Cases reported "Pyelonephritis"

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1/37. Emphysematous pyelonephritis: case report and review of the literature.

    Emphysematous pyelonephritis (EP), a rare necrotizing infection of the upper urinary tract, is a life-threatening complication of patients with diabetes mellitus. A case of EP is described where the diagnosis was delayed for 36 h and the patient died notwithstanding aggressive medical and surgical intervention. The demonstration of gas in the renal structures is pathognomonic of EP. Because early diagnosis and aggressive medical and surgical management is imperative for recovery, we recommend plain abdominal radiographs as a minimal screening tool for all diabetic patients who present to hospital with a presumptive pyelonephritis. The diagnosis should also be considered in patients who failed appropriate medical therapy.
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ranking = 1
keywords = diabetes mellitus, diabetes, mellitus
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2/37. Emphysematous pyelonephritis related to specific gas-forming escherichia coli without diabetes mellitus.

    A 60-year-old-man without a history of diabetes mellitus, or invasive manipulation or obstruction of the urinary tract was admitted for septic shock. Type I emphysematous pyelonephritis was clear in this case: gas within the renal parenchyma extending into the subcapsular region and the perirenal space was present on spiral computerised tomography (CT). Surgical nephrectomy was performed because biochemistry, urography and CT identified a damaged non-functioning left kidney. The outcome was favourable. All urine, blood and nephrectomy specimen cultures were positive for a specific escherichia coli which produced a high level of gas compared to a reference E. coli strain in the same standard medium, despite the absence of diabetes mellitus. Certain strains of bacteria are able to produce high levels of nitrogen, carbon dioxide and hydrogen and such fermentation in the absence of a high glucose serum level might explain the acute gas-producing bacterial renal infection.
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ranking = 6
keywords = diabetes mellitus, diabetes, mellitus
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3/37. Emphysematous pyelonephritis: a rare presentation.

    Emphysematous pyelonephritis is a rare life threatening infection in diabetes characterised by suppurative infection of renal parenchyma and perirenal tissues. It usually presents with fever, nausea, vomiting, abdominal pain, shock, lethargy, and confusion. diabetic ketoacidosis is an uncommon presentation. In the present case, an elderly female presented with abdominal pain, fever, vomiting, and altered sensorium. She was diagnosed to have diabetic ketoacidosis with metabolic encephalopathy with right emphysematous pyelonephritis. She had an excellent response to medical treatment alone and was later discharged on oral hypoglycaemic agents.
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ranking = 0.17242488389619
keywords = diabetes
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4/37. peptostreptococcus asaccharolyticus renal abscess: a rare cause of fever of unknown origin.

    Renal abscess is uncommon in pediatrics and is rarely a cause of fever of unknown origin. We recently cared for a patient who presented with a 3-week history of fever. An indium scan ultimately led to the diagnosis of a renal abscess. Aspiration yielded peptostreptococcus asaccharolyticus. This unusual case prompted a review of the clinical and microbiologic features of renal abscess in pediatric patients at our hospital over the past 10 years. Seven additional patients with a discharge diagnosis of renal abscess were identified. Only 2 of the patients had identifiable risk factors (diabetes mellitus and polycystic kidneys). staphylococcus aureus or enterobacteriaceae were responsible for most infections, consistent with hematogenous and urinary tract sources, respectively. No other cases of anaerobic abscess were identified. This case highlights the importance of considering a renal abscess in the differential diagnosis of fever of unknown origin and of processing specimens for both aerobic and anaerobic organisms.
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ranking = 1
keywords = diabetes mellitus, diabetes, mellitus
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5/37. Fatal emphysematous pyelonephritis with gas in the spinal extradural space in a patient with diabetes.

    BACKGROUND: Emphysematous pyelonephritis (EP) is a rare but life-threatening condition of the upper urinary tract, characterized by the presence of gas in the renal parenchyma and perirenal space. The vast majority of patients with EP (90%) are known to have diabetes, with escherichia coli being the most common causative pathogen. CASE REPORT: We present a case of fatal bilateral EP in a patient with diabetes, with an unusual radiological finding of gas around the spinal cord and in the psoas muscle, with renal parenchymal sparing. Our case serves as an important reminder of this life threatening entity in diabetic patients, which is not well recognized by clinicians because of its rarity.
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ranking = 1.0345493033771
keywords = diabetes
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6/37. Transient renal glycosuria in a patient with acute pyelonephritis.

