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Query: UMLS:C0034186 (pyelonephritis)
6,144 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

One case of xanthogranulomatous pyelonephritis diagnosed following nephrectomy is described, considering its outstanding characteristics such as male adolescent, right kidney, involvement with normal function and without pathological history for which there is no explanation to date. This disease usually occurs in women 60 years or older, suggesting a renal tumor. In 50% of the cases, urine cultures are positive for Escherichia coli or Proteus mirabilis; in accordance with different reports renal tissue cultures are positive in more than 90%. Malnutrition, calcification, urolithiasis and renal failure with hydronephrosis are common findings. The left kidney is more frequently involved. The etiology is unclear: many hypotheses are discussed, with malnutrition and peroxidase deficit as important causes.
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PMID:[Xanthogranulomatous pyelonephritis in an adolescent]. 248 45

In experimental Escherichia coli pyelonephritis, the bacterial multiplication in the kidney parenchyma triggers a burst of neutrophil extravascular migration, as measured by the myeloperoxidase (MPO) activity in the kidney, a marker for tissue neutrophil infiltration. To test the mechanisms of in vivo neutrophil migration, pyelonephritis was surgically induced in rats that were then either complement-depleted with cobra venom factor (CVF), resulting in a profound hypocomplementemia for 72 h after inoculation, or treated with phenylbutazone (PB), a competitive antagonist of bacterial chemotactic formylpeptides. Compared to controls, CVF- and PB-treated animals killed when the neutrophil infiltration started (32 h) had a significantly reduced neutrophil infiltration, as measured by kidney MPO activity. This effect disappeared in animals killed 72 h after surgery, when neutrophil infiltration peaked. These data suggest that redundant chemotactic mechanisms triggered neutrophil migration. Inhibiting one of these mechanisms only transiently delayed neutrophil migration but did not affect the peak infiltration.
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PMID:Role of complement-derived and bacterial formylpeptide chemotactic factors in the in vivo migration of neutrophils in experimental Escherichia coli pyelonephritis in rats. 254 Feb 49

Previous experiments with rats have suggested that pyelonephritic scarring after acute ascending Escherichia coli pyelonephritis partly results from excessive polymorphonuclear leukocyte (PMN) infiltration and activation in the kidney parenchyma. We have studied the role of PMN oxidative metabolism in generating tissue injury during acute pyelonephritis. Rats with acute pyelonephritis were treated with dapsone (25 mg/kg twice daily for 3 days), a compound known to prevent PMN oxidant damage. In vitro, levels of dapsone easily achieved in vivo inhibited myeloperoxidase (MPO)-mediated reactions involving the oxidation of halides to reactive cytotoxic hypohalites (such as MPO-mediated iodination and luminol-enhanced chemiluminescence). In contrast, dapsone had no effect on superoxide production, lysosomal enzyme release, or bacterial killing by activated PMN. In vivo, dapsone treatment had no significant effect on acute pyelonephritis with respect to (i) bacterial counts, (ii) inflammatory swelling, and (iii) PMN infiltration. However, dapsone-treated animals sacrificed 2 months after acute pyelonephritis had a 65% reduction of renal scars when compared with controls. Since dapsone had no antibacterial effect, this protection is compatible with the hypothesis that dapsone prevented oxidant-generated tissue injury due to the extracellular release of the MPO system by activated PMN during acute suppurative pyelonephritis.
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PMID:Relationship between neutrophil-mediated oxidative injury during acute experimental pyelonephritis and chronic renal scarring. 254 35

The enzyme superoxide dismutase affords a protective effect from renal scarring secondary to acute pyelonephritis in primates. To investigate the relationship between renal superoxide dismutase content and age we selected formalin-fixed normal human renal tissue from subjects of varying age, ranging from premature infant to adult, for immunostaining with human anti-superoxide dismutase antibody using the peroxidase-antiperoxidase technique. Sections that demonstrated acute pyelonephritis were immunostained for comparison. Immunostaining for superoxide dismutase was detected consistently in the proximal tubular cell cytoplasm in all specimens regardless of subject age. Superoxide dismutase was not detected in other segments of the nephron. In kidneys that demonstrated acute pyelonephritis we detected enhanced immunostaining in the proximal tubules, as well as increased background staining related to the inflammatory cells present. These results in conjunction with recent demonstrations of proximal tubular cell endocytosis of bacteria suggest that superoxide dismutase has an important role in mediating the initial events of pyelonephritis within the proximal tubular cell.
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PMID:Role of superoxide dismutase in the pathogenesis of pyelonephritis: immunological localization of superoxide dismutase in human renal tissues. 266 28

Authors have studied in apostematous pyelonephritis induced by the ligation of the ureter and the intravenous injection of E coli bacteria the localization and elimination with time of the pathogen. The pathogen was demonstrated by light and electron microscopy, its parietel antigen was localized with the light microscopic peroxidase antiperoxidase and post-embedding electron microscopic immunogold techniques. Two days after inoculation the suppurative inflammation of tubulo-interstitial foci was observed; in the capillaries, interstitium, and tubuli, free and phagocyted bacteria were encountered. In the interstitium, in the proximal tubuli and in the capillary space of some glomeruli bacterial groups were observed. Intracapillary bacteria were attached by their outer wall to the surface of endothelial cells. In the tubuli this adherence occurred with pili or with the outer layer of bacterial wall. From the seventh day after inoculation macrophages containing PAS-positive globuli appeared in the interstitium. Under the electron microscope these globuli proved to be features composed of myelin figures of phagolysosomal origin. Globuli and the myelin figures possessed an E. coli antigenicity. Thirteen weeks after inoculation E. coli antigen positivity was found in the cytoplasm of inflammatory cells in the tubular walls and in the suppurative cylinders, The organism was apparently unable to eliminate the materials derived from the pathogenic microorganisms.
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PMID:[Immunohistochemical, immunocytochemical and electron microscope studies in experimental E. coli pyelonephritis]. 266 79

