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)

As no method for localization of urinary tract infection has been shown to be absolutely reliable, six procedures have been carried out simultaneously in 25 girls with acute symptomatic infections and the reliability of each method assessed. While clinical diagnosis of pyelonephritis or cystitis correlated well with the overall results of the battery of tests, the reliability of individual tests varied. Highest reliability was obtained with CRP determinations followed by antibody titration, sedimentation rate, and renal concentrating capacity. In the bladder washout test only 8 of the 14 patients with pyelonephritis had findings clearly indicating high infection. Intermittent or inadequate discharge of bacteria from the renal parenchyma is suggested as the major source for this inaccuracy. In fact, half of the 42 final washout specimens from girls with acute pyelonephritis contained less than 1000 bacteria per ml, indicating that low numbers of organisms in ureteric urine is common in childhood pyelonephritis.
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PMID:Level diagnosis of symptomatic urinary tract infections in childhood. 109 51

Serum CRP levels ranging between 10 and 200 mug/ml were found in 19 patients with acute pyelonephritis. Treatment with antibacterial drugs, to which the bacteria were fully sensitive, resulted in a rapid decrease of the CRP values and very low or trace amounts were attained within a week. In contrast, cases ineffectively treated and/or reinfected showed increasing or slowly decreasing CRP levels. It is suggested that repeated CRP determinations can be used as a diagnostic tool for the rapid detection of cases of acute pyelonephritis in which treatment is ineffective.
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PMID:Sequential determination of C-reactive protein in acute childhood pyelonephritis. 127 65

Known since 1930, C-reactive protein is, as serum amyloid P component its similar, part of acute phase response proteins. Its principals properties are short half-life (6-8 h), great (within 6 hours) and high (X500) rate after injury. It activates the classical complement pathway, leading further to bacterial opsonization. Different biological methods for measurement are described: both nephelometric laser method, most sensible, and agglutination-latex method, most simple and quickest, are chosen. Studies showed us that CRP value is interesting for diagnosis of bacterial infections: among them neonates infections, peri-partum infections, meningitis, pyelonephritis, pancreatitis or peritonitis. CRP value determination seems to be useful also to hold on with patients who keep infectious peril, as in post chirurgical following, neutropenic induced patients. It seemed to be no use for CRP measurement in grafts following. Its rate in inflammatory diseases or myocardial infarcts is just mentioned. The author precognize more determinations of CRP: in emergency laboratories for diagnosis of bacterial infections (agglutination latex method) and in "routine" to follow up the infectious peril.
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PMID:[C-reactive protein: general review and role in the study of infections]. 307 Apr 64

Ceftazidime ( CAZ ), a new injectable cephem antibiotic, was used for treatment of infections in children, and the following results were obtained. After an intravenous injection of CAZ at a dose of 20 mg/kg, the mean blood levels in 2 patients were 41.5 micrograms/ml at 30 minutes, 18.1 micrograms/ml at 2 hours and 2.55 micrograms/ml at 6 hours, with the half-life (T 1/2) of 1.37 hours. In a 22-day-old baby with meningitis given CAZ intravenously at a dose of 43.5 mg/kg, the blood levels were 100 micrograms/ml at 30 minutes, 68 micrograms/ml at 2 hours and 25 micrograms/ml at 6 hours, with the half-life (T 1/2) of 2.96 hours. After intravenous administration of CAZ in doses ranging from 35.7 to 50 mg/kg, CSF concentrations ranged from N.D. to 6.3 micrograms/ml in 3 patients with purulent meningitis, although 19 micrograms/ml at 1 hour and 13 micrograms/ml at 2 hours in 1 patient after intravenous administration of 46.7 mg/kg. In patient with mumps meningitis, CSF concentrations were undetectable after intravenous administration of 35.7 mg/kg. Seventeen patients (each 1 patient with lymphadenitis, tonsillitis and septicemia, each 2 patients with pneumonia, bronchiectatic bronchitis, pyothorax and purulent meningitis, each 3 patients with pyelonephritis and enteritis) were treated with CAZ intravenously, at the daily doses of 178.2 mg/kg and 200 mg/kg in 4 divided doses in patients with meningitis and 44.1 to 103.4 mg/kg in 3 divided doses in patients with other infections (two of them were given by intravenous drip infusion for 30 minutes). The clinical responses were excellent or good in all the patients except for 1 case of Salmonella enteritis (poor) and 1 case of Campylobacter enteritis (poor). The efficacy rate was 88.2%. It was noteworthy that the clinical response was excellent in 1 case of septicemia with P. aeruginosa with leukemic stage of malignant lymphoma and in 2 cases of purulent meningitis. As side effects, fever, eruption, leukocytopenia, elevation in GOT and positive CRP considered to be allergic, were observed on day 16 of administration in 1 case of pyothorax. These symptoms disappeared by discontinuance of administration. In addition, there were elevation in GOT and GPT in 2 cases and elevation in GOT in 2 cases and elevation in GPT in 1 case; they were all mild or transient, and there was nothing to be worried about.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
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PMID:[Clinical evaluation of ceftazidime in paediatrics]. 637 60

