Correlation Engine 2.0
Clear Search sequence regions


  • anemia (2)
  • cannabinoids (1)
  • cell (2)
  • diagnosis (2)
  • fever (1)
  • flank pain (3)
  • klebsiella (1)
  • men (1)
  • native (1)
  • patients (1)
  • prothrombin (1)
  • renal infarcts (4)
  • thrombophilia (1)
  • thrombosis (1)
  • woman (2)
  • Sizes of these terms reflect their relevance to your search.

    Often the reduced contrast enhancement on CT renal imaging is radiologically interpreted as acute pyelonephritis (PNA), but it is the task of the clinician to assess a possible differential diagnosis such as a renal infarct and look for a cause. In our experience (2010-2013), we hospitalized 51 patients with radiological imaging consistent with acute pyelonephritis in native kidneys. However, three of these cases result, after a second look, to be ischemic lesions, only sometimes complicated by over-infections (Tabella 1). a woman hospitalized for fever and flank pain with blood culture positive for Klebsiella Pneumoniae. Antibiotic therapy allowed a clinical-laboratory improvement, but after 45 days persisted a focal wedge to the CT scan. The labs showed a anemia due to a sickle cell disease (SLC). The overview was finally interpreted as a renal infarct secondary to a sickle cell anemia, initially complicated by over-infection. a men hospitalized for a acute flank pain. The CT scan showed a left renal infarct and a partial renal artery thrombosis, resulting in abuse of cannabinoids and LAC positivity.Third case: a woman hospitalized for flank pain and slight movement of inflammatory markers. CT showed a cuneiform area in the right kidney not vascularized, that did not resolved after prolonged antibiotic therapy. The labs evidence a heterozygous mutation of prothrombin and MTHFR causing the renal infarction. 6% of radiographic imaging consistent with acute pyelonephritis concealed an underlying infarct, due to a unknown state of thrombophilia. The presence of hypovascular imaging to the TC scan, therefore, requires a differential diagnosis between PNA and infarct, especially in the case of atypical development.

    Citation

    Elisabetta Radin, Cristina Izzo, Marco Quaglia, Guido Merlotti, Angelo Nappo, Michele Battista, Gabriele Guglielmetti, Piero Stratta. What if it is not an acute pyelonephritis? A monocentric experience of renal infarcts]. Giornale italiano di nefrologia : organo ufficiale della Società italiana di nefrologia. 2015 Mar-Apr;32(2)


    PMID: 26005936

    View Full Text