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Query: UMLS:C0034186 (
pyelonephritis
)
6,144
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Acute pyelonephritis
is one of the most common serious medical complications of pregnancy and may result in significant maternal morbidity. E. coli and Klebsiella are the two most common causative organisms. Pregnant women with acute
pyelonephritis
should be hospitalized and treated with parenteral antibiotics. Clinical response is usually dramatic, with the majority of patients being asymptomatic within 48 to 72 hours of therapy. Recurrent infection is common, and these women must be followed closely with frequent surveillance cultures. Detection and eradication of bacteriuria at the initial prenatal visit is important in preventing this complication.
...
PMID:Acute pyelonephritis in pregnancy. 379 31
In a renal transplant recipient, acute
pyelonephritis
of the allograft developed in association with acute deterioration of renal function. No other cause of renal dysfunction was delineated, and the serum creatinine level promptly returned to baseline with antimicrobial therapy.
Acute pyelonephritis
is an important cause of late transplant dysfunction, and prompt diagnosis and treatment result in complete recovery of renal function.
...
PMID:Acute pyelonephritis as a cause of late transplant dysfunction. 388 Oct 21
The thick colonic wall permits the creation of an antirefluxing ureterocolonic anastomosis, which reduces the incidence of
pyelonephritis
and limits the deterioration of renal function. Since 1977 a simple procedure for ureterocolonic anastomosis performed entirely outside of the colon was used in 63 patients. Obstructive complications were encountered in 6.4 per cent, while ureterocolonic reflux occurred in 5.6 per cent of the renoureteral units.
Acute pyelonephritis
developed in 7 patients.
...
PMID:Five years of experience with a modified technique of ureterocolonic anastomosis. 672 51
Urine specimens from 65 adult patients with symptomatic urinary tract infections that involved 91 episodes of well-defined acute
pyelonephritis
or cystitis were tested for antibody-coated bacteria (ACB) by a fluorescent antibody assay, unbound bacteria-specific antibody by radioimmunoassay (RIA), and levels of total protein and IgG.
Acute pyelonephritis
was associated with positive tests for ACB (22 [69%] of 32), elevated levels of unbound antibody (28 [88%] of 32), and a mean RIA binding ratio of 9.4. Cystitis was associated with negative tests for ACB (56 [95%] of 59), low levels of antibody in urine (38 [64%] of 59), and a mean RIA binding ratio of 3.2. The results showed that a negative test for ACB may occur with elevated levels of unbound antibody in the urine because, although elevated, levels were still too low to result in detectable antibody coating of the bacteria. There was often, but not always, a correlation between RIA binding ratios and levels of urinary protein and IgG.
...
PMID:Bacteria-specific antibody in the urine of patients with acute pyelonephritis and cystitis. 701 30
Acute urethral syndrome is effectively treated with a standard course of an appropriate oral antibiotic. Cystitis can be treated similarly but, because it is regarded as benign in normal hosts, may be better treated symptomatically.
Acute pyelonephritis
requires a parenteral antibiotic because of its frequent association with bacteremia. In chronic
pyelonephritis
, an oral antibiotic is chosen for long-term use on the basis of its ability to penetrate damaged renal tissue. When urinary tract infection recurs, reinfection must be differentiated from relapse. Reinfection usually requires long-term antimicrobial therapy, but relapse often has a potentially reversible underlying cause and merits extensive diagnostic workup. Chronic prostatitis constitutes a greater therapeutic problem than acute prostatitis because of difficulty with antibiotic penetration.
...
PMID:Urinary tract infections. 2. Therapeutic approach. 703 28
Urinary tract infections (UTI) are the most common of all the bacterial infections affecting humans during their life span. In adult patients, UTI may be categorized into the following groups: acute uncomplicated cystitis, acute uncomplicated
pyelonephritis
, recurrent bacterial UTI infections, asymptomatic bacteriuria, complicated UTI, acute and chronic bacterial prostatitis. In patients with uncomplicated cystitis, short-course (3 days) empirical therapy is more effective than single dose therapy. Recurrent cystitis can be effectively managed by continuous antimicrobial prophylaxis.
Acute pyelonephritis
in patients with anatomically normal urinary tracts should be treated with antimicrobial therapy for 10 to 14 days. Complicated infections require a full 10- to 14-day course of antimicrobial therapy. Urologic evaluation in patients with acute
pyelonephritis
or recurrent infections should not be routinely performed. Screening for asymptomatic bacteriuria is unnecessary in adults, except in particular circumstances. There is little evidence that UTI in adult patients lead to progressive chronic renal injury, unless complicating factors are concurrently present.
...
PMID:[Urinary infections in adults: clinical approach and therapeutic indications]. 772 3
Previous reports have demonstrated lesions on computerized axial tomography (CT), and nuclear scintigraphy (DMSA) in acute
pyelonephritis
(PN). We undertook a prospective study of all patients presenting to our hospital with PN over 40 months. Patients who fulfilled diagnostic criteria, were treated with intravenous antibiotics. Excluding two who were pregnant, all patients had imaging by intravenous urography (IVU), CT and DMSA during their admission. Urine samples were collected prior to treatment. Patients without IVU evidence of cortical scarring but with parenchymal defects on CT and/or DMSA underwent a repeat DMSA three or more months after the acute episode. Of the 164 patients, 142 were female. E. coli was found in 116 patients. Forty-six patients had an abnormality on IVU. Of the 106 patients without IVU evidence of cortical scarring, 59 had a defect on CT and/or DMSA. Late DMSA scans in 35 of these 59 patients showed a persistent abnormality in 77%. E. coli characteristics such as P-fimbriae and Type 1 fimbriae were not predictive of acute imaging abnormalities. Inhibition of E. coli growth by the addition of EDTA was highly predictive of acute CT and DMSA abnormalities with a sensitivity of 83.3% and a specificity of 82.8%.