Elevated surum levels of C-reactive protein have been found regularly in girls with acute clinical pyelonephritis but only infrequently in those with clinical cystitis. Based on these data, the suggestion has been made that elevated serum CRP concentrations may be useful in identifying patients with upper urinary tract infections. In a study in which the bladder washout test was used to localize the site of urinary tract infections, we identified nine girls with renal bacteriuria who did not have clinical findings suggesting acute pyelonephritis; four of these girls had serum CRP concentrations less than 10 micrograms/ml. Twenty-eight girls had bladder washout-proven lower urinary tract infections; three of these had serum CRP values greater than 30 micrograms/ml. These studies show that an elevated serum CRP concentration is not accurate in localizing the site of a urinary tract infection in girls who do not have clinical signs of acute pyelonephritis.
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PMID:Serum C-reactive protein and the site of urinary tract infections. 705 12

The purpose of the study was to investigate the management of pyelonephritis in a large Italian pediatric population. A total of 1,333 patients (36% male) were considered. Escherichia coli was the most frequently isolated agent (89.9%), followed by Proteus mirabilis (3.6%) and Klebsiella oxytoca (2.1%). 27% of microorganisms were resistant to amoxicillin, 4% to amoxicillin/clavulanic acid, 11% to trimethoprim-sulfamethoxazole, 2.4% to gentamicin and less than 2% to ceftazidime. Despite this resistance pattern showing that oral antibiotics, such as amoxicillin/clavulanic acid, are effective in vitro as well as parenteral antimicrobials, a parenteral antibiotic was given initially to 756 (57.2%) children. A prophylactic regimen was started in 922 patients with a rate of reinfection during prophylaxis of 9.5%; a higher rate of reinfection was observed in patients with reflux (25%) compared to children without reflux (3%) (p < 0.0001). Vesicoureteral reflux was demonstrated in 30% of patients. The number of renal abnormalities detected by DMSA in patients with and without reflux was significantly different (p < 0.001). CRP was higher in patients with scars (p < 0.02). In conclusion, pyelonephritis represents a common disease with about 2,500 days of hospitalization per year in the Veneto Region where there is a pediatric population of about 800,000 under 15 years of age. The results of antimicrobial in vitro tests indicate that amoxillicin/clavulanic acid could represent the antibiotic of choice. The high frequency of malformations, observed even in children between 6 and 12 years of age, may suggest the need of an imaging study including DMSA scan and VCUG in all age groups.
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PMID:Retrospective study of children with acute pyelonephritis. Evaluation of bacterial etiology, antimicrobial susceptibility, drug management and imaging studies. 1174 99

A 28-year-old woman had chief complaints of headache and a 40 degrees C fever. At this time, findings indicative of inflammation including elevated CRP and increased WBC were observed, and E. coli was detected on blood and urine culture. As a result, the patient was diagnosed with pyelonephritis and sepsis. Furthermore, markedly increased hepatobiliary enzymes and elevated anti-mitochondrial antibody were confirmed. The administration of antimicrobial agents resulted in improvement of the pyelonephritis and sepsis and normalization of hepatobiliary enzyme and anti-mitochondrial antibody levels. It has been documented that the incidence of urinary tract infection is high among patients with primary biliary cirrhosis (PBC). The findings obtained from the present patient are of considerable interest in elucidating the mechanism of onset in PBC.
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PMID:A patient with E. coli-induced pyelonephritis and sepsis who transiently exhibited symptoms associated with primary biliary cirrhosis. 1468 42