In experimental acute exudative pyelonephritis (AEP), a role for polymorphonuclear leukocyte (PMNL) infiltration in the pathogenesis of kidney scarring has been suggested indirectly. To directly quantitate PMNL infiltration during AEP, we developed an assay for measuring the content in the kidney of myeloperoxidase (MPO), an enzyme present in PMNLs and absent in kidney tissue. This assay was a specific and sensitive marker of the kidney PMNL content. We used this assay to measure in rats with AEP the effect of dexamethasone, administered in an attempt to mitigate the acute inflammatory response. Compared with saline, dexamethasone given during AEP strikingly reduced kidney swelling, measured by the kidney-weight increase, but failed to reduce PMNL infiltration, measured by the kidney MPO content. Despite reduced kidney swelling during AEP, dexamethasone treatment failed to prevent subsequent kidney scarring, an observation indicating that PMNLs play a role in the development of permanent kidney damage during AEP.
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PMID:Failure of dexamethasone to prevent polymorphonuclear leukocyte infiltration during experimental acute exudative pyelonephritis and to reduce subsequent chronic scarring. 283 Mar 42

The distribution of renin in two cases of segmental renal hypoplasia was investigated by immunofluorescence and the peroxidase anti-peroxidase (PAP) method using an anti-human renin antiserum. Renin-containing cells were found only in hypoplasic segments in the vicinity of altered glomeruli and small arteries. Well-preserved renal cortex and areas of chronic atrophic pyelonephritis failed to show any demonstrable site of renin production. Whatever is the mechanism of the disease, the characterization of large numbers of renin-containing cells in the affected kidney support a role for the renin-angiotensin system stimulation in this form of hypertension.
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PMID:Renin localization in segmental renal hypoplasia. Immunohistochemical demonstration in two cases. 701 53

Injection of heat killed bacteria into kidney parenchyma results in pathologic lesions similar to chronic pyelonephritis while immunosuppression reverses this phenomenon. These observations and the propensity of lipid A to bind to cell membranes suggest that the lipid component of bacterial lipopolysaccharide antigens may be important in the pathogenesis of kidney tubule cell death. The right kidneys of syngeneic Fischer 344 rats were repeatedly injected with glycolipid prepared from Salmonella minnesota Re 595 cell walls. As a control, the contralateral kidney was injected with normal saline. The inflammatory response observed in the glycolipid injected kidney was significantly greater (p less than 0.005) than the response detected in the contralateral saline injected control kidney. Electron microscopy of kidney tubule cells incubated with peroxidase conjugated glycolipid demonstrated glycolipid bound to the kidney tubule cell plasma membranes. These studies suggest that individual antigenic components can induce kidney lesions and tubule cell death similar to that seen in chronic pyelonephritis.
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PMID:Salmonella Minnesota Re 595 lipid A induced nephritis. 706 6

A case of hydronephrosis caused by renal stones with elevated serum levels of carbohydrate antigens 19-9 (CA-19-9) and 125 (CA-125) is reported. A 74-year-old woman was hospitalized with pyelonephritis. The results of computerized tomography and endoscopy suggested that the patient did not have pancreatic or ovarian cancer, but laboratory tests were significant for serum CA-19-9 greater than 1,000 U/ml (normal less than 37) and serum CA-125 78 U/ml (normal less than 35), which are markers for such tumors. Abdominal X-ray films showed stones in the pelvis of the right kidney. Excretory urography showed that the right kidney was not functioning. Computerized tomography showed severe right hydronephrosis with a thin renal cortex. Complete obstruction of the ureteropelvic junction of the kidney was seen by retrograde pyelography. During percutaneous pyelography, aspiration of the pelvic urine was done, and the sample had a high concentration of CA-19-9 (250,000 U/ml), but no cancer cells. The patients underwent right nephrectomy. The pelvic urine was tested for both CA-19-9 and CA-125 this time, and both were high (190,000 U/ml and 5,100 U/ml, respectively). Pathological evaluation showed no evidence of a malignant tumor. The epithelium lining the renal pelvis was stained for both CA-19-9 and CA-125 using the avidin-biotin-peroxidase complex method. Serum levels of the markers returned to normal after nephrectomy.
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PMID:[A case of hydronephrosis caused by renal stones with elevated serum levels of CA-19-9 and CA-125]. 799 2

In the pathogenesis of glomerulonephritis, acute renal failure, pyelonephritis and other diseases of the kidneys oxygen radicals are involved. Some types of glomerulonephritis are characterized by infiltration of the glomeruli by neutrophils and monocytes which can form oxygen radicals (superoxide, hydrogen peroxide). The increased amount of cAMP in glomeruli can be due to oxygen radicals. Cyclic nucleotides modulate the inflammatory or immune response in glomerular disease and play a part in the action of local mediators of the inflammation. Oxygen radicals act as second messenger for the activation of cytokines via NF-kappaB transcription factor, they stimulate the formation of TNF-alpha, IL-1, IL-6 and influence the expression of monocyte-specific cytokines (CSF-1 and MCP-1). Radicals formed by the system myeloperoxidase--hydrogen peroxide--halogen derivatives activate proteolytic enzymes (proteinases) which break down collagen and other components of the extracellular matrix present in the basal membrane of glomeruli and in the mesangium. Oxygen radicals and proteinases can cause and amplify glomerular damage. Glucocorticoid administration leads to an increased activity of endogenous antioxidant enzymes in the glomerulus and reduced the of lipid peroxidation.
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PMID:[The role of oxygen radicals in the pathogenesis of glomerulonephritis]. 859 8


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