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Query: UMLS:C0034186 (
pyelonephritis
)
6,144
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Thirty-three patients with acute
pyelonephritis
were studied with regard to the changes in plasma renin activity (PRA) along the clinical course of the disease. 1) Abnormally high PRA was found in 64% of patients in the active stage of acute
pyelonephritis
; they showed a decrease in urinary output of sodium, a reduction in creatinine clearance, and high indices of inflammatory activity. 2) The changes of PRA in the course of acute
pyelonephritis
were negatively correlated to the urinary sodium excretion and creatinine clearance, but positively to the activity of inflammation, serum sodium concentration and the number of E. coli in the urine. PRA returned to normal with the improvement of
pyelonephritis
. 3) Concerning the mechanism of hyperreninemia in the active stage of the disease, the following three factors may be considered;
renal ischemia
, negative sodium balance in the body, and inflammation. Of these, the negative sodium balance seems to be the most important. The patients could not take enough foods to maintain their energy and sodium balance because of fever and pain. 4) The significance of resting PRA in acute
pyelonephritis
might be to reflect the sodium status in the body, but not to be related to hypertension.
...
PMID:Elevated plasma renin activity in patients with acute pyelonephritis. 69 21
It is apparent that the split function study and renal vein renin determination are complementary and afford valuable information for selecting patients with potentially curable renovascular hypertension. The split function study, when interpreted with the recently defined split function ratio, offers the clinician a highly accurate means of diagnosing significant
renal ischemia
. Because the split function ratio shows the disparity between the ischemic and contralateral kidney to a greater degree, the chance of misdiagnosis due to laboratory or physician error is minimized. The split function study, however, is of limited value in patients with
pyelonephritis
since the water- and salt-losing characteristics of the pyelonephritic kidney may mask significant
renal ischemia
. In these patients, as well as those with a nonfunctioning kidney or hydronephrosis, the renal vein renin determination is the test of choice. In addition, the added morbidity of the split function study is not warranted in a patient with an elevated peripheral renin which, for interpretation, requires an accurate 24 hour urine for sodium, a renal vein renin ratio outside the range of patients with essential hypertension (renal vein renin ratio greater than 1.7) and evidence of suppression of renin secretion from the contralateral kidney. If, however, the renin determination does not afford convincing evidence of significant
renal ischemia
in a patient with radiographic evidence of renal arterial stenosis, a split function ratio definitely should be determined to more completely define the pathology. The attendant morbidity of a carefully performed split renal function study does not approach the morbidity and mortality associated with unnecessary surgery or inadequately treated hypertension.
...
PMID:Ureteral catheterization studies. 115 55
P-fimbriated Escherichia coli, which cause nonobstructive
pyelonephritis
, adhere to a specific urothelial glycolipid receptor. In either the presence or absence of reflux (in the area of turbulent urine flow) these bacteria ascend the ureter and cause a decrease in ureteral motility. Endotoxin causes peristalsis to cease, leading to ureteral dilatation and change in papillary shape, thus allowing intrarenal reflux and adherence of the bacteria to renal tubules. Bacterial infection of a refluxing ureter may cause reflux to persist. Once the bacteria reach the kidney rapid effects occur at the cellular level with activation of complement followed by granulocytic aggregation and capillary obstruction, causing
renal ischemia
and damage during reperfusion. In addition, during phagocytosis the respiratory burst occurs, releasing toxic oxygen molecules, which leads to renal tubular death, invasion of the interstitium, microabscess and renal scar formation, that is chronic
pyelonephritis
, which equates with reflux nephropathy.
...
PMID:Vesicoureteral reflux and pyelonephritis in the monkey: a review. 143 97
Escherichia coli is the most frequent cause of
pyelonephritis
. Its possible virulence factors include the ability to adhere and colonize the urinary tract, an important initiating factor in all urinary tract infections (UTIs). The importance of P fimbriae in this adhesion is stressed and the evidence for its importance in
pyelonephritis
is presented in epidemiologic studies of patients, as well as in animal studies. It appears that both host receptor density and the nonsecretor state is responsible for susceptibility to urinary tract infection. Vesicoureteral reflux can be responsible for ascending upper tract infection, but infection with P-fimbriated E coli may lead to ascending
pyelonephritis
without reflux because of the paralytic effect of lipid A on ureteral peristaltic activity.
