Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
Pivot Concepts:   Target Concepts:
Query: UMLS:C0034186 (pyelonephritis)
6,144 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Fifty indoor patients of chronic pulmonary tuberculosis were studied for renal involvement. There were 36 (72%) males and 14 (28%) females. Age of the patients was ranging from 16 to 70 years. Most of the patients were receiving treatment for tuberculosis for more than 1 year. Frequency of micturition and dysuria were the commonest symptoms observed. Urine smear for mycobacteria was negative in all patients however culture was positive in 6% patients. Renal biopsy was attempted in all patients but was successful in 35 patients. It revealed interstitial nephritis in 28.5%; amyloidosis in 17.1%, glomerulonephritis in 17.1%, tubercular pyelonephritis in 5.6%; pyelonephritis combined with amyloidosis in 8.5% patients. Non-specific changes were observed in 14.3% patients and in 8.5% patients tissue was inadequate for biopsy study.
...
PMID:Renal involvement in chronic pulmonary tuberculosis. 276 53

Twelve of the 25 patients with chronic granulomatous disease treated at our institution between 1957 and 1987 were found to have urinary tract disorders. All 12 patients were male and 22 years of age or younger when chronic granulomatous disease was diagnosed. Six patients had hydroureteronephrosis in association with recurrent episodes of pyelonephritis, retroperitoneal lymphadenitis, and granuloma formation. The other six patients had genital lesions or dysuria. Among the six patients with hydroureteronephrosis, a nephrectomy was performed in two, ureterolysis was used to relieve obstruction in one, and hydroureteronephrosis resolved after antibiotic therapy alone in three. We conclude that complications involving the genitourinary system occur frequently in patients with chronic granulomatous disease. Periodic imaging of the urinary tract may detect asymptomatic hydroureteronephrosis or other treatable genitourinary abnormalities in these patients.
...
PMID:Urinary tract disorders in patients with chronic granulomatous disease. 277 Aug 1

The traditional criterion of 10(5) colony-forming units (CFU) per milliliter of urine to diagnose urinary tract infection was based on studies of pregnant and nonpregnant women with asymptomatic bacteriuria or acute pyelonephritis. Recent studies of symptomatic women revealed that urine cultures in approximately one third of those with confirmed urinary tract infections grew only 10(2) to 10(4) CFU/mL. The major causes of acute dysuria among such women are urinary tract infection, sexually transmitted disease, and vaginitis. In most instances, it is possible to make the diagnosis based on clinical features. The major features of urinary tract infection are internal dysuria; frequency, urgency, and voiding of small volumes; abrupt onset; suprapubic pain; presence of pyuria. Presence of hematuria which occurs in about 50 percent of patients strongly suggests bacterial cystitis. Three to seven days of empiric antimicrobial therapy is indicated for these patients, with selection of a first-line antimicrobial agent that offers efficacy against Escherichia coli or Staphylococcus saprophyticus; reasonable cost; few side effects. Ampicillin is not recommended. Indications for culture include uncertain clinical features; history of previous infection within the past three weeks; duration of symptoms of more than seven days; recent hospitalization or catheterization; pregnancy; diabetes. To maximize the sensitivity and specificity of the urine culture in acutely symptomatic women, it is necessary to request the laboratory to report 10(2) to 10(4) CFU/mL.
...
PMID:Protocol for diagnosis of urinary tract infection: reconsidering the criterion for significant bacteriuria. 304 81

In caring for women with acute dysuria, clinicians traditionally have relied on clinical findings to distinguish between acute pyelonephritis and "cystitis"; they have ordered urinalysis and urine culture regularly for patients with suspected acute pyelonephritis and ordered these tests inconsistently for patients with suspected "cystitis." Recent evidence indicates that "cystitis" may actually be any of six different clinical conditions, each of which is managed differently; subclinical pyelonephritis, lower urinary tract bacterial infection, chlamydial urethritis, other forms of urethritis, vaginitis, or dysuria without any urinary tract or vaginal infection. The distinction between these entities is made primarily from clinical findings. Urinalysis is also of great value in symptomatic patients; the presence of pyuria (and possibly indirect quantitation of pyuria by the leukocyte esterase test) is a reliable indicator of treatable infection, and its absence indicates infection is not present. In contrast, urine culture is of clear value only in patients with acute pyelonephritis or subclinical pyelonephritis.
...
PMID:Urinalysis and urine culture in women with dysuria. 351 13

