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)

Incidence of chronic renal failure in children is not yet clearly known. In recent years it has been evaluated on the basis of the number of patients accepted into dialysis-transplantation programs and is thus underestimated, as registries do not list children who are not treated for technical reasons, lack of facilities or health policy. The number of new patients per year per million child population varies widely. Differences among countries are mainly related to economic development. In developed countries the incidence of CRF remains stable or decreases slowly owing to early diagnosis, improved conservative treatment, prevention of genetically-transmitted diseases, whereas the prevalence increases steadily as a consequence of improved replacement therapy. Causes of primary renal diseases have been analyzed in several series totaling over 9400 children. The most frequent cause is chronic primary glomerulonephritis followed by pyelonephritis, including obstructive uropathies and vesico-ureteral reflux. Differences in geographical distribution of etiologies are also analyzed. The relative contribution of chronic peritoneal dialysis and hemodialysis in the treatment of children with ESRF varies from country to country. Several problems regarding CRF in children are briefly discussed: prevention of renal failure, extension of treatment opportunities to more children, quality of replacement therapy, and clinical rehabilitation of children.
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PMID:Worldwide demographic aspects of chronic renal failure in children. 832 Sep 42

France occupies second position among industrial countries for the number of patients with chronic renal failure. The incidence of chronic renal failure is 61 per million of inhabitants, and increases by 10 to 20% each year. One third of patients with CRF are renal transplant recipients, while 6% of the remaining patients are treated by chronic ambulatory peritoneal dialysis, 6% by domiciliary haemodialysis and 57% by haemodialysis in a dialysis centre or autodialysis. The mean age of management of patients with end-stage chronic renal failure is 59 years. The role of glomerulonephritis and chronic pyelonephritis appears to be decreasing, but the incidence of diabetic nephropathy has doubled over the last decade. The mean age of transplant recipients is 45 years. The number of transplantations has regularly decreased over several years due to the lack of organs. Chronic renal failure patients essentially die from cardiovascular causes, and the frequency of malignant disease responsible for death is estimated to be 10%.
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PMID:[Epidemiologic aspects of terminal chronic kidney failure and its therapeutic modalities]. 910 13

From November 1998 to March 2000, two hundred patients over the age of 60 years (Elderly) with clinical renal disease were studied. 144 patients were between ages of 60-69 years, 46 between 70-79 years and 10 were above 80 years. The elderly patients (Male 165; Female 35) with renal disease constituted 11% (200/1816) of the total nephrology consultation during the study period. The clinical presentation included chronic renal failure (42.5%); acute renal failure (28%); nephrotic syndrome (14.5%); acute glomerulonephritis (7.5%); renal vascular disease (5%) and renal cystic disease (2.5%). Diabetic nephropathy, obstructive uropathy and hypertensive nephrosclerosis were the major causes of CRF, accounting for 80% of total CRF in the elderly. Chronic glomerulonephritis and chronic pyelonephritis (CPN) were less common and etiology of CRF was uncertain in 5.9% of cases. However, diabetic nephropathy was the commonest (49.4%) cause of chronic renal failure. We did not see a single case of ischemic nephropathy causing CRF in the present study. Prerenal ARF, obstructive uropathy and sepsis were contributing factors for ARF in 82% of the cases. Volume depletion due to gastrointestinal fluid loss and urinary tract obstruction on account of enlarged prostate were the leading causes of ARF in 20 (35.7%) and 8 (14.3%) cases respectively. Sepsis with or without multiorgan failure was the major (46.7%) cause of mortality in patients with ARF and overall mortality was 26.8%. The commonest (31%) cause of nephrotic syndrome was the idiopathic membranous nephropathy. Diabetic nephropathy related to type-2 diabetes mellitus was the second most common (24.1%) cause of nephrotic syndrome. Diffuse endocapillary proliferative GN of post infectious etiology was the commonest (73.3%) type of acute GN in our elderly patients. Renal cystic diseases were noted in 5 (ADPKD 3; Simple cyst-2) patients. Thus, overall spectrum of renal disease in our elderly patients is similar to that of developed nations except in two ways: (i) Endocapillary proliferative GN of post infectious origin was the commonest type of acute GN and (ii) Rarity or absence of ischemic nephropathy and atherosclerotic renal artery occlusive disease.
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PMID:Spectrum of renal diseases in the elderly: single center experience from a developing country. 1209 35

Over an 8-year period (January 1996 to December 2003), a total of 171 patients below the age of 15 years were diagnosed with chronic renal failure. The mean incidence rate of CRF in Kuwaiti children was found to be 38.2 per million children per year, with a peak incidence of 55 per million children per year. While the mean age at diagnosis was 33+/-12 months (range: 1 month to 15 years), the male:female ratio was 2.7:1. Etiological factors for chronic renal failure included congenital urological malformation (61.9%), chronic glomerulopathies (5.2%), hereditary nephropathies (21%), multi-system disease (0.5%), chronic pyelonephritis (without VUR) (4.6%), tumors (0.6%), ischemic renal disease (1.1%) and unknown etiology (1.7%). Thirty percent of patients reached end-stage renal disease within a mean of 18 months following diagnosis. The overall mortality before reaching ESRD was reported to be 4%. Kuwait has one of the highest incidence and prevalence rates of CRF in children. It is likely that genetic and hereditary factors are the cause of these high rates.
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PMID:Chronic renal failure in Kuwaiti children: an eight-year experience. 1613 59

This study among elderly renal Egyptian patients (n=220) with only 20 of them were subjected to renal biopsy. Results showed: diabetic nephropathy in 28.2%, hypertensive nephrosclerosis 25.5%, UTI, cystitis and pyelonephritis in 6.8%, renal stones in 5.9%, obstructive uropathy in 7.6%, simple cysts in 4.5%, CRF of unknown origin in 13.1%, and others in 26.4%. DM and HTN were S related to kidney function tests and increase in elderly. Other cardiovascular risk factors and smoking are reported by previous workers to be HS related to renal diseases. Age was significantly related to GFR, BUN and Cr. but sex difference was not significantly related to renal diseases. Multiple myeloma, lupus nephritis, vasculitis and hepatitis B were all recorded in few numbers of elderly Egyptians. HCV was more common and more likely to cause renal diseases. Abdomino-pelvic ultrasound was confirmatory to clinical renal diseases diagnosis. Among patients (n=20) biopsies showed focal necrotizing GN in 20%, membranous nephropathy in 50% and renal amyloidosis in 30%. CTIN was associated in some cases due to NSAID intake. Analgesic nephropathy was a common problem that might lead to ARF in some cases especially in the elderly. Ultrasound results among the biopsy group were confirmatory to clinical diagnosis.
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PMID:Pattern of renal diseases among elderly Egyptians patients with acute or chronic renal diseases in Ain Shams University and Nasser Institute Hospitals, Cairo, Egypt. 1633 99