Renal ischemia
leads to renal damage following infection by reperfusion damage due to the release of superoxide. Experimentally, this ischemic damage can be prevented by allopurinol, a xanthine oxidase inhibitor. The acute inflammatory response can produce renal damage because of the respiratory burst of phagocytosis, which while killing phagocytosed bacteria also damages renal tubules. An amelioration of the inflammatory response by treatment with superoxide dismutase or corticosteroids has been shown to modulate renal damage. Vaccination with P fimbriae has been shown experimentally to prevent the initiation of the disease. However, since vaccines are not clinically available, the clinical and animal studies on therapy of acute disease are stressed. Acute pyelonephritis during the first 3 years of life more often produced the renal damage that could lead to end-stage renal disease.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Etiology and pathophysiology of pyelonephritis. 167 Sep 5
Most urinary tract infections occur without either obstruction or vesicoureteral reflux. Children become colonized by their mother's bacterial flora, that within the nursery or by siblings. Bacterial adherence may lead to colonization of the perineum in girls and of the prepuce in boys (if uncircumcised). Nephropathogenic bacteria ascend the urinary tract because of the P-fimbriae of Escherichia coli which adhere to a specific urothelial cell glycolipid. The endotoxin effect on ureteral peristalsis leads to intrarenal reflux, adherence in the kidney and acute
pyelonephritis
. Complement activation then causes granulocytic aggregation in capillaries with
renal ischemia
and activates granulocytes to produce the respiratory burst of phagocytosis, which releases superoxide into both phagosomes and the tubular lumen. Bacteria are thus killed as are renal tubules, leading to nephron loss. Untreated, the ischemia and respiratory burst lead to a loss of renal function and scar formation ending as chronic
pyelonephritis
(or reflux nephropathy).
...
PMID:Norwich-Eaton lectureship. Pathogenesis of nonobstructive urinary tract infections in children. 237 23
Previous studies show that chronic
pyelonephritis
and end stage renal disease may follow acute
pyelonephritis
in children and adolescents when improperly or inadequately treated. Our study shows that there is a significant decrease in renal function following untreated acute bacterial
pyelonephritis
due to nephron loss. The acute inflammatory response is responsible for much of the renal damage, although damage from
renal ischemia
is an additional significant factor. The present study used a combination of an antibiotic and a xanthine oxidase inhibitor (allopurinol) as compared to antibiotic therapy alone begun 72 hours after infection. Both were successful in eradicating the infection rapidly, but did not entirely prevent renal damage. Treatment prior to 72 hours thus is important. It appears that the combined treatment, designed to eradicate the bacteria as well as reduce the post-ischemic reperfusion damage and the phagocytic burst of phagocytosis is ideal, as this combined treatment was effective in preventing almost all renal damage and loss of renal function.
...
PMID:Treatment of experimental pyelonephritis in the monkey. 240 97
Unilateral parenchymatous kidney disease associated with high blood pressure represents a potentially curable form of hypertension. Surgery may normalize blood pressure in a substantial number of these patients. Curable renal parenchymatous hypertension includes unilateral tubulointerstitial kidney diseases such as chronic
pyelonephritis
, reflux nephropathy, segmental hypoplasia and radiation nephritis, hydronephrosis, simple renal cysts, traumatic kidney lesions and renal tumors associated with high blood pressure.
Renal ischemia
and in turn activation of the renin angiotensin system is involved in the pathogenesis of hypertension in most of these patients. In patients with unilateral kidney disease and hypertension, both an operative and a medical therapeutic approach have a high success rate. Good candidates for nephrectomy are young patients with severe hypertension, strict unilateral disease, normal plasma creatinine levels and minimal function of the involved kidney. In unilateral hydronephrosis reconstructive surgery or nephrectomy may cure or improve hypertension in the vast majority of the patients. Surgically correctable hypertension has also been reported in some patients with large renal cysts and renal tumors (hemangiopericytoma, Wilm's tumor, hypernephroma, renal pelvic tumor).