Quantitative criteria distinguish bacterial infection (or colonization) of the urine from contamination. These criteria depend on the fact that the density of bacteria in infected urine is usually several orders of magnitude higher than the density of bacteria in contaminated urine. Most research on quantitative definitions of infection has concerned Gram-negative rod infections in women. For asymptomatic bacteriuria, the most prevalent urinary tract infection, and for pyelonephritis, a criterion of 1 X 10(5) cfu/ml provides optimal separation of infection from contamination of voided urine. For acute dysuria and frequency, recent evidence supports the use of a colony count of 1 X 10(2) cfu/ml bacteria as the most useful criterion. For the diagnosis of catheter-associated urinary tract infection, the criterion of 1 X 10(5) cfu/ml has been used most commonly, although a lower threshold may be appropriate. Additional investigation is required to determine the most appropriate quantitative definition of infection in this and several other circumstances.
...
PMID:Quantitative definition of bacteriuria. 634 44

A clinical-radiologic-pathologic correlation study was performed in 18 (17 female) patients with xanthogranulomatous pyelonephritis (XGP) with CT scans available for analysis. Presenting signs and symptoms included pain (66%), urinary frequency (66%), dysuria (66%), nocturia (66%), palpable mass (56%), leukocytosis (50%), and fever (50%). The duration of symptoms was usually relatively short (less than 6 months), considering the extent of the pathologic process. In 14 patients, the disease was diffuse; the kidney was enlarged with preservation of the reniform outline in 13. The renal pelvis, lined with sheets of lipid-laden macrophages and surrounded by a marked fibrotic reaction, was contracted in 11 and contained pelvic calculi in 12. The parenchyma was replaced by multiple, rounded, low-density areas on CT that corresponded to dilated calices and/or inflammatory tissue. These areas had enhancing rims (10 cases) that corresponded to preserved, compressed normal parenchyma and/or inflammatory tissue. There was CT identification of unsuspected extension through the renal capsule with involvement of the perirenal space in 11 patients, the pararenal spaces in 13, and the psoas muscle in six. The pararenal space and the psoas muscle were often extensively involved with minimal perirenal disease in six patients, a reflection of chronic indolent infection. There were four cases of focal XGP that appeared on CT as low-density mass lesions with wall enhancement surrounding dilated, stone-filled calices or as focal masses occupying one pole of a duplication. Extensive pararenal disease was present in two of the four cases of focal XGP. The preoperative diagnosis of XGP was suspected in only 44% of cases. It is concluded that CT should play a role in diagnosis and preoperative planning to demonstrate the extent of extrarenal disease that is poorly depicted by other means.
...
PMID:CT of xanthogranulomatous pyelonephritis: radiologic-pathologic correlation. 660 82

Examinations of the urine in 216 kidney allograft recipients resulted in significant bacteriuria in 274 samples of 1,802 urines tested. Bacteruria was found in 30 patients with recurrent or chronic persistent infections of the urinary tract; this patient group was studied by examination of 399 urine samples (mean 13.3 samples per patient). Four patients suffered from urologic complications after kidney grafting and were excluded from the study; 15 patients were diagnosed clinically and/or histologically with transplant pyelonephritis, 11 patients with cystitis. Of main importance for the diagnosis of transplant pyelonephritis were findings of persistent leucocyturia and the presence of antibody-coated bacteria. Both of these findings were repeatedly seen in all patients with transplant pyelonephritis. Clinical symptoms included fever and dysuria. In contrast to patients suffering from cystitis, transplant function detoriated in 13 of 15 patients with transplant pyelonephritis; two patients had to be treated by hemodialysis. Septicemia occurred in eight of the 15 patients studied. The data illustrate the frequency of transplant pyelonephritis as observed in 15 of 26 patients accompaining chronic urinary tract infection after kidney allograft transplantation. As a predisposing factor, obstruction of the urinary tract was diagnosed in eight of the 15 transplant recipients with pyelonephritis. The prednisone dose was higher than 10 mg in eight of 15 patients at the time transplant infection was diagnosed. Successful antibiotic treatment resulted in stable transplant function in three patients; four patients exhibited even lower serum creatinine levels after therapy.
...
PMID:[Transplant pyelonephritis (author's transl)]. 698 35

