Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Pivot Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Target Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Query: UMLS:C0451641 (
urolithiasis
)
3,973
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Proteus mirabilis, a significant cause of bacteriuria and acute pyelonephritis in humans, produces urease. This high-molecular-weight, multimeric, cytoplasmic enzyme hydrolyzes urea to ammonia and carbon dioxide. To assess the role of urease in colonization,
urolithiasis
, and acute pyelonephritis in an animal model of ascending urinary tract infection, we compared a uropathogenic strain of P. mirabilis with its isogenic urease-negative mutant, containing an insertion mutation within ureC, the gene encoding the large subunit of the enzyme. Mice challenged transurethrally with the parent strain developed significant bacteriuria and urinary stones. The urease-negative mutant had a 50% infective dose of 2.7 x 10(9) CFU, a value more than 1,000-fold greater than that of the parent strain (2.2 x 10(6) CFU). The urease-positive parent strain reached significantly higher concentrations and persisted significantly longer in the bladder and kidney than did the mutant. Indeed, in the kidney, the parent strain increased in concentration while the mutant concentration fell so that, by 1 week, the parent strain concentration was 10(6) times that of the mutant. Similarly, the urease-positive parent produced significantly more severe renal pathology than the mutant. The initial abnormalities were in and around the pelvis and consisted of acute inflammation and epithelial necrosis. By 1 week,
pyelitis
was more severe, crystals were seen in the pelvis, and acute pyelonephritis, with acute interstitial inflammation, tubular epithelial cell necrosis, and in some cases abscesses, had developed. By 2 weeks, more animals had renal abscesses and radial bands of fibrosis. We conclude that the urease of P. mirabilis is a critical virulence determinant for colonization,
urolithiasis
, and severe acute pyelonephritis.
...
PMID:Contribution of Proteus mirabilis urease to persistence, urolithiasis, and acute pyelonephritis in a mouse model of ascending urinary tract infection. 851 76
Mucinous cystadenoma with malignant transformation occupying the lower half portion of the right renal pelvis in a 69-year-old Japanese man was recorded. The patient had recent dysuria but no clinical history of pyelonephritis or
urolithiasis
. Under the clinical diagnosis of unusual renal cyst, the right total nephrectomy was performed. Grossly, the cystic tumor, 5 cm across, formed a monolocular lumen filled with mucins and showed no direct communication with the renal pelvis inside. Microscopically, the epithelial lining was characterized by a single layer of benign mucin producing columnar cells that scattered foci of non-invasive papillary projections with cell stratification and nuclear atypia suggestive of malignancy. Although there was non-specific chronic
pyelitis
, no
pyelitis
cystica et glandularis was encountered. Of circa 60 glandular neoplasms arising in the renal pelvis reported previously, adenomas are only five including two mucinous cystadenomas, while the remainder are adenocarcinomas. The histological findings of mucinous cystadenoma in the present case may represent the process of a transition from adenoma to adenocarcinoma. The result suggests the possibility that adenoma-carcinoma sequence may exist among the glandular neoplasma arising in the renal pelvis. The histogenesis was unclarified.
...
PMID:Mucinous cystadenoma with malignant transformation arising in the renal pelvis. 908 36
Urinary obstruction is rarely associated with a distinct granulomatous inflammation, which involves the pyelocalyceal system and closely simulates infectious conditions including tuberculosis. Its clinicopathologic features, however, have not been adequately studied since there are only seven isolated reported cases. In a comprehensive study of 112 kidney specimens with urinary obstruction, we identified five cases of granulomatous
pyelitis
. The features of these cases were detailed and compared with the previously reported cases. Among the five identified subjects, three patients had history of
urolithiasis
and two had ureteral stenosis and all had stent placement 7 weeks to 12 years before nephrectomy for relief of the unilateral urinary obstruction. The age distribution was between 38 and 81 years. Two had end-stage renal disease or chronic renal failure. The pyelocaliceal system showed frank hydronephrosis (1 case) or partial dilatation (4 cases) and contained cheesy and gritty material in its lumen. Each case showed severe granulomatous inflammation, which was limited to the pelvic wall and closely associated with calcified debris, necrotic inflammatory cells, and material consistent with Tamm-Horsfall protein. The kidney showed chronic tubulointerstitial nephritis but without granulomas. Cultures of urine, blood, and the renal pelvic content, and special stains of tissue sections did not show fungi or mycobacteria in any case. Many of these features were also observed in previously reported cases. Granulomatous
pyelitis
is a rare but distinct cliniocopathologic entity characterized by severe noninfectious granulomatous inflammation limited to the renal pelvis, which is uniformely asociated with urinary obstruction and pyelocalyceal dilatation and may develop in response to accumulated calcified material in the renal pelvis. Awareness of this entity and its characteristic clinicopathologic features also helps eliminate an infectious etiology with obvious treatment and prognostic implications.
...
PMID:Granulomatous pyelitis associated with urinary obstruction: a comprehensive clinicopathologic study. 1671 72
We report a case of pseudotuberculous granulomatous
pyelitis
in an elderly female patient with hydronephrotic right kidney secondary to obstructing urinary stone. Pseudotuberculous granulomatous
pyelitis
is a rarely reported entity, characterized by severe granulomatous inflammation limited predominantly to the renal pelvis. It is associated with urinary (pelvicalyceal) obstruction,
urolithiasis
well as non- Mycobacterial urinary tract infection.
...
PMID:Pseudotuberculous Granulomatous Pyelitis. 2744 Aug 12