...
PMID:Curable renal parenchymatous hypertension: current diagnosis and management. 390 29
Renal tubular dysgenesis (RTD), with hypoplasia especially of renal proximal convoluted tubules and clinical neonatal anuria or oliguria, has been reported as a congenital familial (autosomal recessive) disease, variably with features of oligohydramnios, Potter syndrome, or pulmonary hypoplasia. A similar tubular lesion due to antenatal tubular atrophy has been reported for conjoined twins with twin-twin transfusion syndrome or acardia and in infants of mothers given antihypertensive agents, including angiotensin-converting enzyme (ACE) inhibitors, during pregnancy, and it has been seen as a unilateral lesion in young infants with renal artery stenosis due to arteritis or medial arterial calcinosis. The renal tubular changes in RTD are very like those of the "endocrine kidney" in experimental animals and resemble those of the renal tubular atrophy of end-stage kidney diseases such as glomerulonephritis, tubulointerstitial kidney disease, obstructive uropathy/
pyelonephritis
, graft rejection of transplanted kidneys, or the renal parenchymal changes seen with protracted dialysis therapy. Labeled lectins that differentially mark proximal convoluted, distal convoluted and connecting, and collecting tubules showed no distinctive differences in staining patterns of the hypoplastic renal tubules of infants and children with RTD, postnatal renal artery obstruction, or the various types of end-stage renal disease with the lectins used (PNA, GSLI, UEA, and LTA). The findings suggest that the renal tubular changes in some if not all the conditions studied are the result of
renal ischemia
. The reported familial RTD with hypernephronic nephromegaly may be a specific disorder, but other forms could reflect
renal ischemia
acquired in utero or in early or later postnatal life.
...
PMID:Labeled lectin studies of renal tubular dysgenesis and renal tubular atrophy of postnatal renal ischemia and end-stage kidney disease. 815 24
The activity of lactate dehydrogenase (LDG), malate dehydrogenase (MDG), concentrations of lactic acid and lipid peroxidation (LPO) products in the blood serum and urine were estimated in 119 patients with acute
pyelonephritis
(70 cases of serous and 49 cases of purulent). The results of the study showed that acute
pyelonephritis
patients have activated anaerobic glycolysis. Ischemia leads to accumulation of lactic acid, activation of LPO. Significant differences between the groups of patients reflect strong influence of renaltissue ischemia on activity of systemic metabolic processes and metabolism in renal parenchyma. Standard infusion therapy was given to 30 patients with acute purulent
pyelonephritis
. 19 patients received solution of succinic acid reamberin. On day 4 of reamberin therapy plasma and urine activity of LDG and MDG attenuated, lactic acid concentration decreased, content of dienic conjugates was close to normal. Patients on reamberin treatment exhibited earlier relief of endogenic intoxication and improvement of blood count. Thus, succinic acid drugs reduce
renal ischemia
, improve a course of postoperative period in patients with acute purulent
pyelonephritis
.
...
PMID:[Succinic acid infusions for correction of renal ischemia in patients with acute purulent pyelonephritis]. 1864 57
A mitochondria-targeted chimeric compound consisting of a rhodamine derivative linked to a plastoquinone molecule (10-(6'-plastoquinonyl)decylrhodamine, SkQR1) was studied under conditions of acute brain or kidney damage. A protective effect of this compound was demonstrated in a model of focal brain ischemia, rat
kidney ischemia
/reperfusion, myoglobinuria (rhabdomyolysis, or crush syndrome), and
pyelonephritis
. We found that a single intraperitoneal injection of SkQR1 diminishes the size of the ischemic zone in the brain and improves performance of a test characterizing neurological deficit in ischemic animals. Control substance not containing plastoquinone appeared to be not neuroprotective. The data show that SkQR1 is a nephroprotectant and neuroprotectant, which can be due to the antioxidative action of this Skulachev cation.
...
PMID:New-generation Skulachev ions exhibiting nephroprotective and neuroprotective properties. 2036 1
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