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)

Malacoplakia of the kidney is a rare histopathologic entity of unknown etiology. Patients may present with a renal mass or with urinary tract infection. The prognosis has been uniformly poor excepting in those patients with unilateral involvement treated by nephrectomy. A 31 year old woman presented with acute renal failure and pyelonephritis. Renal biopsy revealed an interstitial infiltrate of large histiocytic cells with intracytoplasmic PAS-positive granules and calcospherules, findings consistent with malacoplakia. Following antibiotic treatment and dialysis, the patient has had a gradual improvement in renal function.
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PMID:Malacoplakia of the kidney: apparent improvement following medical management. 63 Jul 42

In order to identify prolactin-producing tumours in human pituitary glands, 45 chromophobe adenomas, obtained from unselected necropsies, have been studied by various staining procedures including the immunoperoxidase technique for the demonstration of prolactin. The presence of immunoreactive prolactin was revealed in the cytoplasm of the tumour cells in six cases (13%), indicating that the occurrence of prolactin-producing adenomas is not rare. No correlations were established between tumours and clinical history. Two adenomas were detected in female and four in male patients. The age of the patients at necropsy ranged from 28 to 75 years. Three adenomas were associated with disseminated carcinoma, two with fatal liver disease, and one with diabetes mellitus, atherosclerosis, and pyelonephritis. Manifest endocrine symptoms were not disclosed, and endocrine investigations, including measurements of blood prolactin levels, were not undertaken. Thus, direct evidence is lacking as to whether or not these tumours were actively secreting prolactin. In the non-tumorous parts of the anterior lobes the number of prolactin cells was decreased in two cases, suggesting that prolactin released from the adenoma cells suppressed prolactin production in the non-tumorous pituitary. However, the number of prolactin cells of the non-tumorous adenohypophysis seemed to be unchanged in two and increased in another two cases. The present findings conclusively proved the existence of the prolactin-producing adenomas as a distinct entity. These tumours do not stain with acid or basic dyes, they are PAS or thionin negative, and do not contain immunoreactive growth hormone. Thus, by conventional staining procedures they are indistinguishable from other chromophobe adenoma types. Herlant's erythrosin and Brookes' carmoisine methods, claimed spedifically to stain prolactin cells, failed to provide reliable results, hence their use cannot be recommended in tumour identification. Immunoperoxidase staining of prolactin is the only technique which conclusively reveals the presence of immunoreactive prolactin in the cytoplasm of the tumour cells and permits diagnosis. It is proposed that this technique be introduced in pituitary morphological studies. Its application may lead to a better understanding of problems related to prolactin-producing tumours and their secretory activity.
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PMID:Localization of prolactin in chromophobe pituitary adenomas: study of human necropsy material by immunoperoxidase technique. 77 66

The ultrastructure of xanthogranulomas developing during obstructive suppurative pyelonephritis was studied in rats with a permanent ligature of one ureter and an intravenous injection of E. coli suspension. The xanthogranulomas consisted of macrophages with numberous phagolysosomes containing rests of phagocytosed polymorphonuclear leucocytes and bacteria. Lipids identifiable as triglycerides were found in such cells particularly as isolated intracytoplasmic droplets and, less frequently, within the phagolysosomes. The source of isolated intracytoplasmic lipid droplets within the macrophages has remained obscure. Their origin in the macrophages by synthesis could not be excluded, similarly as in the polymorphonuclear leucocytes. PAS positive cells occurring as late as 2 months after the beginning of the experiment at the periphery of xanthogranulomas contained multiple intracytoplasmic vacuoles, most probably phagolysosomes. These cells, with high probability the oldes ones of the macrophagic population in the xanthogranulomas were virtually devoid of lipid droplets.
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PMID:Ultrastructure of experimental xanthogranulomatous pyelonephritis. 81 76

The immunomorphological characteristics of interstitial macrophages with PAS-positive granules were studied in experimental Escherichia coli pyelonephritis in rats, using an anti-E. coli antibody. Immunohistochemical, immunoelectron microscopical, as well as light- and electron microscopical findings were compared at twelve time points between 2 days and 13 weeks after infection. Macrophages with PAS-positive granules were present in the inflammatory infiltrates from the 7th day. The granules were phagolysosomes, filled predominantly with myelin figures. The myelin figures originated mainly from the constituents of the bacterial wall and reacted with the anti-E. coli antibody even 13 weeks after infection. The storage of bacterial residues with preserved antigenic structures for several weeks after infection indicates disturbed phagolysosomal elimination of the bacterial substances in the PAS-positive macrophages. In the formation of macrophages with PAS-positive granules, lysosomal overloading with large amounts of bacteria and cell debris is assumed, leading to consumption of the lysosomal enzymes, consequent incomplete breakdown and retention of the bacterial residues.
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PMID:Demonstration of bacterial antigen in macrophages in experimental pyelonephritis. 197 36

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