing". Stress incontinence has a damaging effect on the supporting apparatus of the urethra and the bladder, and also on the ureter and the kidneys. Ureteral drainage disorders and chronic pyelonephritis are the changes most commonly diagnosed in roentgenograms. No statistically significant differences between recurrent and first-time stress incontinence were found. Urethrocystographic findings facilitate selection of the surgical procedure. It appears possible to reduce the frequency of recurrence if preoperative roentgenological findings are taken into account.
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PMID:[Recurrent stress incontinence]. 405 46

Partial obstruction of one ureter was created in weanling rats (3 weeks old) and its effects were studied after 3, 6, and 9 weeks. Within 3 weeks, a considerable hydronephrosis had appeared, which did not progress with time. No effect on parenchymal weight was observed, either on the obstructed side or on the contralateral, intact one. Histological examination revealed a marked deformation of the papilla in about 25% of the hydronephrotic kidneys and evidence of chronic pyelonephritis in 40%. However, the inflammatory changes were restricted to the attenuated circumhilar 'edges' of the parenchyma, thus involving only a minor portion of the kidney. The body weight of the animals obstructed for 9 weeks was 12% lower than that of normal, sham-operated controls. In summary, the effect on the renal parenchyma of partial ureteric obstruction, created in the weanling period, was relatively discrete and less pronounced than when obstruction is performed in the neonatal period.
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PMID:Partial ureteric obstruction in weanling rats. I. Long-term effects on the renal morphology. 405 78

Experiments using an in vitro method of assessing protein synthesis by (14)C amino acid incorporation were designed to determine whether pyelonephritic kidneys were capable of local antibody production. Unilateral pyelonephritis was produced in rabbits by intravenous injection of E. coli 0-75 while one ureter was transiently occluded. The capability of protein and immunoglobulin synthesis by pyelonephritic kidneys, contralateral kidneys, normal kidneys, and spleens from normal and pyelonephritic animals was measured. Enhanced protein and immunoglobulin syntheses by pyelonephritic kidneys were first detected by the 11th day after infection and persisted through day 120. In individual experiments the pyelonephritic kidney produced 6-170 times more soluble protein than did the contralateral, uninfected kidney. In seven experiments, IgG comprised a mean of 72% of the total protein synthesized by the pyelonephritic kidney, compared with a mean of 19% in the contralateral kidney. IgA accounted for 10 and 9%, respectively. In these experiments 0.6-17% of the synthesized IgG was precipitable by somatic antigen of the E. coli 0-75. The capability of the pyelonephritic kidney to synthesize soluble protein was quantitatively similar to that of spleens from infected animals. The proportion of synthesized protein which was immunoglobulin G, however, was greater in the pyelonephritic kidney than in the spleen. Furthermore, specific antibody synthesis by the pyelonephritic kidney persisted longer than did synthesis by the spleen of the same animal. These studies provide evidence that in experimental pyelonephritis a significant local immune response occurs which is represented primarily by the production of IgG. Local immunoglobulin formation and specific antibody synthesis may be important factors in determining patterns of host resistance.
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PMID:Local immune response in experimental pyelonephritis. 418 Feb 77

Both E. coli and S. aureus were simultaneously injected into the left renal arteries of 55 female dogs. The arteries were occluded for 10 minutes prior to the injection and 10 minutes after. The renal veins were occluded during the injection and for 10 minutes after. Ten animals did not survive longer than 24 hours. Ten of 45 developed neither renal lesions nor bacteriuria; of the remaining 35 which did, five were killed on each of the second, seventh and fourteenth days, and their renal lesions were assessed. Eighteen of the remaining 2 which developed bacteriuria were killed 3 to 12 weeks following surgery when bacteria could no longer be recovered from the urine. Only two dogs had persistent bacteriuria 12 weeks after surgery. All animals which developed bacteriuria had gross lesions in the left kidney but not the right. Naturally occurring renal lesions were found in 17 of 78 random-source dogs at laparotomy. E. coli was cultured from the urine of five of these dogs but not from the kidneys. These lesions were morphologically similar to experimental ones. It is concluded that with this method renal lesions similar to spontaneous ones can be produced, but care must be taken to exclude the relatively large percentage of random-source dogs with naturally occurring lesions from any study. Various forms of infectious nephritis have been reported to be among the commonest diseases of dogs (1, 2). The successful production of chronic pyelonephritis in dogs depends on a variety of factors in addition to injecting bacteria into either the renal artery or ureter. Thus, ureteral obstruction, renal anoxia and reduced pulse pressure increased the susceptibility to renal infection (3, 4, 6, 7, 8). Our laboratory has been concerned with the production of experimental pyelonephritis in dogs so that the efficacy of various treatments could be studied. The present work was undertaken to standardize methods of producing the disease and to compare experimental renal lesions with naturally occurring ones.
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PMID:Experimental pyelonephritis in dogs. 423 36