    glycosuria was detected in a 37-year-old Chinese woman by a urinary examination in a local clinic with clinical evidence of acute pyelonephritis (APN). Transient glycosuria is an unusual complication of acute pyelonephritis in non-diabetic patients. As there is growing prevalence of type 2 diabetes in the population worldwide, it must be recognized that mistaken diagnosis of diabetes mellitus by glycosuria may predispose patients to an unfavorable hypoglycemic episode. Thus definite diagnosis of diabetes mellitus should be made only after recovery of APN by means of urinalysis or by simultaneous blood glucose concentration analysis.
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ranking = 2.1724248838962
keywords = diabetes mellitus, diabetes, mellitus
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7/37. Emphysematous pyelonephritis in a renal allograft: successful treatment with percutaneous drainage and nephrostomy.

    Emphysematous pyelonephritis in renal transplant allograft occurs rarely. This is a case report on a 55-year-old man who had renal transplantation in 1983 and developed post-transplant diabetes mellitus in 1984. This patient suffered from fever and right low abdominal pain and was subsequently diagnosed as emphysematous pyelonephritis by computerized tomography. He was successfully treated with percutaneous drainage, percutaneous nephrostomy and parenteral antibiotics. Although the management of emphysematous pyelonephritis has been a subject of controversy, we recommend consideration of renal preservation in patients with few risk factors, especially in those patients presenting with chronic renal insufficiency, solitary kidney and transplant allograft.
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ranking = 1
keywords = diabetes mellitus, diabetes, mellitus
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8/37. nephrosis and papillary necrosis after pyelonephritis.

    We present a case of nephrotic syndrome complicating acute pyelonephritis in a 45-year-old man. His first attack of acute bacterial pyelonephritis had two unusual features: transient nephrotic syndrome and chronic recurrent episodes of papillary necrosis. The former, which lasted for two weeks, was characterized by edema, excretion of 7.7 g of urinary protein per 24 hours and hypoproteinemia (1.8 g per 100 ml). A percutaneous renal biopsy two weeks after the height of the nephrotic state showed normal glomeruli by light and electron microscopy and immunohistologic studies. Interstitial changes were noted. Over two years the patient has passed approximately 50 fragments, characterized as necrotic tissue containing tubular structures. He has no evidence of diabetes mellitus, urinary-tract obstruction or ureteral reflux, analgesic abuse or atypical vasculitis. He is afebrile but has recurrent bacteriuria despite antibiotics. This case demonstrates that acute pyelonephritis must be added to the list of diseases causing the nephrotic state.
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ranking = 1
keywords = diabetes mellitus, diabetes, mellitus
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9/37. Renal cell carcinoma complicated by emphysematous pyelonephritis in a non-diabetic patient with renal failure.

    A 72-year-old non-diabetic uremic woman underwent right nephrectomy for urolithiasis at the age of 50. Because pyuria, fever, chilliness and left flank pain developed during preparing for arteriovenous fistula, she was admitted to National Cheng Kung University Hospital. Renal cell carcinoma (RCC) complicated with emphysematous pyelonephritis (EPN) was diagnosed and immediately treated with antibiotics and CT-guided percutaneous catheter drainage. Cultures of pus and blood yielded escherichia coli. She received left radical nephrectomy later for the control of persistent sepsis and removal of left renal tumor. The pathology of the tumor was composed of a glandular arrangement of granular cells with the occasional atypism, and renal parenchyma had been totally replaced by RCC. The non-tumor part of the kidney showed chronic pyelonephritis. Five months later, multiple metastases developed. We reported this first uremic case with EPN and RCC, but without diabetes mellitus and urinary tract obstruction. The gas formation may be due to large RCC, which caused impaired tissue perfusion and E. coli infection.
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ranking = 1
keywords = diabetes mellitus, diabetes, mellitus
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10/37. Emphysematous pyelonephritis.

    Emphysematous pyelonephritis is a rare complication of urinary tract infection and generally occurs in patients with diabetes mellitus or urinary tract obstruction. We recently treated an 81-year-old diabetic woman with klebsiella pneumoniae urinary tract infection and septicemia whose abdominal roentgenogram demonstrated a striking left pneumonephrogram as well as intraureteral and perirenal gas. The patient died despite intensive therapeutic efforts. Unfortunately, the prognosis for this severe necrotizing infection process remains unfavorable.
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ranking = 1
keywords = diabetes mellitus, diabetes, mellitus
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