Acute pyelonephritis
is often associated with acute CT and/or DMSA abnormalities which may evolve into renal cortical scars. Acute scan abnormalities can be predicted by the presence of E. coli which were susceptible to EDTA in culture. Late scarring could not be predicted by clinical features, response to treatment or antibiotic used.
...
PMID:A prospective study of cortical scarring in acute febrile pyelonephritis in adults: clinical and bacteriological characteristics. 777 71
Acute pyelonephritis
is a common invasive infection frequently caused by E. coli that possess P-fimbriae and secrete hemolysin. We have examined the role of P fimbriae and hemolysin in the killing of putative target cells of acute
pyelonephritis
, that is, human renal epithelial cells (HRPTEC). Cultures of HRPTEC were overlaid with (1) a prototypic pyelonephritogenic E. coli (CFT073) which expresses both P fimbriae and hemolysin; (2) its hemolysin-negative isogenic mutant (CFT073hlyD::TnphoA); or (3) a prototypic nonpyelonephritogenic fecal E. coli (FN414) which is negative for both P fimbriae and hemolysin. CFT073 and CFT073hlyD::TnphoA but not FN414 adhered to HRPTEC, as demonstrated by electron microscopy and direct counting. Adherence was diminished by antisera directed against P fimbriae and by a monoclonal antibody recognizing the epithelial receptor for P fimbriae. CFT073 was significantly more cytolethal for HRPTEC than its hemolysin-negative mutant. The bacteria-free filtrate of CFT073 was both hemolytic and cytolethal whereas that of CFT073hyD::TnphoA was not hemolytic and was significantly less cytolethal. Finally, we demonstrated that CFT073 passed through monolayers of HRPTEC at a higher rate than CFT073hlyD::TnphoA, indicating that hemolysin damages HRPTEC, facilitating passage of bacteria through the epithelial barrier. With HRPTEC and a pyelonephritogenic strain of E. coli we have reproduced in vitro bacterial attachment and toxin delivery by P fimbriae and hemolysin, factors epidemiologically associated with acute
pyelonephritis
in patients.
...
PMID:Binding to and killing of human renal epithelial cells by hemolytic P-fimbriated E. coli. 786 2
This study examined the effect of pregnancy on the host response to acute
pyelonephritis
. Urine and serum samples were obtained at the time of diagnosis and after two weeks, from non-pregnant and pregnant women with acute
pyelonephritis
. The samples were analyzed for interleukin-6 (IL-6) and specific antibody activity to antigens extracted from the Escherichia coli strain infecting each patient. The host response to infection was further quantitated as fever, C-reactive protein, and renal concentrating capacity.
Acute pyelonephritis
in non-pregnant and pregnant women was accompanied by a significant serum and urine antibody response. The serum antibody response was significantly lower in the pregnant group. The IL-6 levels in serum and urine at diagnosis were significantly higher in the non-pregnant compared to the pregnant women. These results demonstrate that the immunosuppression of pregnancy includes the mucosal IL-6 and specific antibody responses to acute
pyelonephritis
caused by E. coli.
...
PMID:Suppressed antibody and interleukin-6 responses to acute pyelonephritis in pregnancy. 816 47
Various treatment strategies are currently used in the management of acute
pyelonephritis
, with some patients being treated as inpatients and others as outpatients. To better describe the clinical course of patients with this condition and the management strategies of physicians treating these patients, a retrospective cohort study of febrile nonpregnant women presenting to the emergency department with clinical evidence of acute
pyelonephritis
was conducted.
Acute pyelonephritis
was defined as infected urine (> or = 7 white blood cells/high-power field and/or urine culture with > or = 10(4) colony-forming units [CFU]/mL) and fewer (> or = 37.8 degrees C) without other source. Between October 1990 and September 1991, 28 hospitalized and 83 nonhospitalized patients satisfied these criteria. Data were abstracted from hospital charts, and clinical outcomes were determined from chart reviews and telephone or mailed questionnaires. The hospitalized patients were significantly older (odds ratio [OR] = 1.07), had higher temperatures (OR = 6.12), and were more likely to have diabetes (OR = 10.57), genitourinary tract abnormalities (OR = 10.53), and vomiting (OR = 12.17) than the nonhospitalized patients. Sixty-six (80%) of the nonhospitalized patients were treated with a single dose of parenteral antibiotic (usually gentamicin or ceftriaxone) before discharge on oral antibiotics. Seventy-one (86%) were treated with oral trimethoprim-sulfamethoxazole. Follow-up was obtained for 75 (90%) of the nonhospitalized patients. Nine (12%) of the 75 returned because of symptoms of acute
pyelonephritis
, with 8 returning within 1 day of the initial visit. Seven of those returning were admitted. All responded to additional antibiotic therapy.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:ED management of acute pyelonephritis in women: a cohort study. 817 29
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