Retrograde pyelonephritis was produced in rats by introducing into the bladder a small refluxing inoculum of Escherichia coli that would enter the renal pelvis but not the blood stream. At the same time the left ureter was partially obstructed for 18 hours. This model differs from previous attempts to produce E coli pyelonephritis with large (0.6 ml) volumes infused into the bladder, because such large volumes cause bacteremia and hematogeneous pyelonephritis. Since retrograde E coli pyelonephritis in patients is not accompanied by positive blood cultures, the model described in this report is believed to accurately mimic human pyelonephritis and to allow a realistic approach to the study of immunity against retrograde infection in the urinary tract.
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PMID:Immunization against retrograde pyelonephritis. I. Production of an experimental model of severe ascending Escherichia coli pyelonephritis without bacteremia in rats. 459 Jun 45

The clinical and pathological findings in 150 children submitted to partial or total nephrectomy have been reviewed. Histological examination of the kidney removed at operation showed evidence of renal dysplasia in 76 (51%). These 76 patients were divided into three main groups on the basis of the pathological changes found in the kidney and the associated urinary tract anomalies. In group 1, gross cystic renal dysplasia was associated with absence or atresia of the renal pelvis and ureter. In group 2, renal dysplasia was segmental; the ureter, although patent, had some anatomical or functional abnormality which resulted in urinary stasis or reflux. In many of these patients dysplasia was confined to the upper pole of a ;duplex' kidney which was drained by an ectopic ureterocele. In group 3, renal dysplasia was associated with obstruction of the lower urinary tract, most commonly by posterior urethral valves. In group 1 dysplasia was total, involving the whole kidney, whilst in groups 2 and 3 dysplasia tended to be segmental; in the majority some normal renal tissue was present. Pyelonephritis was a very common complication, but was present only in patients from groups 2 and 3, in whom a lumen was present in the draining ureter, and not in patients from group 1 in whom the ureter was atretic or absent, and the kidney not functioning. It appears that urinary obstruction, stasis, or reflux are the principal factors predisposing to and promoting pyelonephritis in dysplastic kidneys. There seems to be no reason to suppose that dysplastic renal tissue is abnormally susceptible to infection since pyelonephritic changes were lacking in those cases in which dysplasia was most severe.
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PMID:Renal dysplasia. I. A clinico-pathological study of 76 cases. 557 4

An experimental pyelonephritis model was developed in monkeys (Macaca fascicularis) using P-fimbriated Escherichia coli as the infecting organism. The relevant receptor molecules for P-fimbriae were also shown to be present in Macaca fascicularis. Atraumatic administration of P-fimbriated E. coli into the ureter induced a ureteritis followed by acute and chronic pyelonephritis. The decisive role of P-fimbriae as an adhesive virulence factor was proven by the receptor blockade of P-fimbriae-mediated bacterial adhesion by a synthetic receptor analogue (alpha-D-Galp-(1-4)-beta-D-Galp-1-OMe), which was administered into the ureter together with the challenge bacteria. On the basis of these and other findings, the role of reflux and pyelonephritis in relation to renal scarring is discussed in this paper. It is proposed that minor transitional vesicoureteral reflux together with the adhesive property of P-fimbriated E. coli and their ability to induce ureteritis might constitute an alternative mechanism to gross reflux by which bacteria ascend to the kidney. These findings and the fact that intestinal colonization with P-fimbriated E. coli coincides with the disease have opened up new prophylactic and therapeutic possibilities.
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PMID:P-fimbriae of pyelonephritogenic Escherichia coli: significance for reflux and renal scarring-a hypothesis. 613 85

Unilateral hydronephrosis was induced by temporary ligature of the left ureter in 29 rabbits. In 21 animals so treated, chronic pyelonephritis was simultaneously induced by intravenous application of a suspension of E. coli. Histologic examination of renal pelvic epithelia in animals killed four weeks after the surgical intervention, revealed the following features: 1. Simple hyperplasia of urothelium in 12 cases, 2. atypical hyperplasia - (dysplasia) of urothelium in 10 cases, 3. v. Brunn's nests in 20 renal pelvises; 11 cases of cystic pyelitis, all combined with Brunn's nests, 4. metaplastic transformation of visceral mono- or bilayered epithelium into multi-layered urothelium-like structures in 19 renal pelvises. These changes are observed almost exclusively in the left renal pelvis of animals subjected to temporary ureteral ligature. Atypical urothelial hyperplasia is found only together with chronic pyelonephritis. Hyperplastic and dysplastic epithelial changes in the renal pelvis, the formation of Brunn's nests, and cystic pyelitis are interpreted as sequelae of postrenal obstruction or concomitant chronic inflammation.
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PMID:Epithelial abnormalities in the renal pelvis in experimental hydronephrosis and pyelonephritis. 634 54


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