A 69-year-old woman, who had been diagnosed with interstitial pneumonia at 66 years of age, was admitted to our hospital because of high fever, purpura occurring on her arms and legs, and renal dysfunction. At the time of admission, her renal function had severely deteriorated (sCr 8.2 mg/dl, 24 h Ccr 6 ml/min), she had a severe high fever (BT 39.5 degrees C), back pain, a white blood cell count of 19,540/,microl, and a CRP level of 26.7 mg/dl. Blood and urine cultures yielded identical strains of E. coli. We diagnosed sepsis caused by pyelonephritis, and started intravenous meropenem trihydrate(MEPM) at 0.5 g/day. Her renal dysfunction was severe, so we started hemodialysis therapy. Immunological examination revealed the presence of ANCA-associated glomerulonephritis. Renal biopsy before steroid therapy confirmed the diagnosis of pauci-immune-type crescentic glomerulonephritis. Based on purpura and interstitial pneumonia, along with rapidly MPO-ANCA-positive progressive glomerulonephritis (RPGN) with acute renal failure, we diagnosed microscopic polyangitis (MPA). To treat sepsis and severe pyelonephritis, we started intravenous immunoglobulin 5 g (100 mg/kg)/day for 5 days before starting immunosuppressive steroid therapy (m-PSL 1 g/day, PSL 20 mg/day) for 3 days. These treatments improved her general condition and immediately improved her renal function. It is important to prevent infection during treatment using conventional immunosuppressive therapy. These findings suggest immunoglobulin therapy to be a safe immuno-suppressive treatment that is efficacious against ANCA-associated glomerulonephritis.
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PMID:[A case of microscopic polyangitis with sepsis due to pyelonephritis]. 1640 32

The aim of this study was to assess the impact of vesicoureteral reflux (VUR) on renal scar following acute pyelonephritis by comparing the refluxing renal units with nonrefluxing renal units in children with unilateral primary VUR. Forty-eight children with unilateral primary VUR diagnosed after the first pyelonephritis were enrolled. Mean age of patients was 1.0+/-1.6 years (29 boys and 19 girls). All patients underwent renal ultrasonography and renal 99 m-technetium dimercaptosuccinic acid (DMSA) scan within three days following the diagnosis of pyelonephritis, and voiding cystourethrography (VCU) was performed soon after fever subsided and the infection was controlled. The DMSA scan was rechecked six months after the initial study when the first scan showed a renal defect. The first DMSA showed renal defects in 34 (70.8%) out of 48 of the refluxing renal units and in 13 (27.1%) out of 48 of the nonrefluxing renal units (P<0.01, OR: 6.54). At six months after the infection, 23 (47.9%) out of 48 refluxing renal units and seven (14.6%) out of 48 nonrefluxing renal units had renal scars on DMSA scan (P<0.01, OR: 5.39). The prevalence of renal scars did not vary significantly according to the grade of VUR. The CRP level on admission was significantly higher in patients with acute renal defect and scar. In conclusion, VUR increases the risk of post-pyelonephritic renal scars in children.
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PMID:Vesicoureteral reflux increases the risk of renal scars: a study of unilateral reflux. 1679 9

Acute uncomplicated pyelonephritis (APN) is a complex clinical entity, which is defined differently based on clinical or imaging criteria. The aim of this study was to describe the clinical and radiological presentation of APN-upper urinary tract infection (UTI) cases observed between May 2005 and June 2006 and hospitalised in the Emergency Medicine ward of San Luigi Hospital, Orbassano, Turin, Italy. All patients underwent imaging scans and were differentiated on the basis of parenchymal involvement. Of around 45000 patient visits to the emergency room between May 2005 and June 2006, 23 patients were diagnosed as having uncomplicated upper UTI (all female, age 15-57 years). Renal parenchymal involvement was confirmed by imaging in 16 cases (69.6%). The imaging spectrum ranged from a small single lesion to large multiple defects; on admission, 2 cases had no pain and 2 had no fever; lower urinary tract symptoms were present in only 13 patients (7 with parenchymal involvement). All patients with parenchymal involvement had at least one sign of systemic inflammation-infection. Most patients (15) had taken antibiotics before hospitalisation; consequently, urine cultures were negative in 21 cases (14 cases with positive imaging (87.5%)). The data from patients with and without parenchymal involvement overlapped, the only difference being a higher prevalence of high CRP levels in cases with parenchymal involvement.
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PMID:The clinical spectrum of acute 'uncomplicated' pyelonephritis from an emergency medicine perspective. 1819 85


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