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)

Magnesium ammonium phosphate calculi developed in the urinary bladders and urethras of four of five offspring of Miniature Schnauzer parents with recurrent struvite urolithiasis. Calculi were detected by radiograhy when the dogs were 12 to 15 months old. Males and females were affected. A significant number of urease-producing staphylococci were identified in the urine of three of four dogs before urolith formation, and in one dog after urolith formation. The dogs were evaluated until they were 26 months old. Serum concentrations of calcium, phosphorus, and magnesium were inside usual limits throughout the study. Abnormalities that might predispose to urinary tract infection were not identified by radiography or necropsy studies. In one dog, bladder calculi recurred after surgical removal of multiple cystoliths. In another, urethral obstruction and acute generalized pyelonephritis induced a lethal uremic crisis. Gross and microscopic lesions, detected after necropsy of all dogs with uroliths, were typical of bacterial infection.
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PMID:Struvite urolithiasis in a litter of miniature Schnauzer dogs. 740 90

Infection on foreign body: bacterial colonization of ureteric stents. The most frequent cause of the early removal of ureteric endoprostheses (double J) is generally due to bacterial colonization. In order to prevent or to restrict the prosthesis colonization, it is necessary to understand the major steps and the factors influencing the colonization. This is the reason why we aimed to extract the most relevant parameters influencing the bacterial colonization from the observations made in vivo thanks to in vitro analyses. We have studied in vivo the relationship between the bacterial colonization of the endoprostheses, the urinary infections and the antibiotherapy. In vitro, we have defined the conditions promoting the primary adhesion of the most frequently isolated bacteria on endoprostheses. Surface properties of bacteria and materials have been compared to:--the bacterial count of infected double J samples with respect to bacterial species,--the bacterial count of the infected samples with respect to pH and Ca2+, Mg2+ concentration. The results show a great variability of the biomaterial surface properties which could be optimized, the fact that the urinary medium acidification could lower the bacterial adhesion and the ambiguous role of Ca2+ and Mg2+ ions which is discussed in this paper. In the case of in vivo analyses, the conflicting results between leukocyturia and bacteriuria lead to the detection of the bacterial colonization under antibiotic treatment. The characterized urinary infection must warn the risk of pyelonephritis.
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PMID:[Infection on foreign material: bacterial colonization of ureteral endoprostheses]. 1018 17