Definitions
- Acute PN – acute, non-spec infectious (MC bacterial), uni or bilateral tubulointerstitial disease (GLN is bilateral)
- CF – flank pain, tenderness, fever, chills, bacteriuria
- Chronic PN – disease of renal pelvis, calyces and underlying parenchyma (tubulointerstitial sys). Caused by long term bact inf. Periods of exacerbation and remission. Can progress to CRF
- Bacteriuria – significant >100,000 CFU/ml (E.Kass)
- Asymp BU – SBU in absence of symptoms of disease
- Pyuria – >5 PMNLs per high power field
- UTI
- Uncomplicated – without physical and anatomical abnormalities of UT
- Absence of urological surgery/instrumentation
- Community acquired
- Complication – in pts with anatomical abnormalities, obstruction, instrumentation, catheterisation , males
- Uncomplicated – without physical and anatomical abnormalities of UT
Epidemiology
- Women – MC, childbearing age
- Men – >60 years; prostatic obstruction, ureteric calculi
Etiology
- Bacterial (G- more common)
- E.coli (OKH), Proteus, Enterobacter, Pseudomonas, Klebsiella
- Staph, H.influenza, Bacteroides, Clostridium
- Mycoplasma
- C.albicans
Pathogenesis
- Ways of penetration
- Ascending (from outside to in) – urethra, bladder, ureter, kidney
- Hematogenic
- Lymphogenic
- Predisposing + defence factors
- Local host defence
- Length of male urethra – 16-20cm
- Prostatic antibacterial factor
- Normal vaginal flora
- Cervicovaginal Ab production
- Voiding mechanism
- Bladder surface GAGs – IgA defends
- Local predisposing factors
- Refluxes, disturbances of renal vascular system
- Prostatic adenoma
- Renal + bladder calculi – IMP
- Pregnancy – leads to abnormal urine flow due to
- Enlarged uterus compresses ureters
- Progesterone causes atony of ureters
- Urethral strictures
- PKD
- Microorganism virulence factors
- Pili attachment
- K mechanisms – E.coli
- Urease production – Proteus (ammonia alkalises urine >> inhibits phagocytosis)
- Coagulase production – Staph
- Hemolysin prod
- Motility
- Local host defence
Pathophysiology
- Disturbance of urine drainage – atony, stasis
- Disturbance of concentrating ability of kidneys – dysfunctional transport of Na, water, urea
- Disturbance of acid-base regulation
- Tubular proteinuria – <1.5g/l (always mild)
- Disturbance of BP regulation
- Retention of NaCl
- Production of renin and PGs
*Normal USG – 1.010-1.040
Clinical features
- APN
- General – fever, headache, weakness, tachycardia, tachypnea
- Local CF – lumbar + abdominal pain, dysuria, frequency
- Lab – pyruia, bacteriuria, mild PU, low USG*, high RBC sedimentation rate
- Triad – pain, fever, leukocyturia w/ SBU
- NOTE – no HTN in APN
- CPN
- History – weakness, headache, dysuria, nocturia, fever, weightloss, lumbar heaviness. UTI in childhood; DM; prostatic adenoma
- Physical – fever, palpable pain, anemia, HTN
- Lab – leukocyturia, BU, PU (in remission there is no LU or BU). Low USG
- US – decreased size, structural change
Classification
- APN
- Course – acute, subacute, asymptomatic
- Morphology of inflam – non-purulent or suppurative
- CPN
- Regarding PG – primary or secondary
- Regarding location – UL or BL
- Leading symptom – hypertonic, anemic, hematuric
- Tubular atrophy – thyroidisation
Diagnosis
- History
- Physical exam – positive succussio renalis / costo-vertebral angle tenderness
- Lab exam – urinalysis, peripheral blood, BUN, RBC sedimentation
- Renal function exam
- Probes of Zimnitsky (see box)
- Clearance – FF (GFR/RPF)
- Radioisotope – ING, scintigraphy
- US + Venous pyelography
- CT – when suspicious of neoplasm
- VCUG – check vesicoureteral reflux VUR
- Renal biopsy – NEVER used to diagnose
Complications
- Sepsis, abscess, papillary necrosis (DM/immunocompromised)
Zimnitsky probes
- Collect separate portions of urine every 3 hours and measure the volume and USG
- Add all the volumes together and estimate daily diuresis
- If the highest USG in at least 1 sample is >1.018 then it means that the concentrating ability of kidney isn’t affected
Treatment
- Regimen + diet – increase water (2L/day), no alcohol
- Scheme (total course for 30 days)
- AB course (may be empirical) for 10 d
- If after course urine culture is (+), begin course with a different AB
- Sulphonamide course for 10d
- Quinolone course for 10-15d
- AB course (may be empirical) for 10 d
- Drugs
- Antibiotics
- Dose – 2mg/kg
- Amps – 40mg/ml
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- Aminoglycosides – gentamicin(see box) + tobra
- Not allowed – strepto + kana
- Beta lactams – cephalosporins, hemisynthetic pens
- NA – pen + methicillin
- Clarithromycin
- Fosfomycin – safe for pregnancy [3g/1 dose]
- Aminoglycosides – gentamicin(see box) + tobra
- Sulphonamides – biseptol (SMX/TMP : 400mg/80mg tabs, 2 tabs bid)
- Chemotherapeutics – ciprofloxacin, levofloxacin, pefloxacin
- Ciprofloxacin – 250mg tab bid/ 500mg tab qd
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