The case histories of 175 dogs with ureteral ectopia were reviewed; there were 156 females and 19 males. Golden retrievers, labrador retrievers and Skye terriers appeared to be over-represented. Their median age when examined was 10 months, and the males were significantly older than the females. Fifty-six animals were affected bilaterally, 50 were affected on the left side alone and 69 on the right side alone. One hundred and twenty-two cases had other abnormalities and 67 had more than one; they included hydro-ureter, hydronephrosis, pyelonephritis, bladder hypoplasia and congenital incompetence of the urethral sphincter mechanism. Forty-one cases were not treated, and the other 134 were treated by ureteronephrectomy, extravesicular ureteric transplantation or intravesicular ureteric transplantation. One hundred and twelve cases were available for follow-up for a median period of over two years (range one month to 15 years). The response to surgery and the incidence of complications was similar after each method of treatment. Sixty-five of the 112 cases were cured of incontinence and 26 were improved. The complication rate (14 per cent overall) was similar for each procedure although different types of complications occurred. Hydronephrosis occurred most commonly after extravesicular transplantation and dysuria occurred most commonly after intravesicular transplantation.
...
PMID:Canine ureteral ectopia: an analysis of 175 cases and comparison of surgical treatments. 761 May 37

We evaluated 120 patients with neurogenic bladder treated by clean intermittent self catheterization (CIC) in our department. These cases were divided into 2 groups: early treatment cases in which CIC started within 1 year after onset of dysuria, and late treatment cases in which CIC started after more than 1 year. Urinary tract infections (UTI) were recognized in 35% of the early treatment cases and 80% of the late treatment cases in the subsequent period. Pyelonephritis was experienced in 4% of the early treatment cases and 12% of the late treatment cases. Antibiotics therapy was considered unnecessary for asymptomatic UTIs. After CIC treatment, hydronephrosis detected by intravenous pyelography (IVP) and ultrasonography was improved in 18 of the 20 cases, and no cases showed deteriorated renal function. In the cases with neurogenic bladder after radical operations of the uterus or rectum, 45% of the early treatment cases have become free from CIC within 3 months postoperatively, and 84% eventually became free. Most of the late treatment cases have been continuing CIC. We considered that CIC was unnecessary when the residual urine was less than 100ml based on the periodical urinalysis and observation of renal function.
...
PMID:[Clinical investigation of clean intermittent catheterization]. 819 69

Urinary tract infections (UTIs) are still one of the most common bacterial infections in pregnant and non-pregnant women. It is estimated that about 10-20% of all women suffer from a UTI at some point in life. The presence of UTI is defined as the existence of urinary symptoms such as frequency of urination and dysuria with or without bacteriuria or pyuria. The prevalence of bacteriuria in females varies from less than 1% in infants to 10% and more in older women. There are major differences in the clinical features between young and elderly women depending on the different pathogenesis, microbiology and general condition. Especially for elderly women, symptomatic and asymptomatic bacteriuria presents a risk factor for bacteraemia, sepsis and also increased mortality. During pregnancy, the prevalence of bacteriuria does not change but there are some changes in the pathogenesis that increase the rate of pyelonephritis. Asymptomatic bacteriuria rarely resolves spontaneously during this time. For non-pregnant women, short therapy strategies are recommended, preferably 3 days of trimethoprim-sulphamethoxazole (TMP/SMX) or quinolones. In pregnant women, therapy with amoxycillin or an oral cephalosporin is considered optimal.
...
PMID:Uncomplicated urinary tract infections in pregnant and non-pregnant women. 840 50


<< Previous 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 Next >>