succimer and Acute-Disease

succimer has been researched along with Acute-Disease* in 60 studies

Reviews

5 review(s) available for succimer and Acute-Disease

ArticleYear
Mercury poisoning.
    Current problems in pediatrics, 2000, Volume: 30, Issue:3

    Topics: Acute Disease; Chelating Agents; Chelation Therapy; Child; Diagnosis, Differential; Dimercaprol; Environmental Exposure; Humans; Mercury; Mercury Poisoning; Penicillamine; Succimer; United States

2000
Update on dimercaptosuccinic acid renal scanning in children with urinary tract infection.
    Pediatric nephrology (Berlin, Germany), 1995, Volume: 9, Issue:2

    The dimercaptosuccinic acid (DMSA) renal scan is a method for assessing kidney function. Indications for DMSA scanning in children with urinary tract infection (UTI), as well as timing, have changed. Pitfalls in interpreting DMSA scans include: (1) acute pyelonephritis (APN), (2) tubular dysfunction, (3) hypertension, (4) use of captopril in patients with renovascular hypertension and (5) duplex kidneys. Interpretation of DMSA scans in children with UTI vary according to timing and clinical setting. During the course of a febrile UTI a DMSA scan may reveal a normal kidney, APN or a non-functioning, small and/or ectopic kidney. In the absence of UTI (up to 6 months) in children with vesicoureteric reflux a DMSA scan may indicate a normal kidney, renal scarring (reflux nephropathy), occult duplex kidney and allows the progression of scarring and hypertrophy of normal areas of the kidney to be followed anatomically. The DMSA renal scan in now the most reliable test for the diagnosis of APN. The transient abnormalities due to APN can occur in normal or scarred kidneys. Lesions due to reflux nephropathy (defined as a defect in the renal outline or contraction of the whole kidney) are permanent. Intravenous urography reveals renal abnormalities later than the DMSA scan. If abnormalities are seen on a DMSA scan performed during the course of APN it is impossible to predict the outcome: they can progress to permanent scarring or heal completely. An abnormal DMSA scan during a febrile UTI allows the identification of children at risk of developing renal scars. These children should be carefully investigated, maintained on long-term quimioprophylaxis and followed.

    Topics: Acute Disease; Animals; Child; Cicatrix; Humans; Injections, Intravenous; Kidney; Kidney Diseases; Organotechnetium Compounds; Pyelonephritis; Radionuclide Imaging; Succimer; Technetium Tc 99m Dimercaptosuccinic Acid; Urinary Tract Infections; Urography; Vesico-Ureteral Reflux

1995
[Imaging of acute pyelonephritis].
    La Revue du praticien, 1993, May-01, Volume: 43, Issue:9

    Despite the advances achieved in imaging methods, the diagnosis of acute pyelonephritis rests on clinical and bacteriological date. Yet imaging is of considerable value to exclude a possible obstacle in the excretory canals which might be responsible for acute pyelonephritis. Ultrasonography associated with plain abdominal radiography without preparation or with intravenous urography is the choice method. In case of atypical forms, patients at risks or resistance to medical treatment, computerized tomography provides an information that is invaluable for the diagnosis as well as for the prognosis.

    Topics: Acute Disease; Diagnostic Imaging; Humans; Pyelonephritis; Radionuclide Imaging; Succimer; Tomography, X-Ray Computed; Ultrasonography; Urography

1993
Renal cortical scintigraphy in the diagnosis of acute pyelonephritis.
    Seminars in nuclear medicine, 1992, Volume: 22, Issue:2

    Comparative clinical studies have shown renal cortical scintigraphy, using technetium-99m (99mTc)-labeled glucoheptonate or dimercaptosuccinic acid (DMSA), to be significantly more sensitive than either intravenous pyelography or renal sonography in the diagnosis of acute pyelonephritis. However, due to uncertainties about the diagnostic accuracy of the clinical and laboratory parameters used in these studies, true sensitivity of renal cortical scintigraphy was unknown. Therefore, we evaluated the accuracy of [99mTc]DMSA scintigraphy in the diagnosis of experimentally induced acute pyelonephritis in piglets using strict histopathologic criteria as the standard of reference. The sensitivity and specificity of the DMSA scan for the diagnosis of acute pyelonephritis were 91% and 99%, respectively, with an overall 97% agreement between the scintigraphic and histopathologic findings. Based on the results of this experimental study, we used the [99mTc]DMSA scan as the standard of reference for the diagnosis of acute pyelonephritis, and conducted a prospective clinical study of 94 children hospitalized with the diagnosis of acute febrile urinary tract infection (UTI). The aims of this study were (1) to determine the relationship among vesicoureteral reflux, P-fimbriated Escherichia coli, acute pyelonephritis, and renal scarring, and (2) to evaluate the diagnostic reliability of the clinical and laboratory parameters commonly used in the diagnosis of acute pyelonephritis. We documented acute pyelonephritis in 62 (66%) of 94 patients. Vesicoureteral reflux was demonstrated in 29 (31%) of the total group and in only 23 (37%) of 62 patients with acute pyelonephritis. The prevalence of P-fimbriae in the E coli isolates was 64% in the patients with acute pyelonephritis and 78% in those with a normal DMSA scan. Even in patients without reflux, P-fimbriae were found in 71% of isolates from the patients with acute pyelonephritis and in 75% of those with a normal renal scan. Follow-up DMSA scans were obtained in 33 patients with acute pyelonephritis in 38 kidneys. We found complete resolution of the acute inflammatory changes in 58% of the involved kidneys and renal scarring in the remaining 42%, including 40% of the kidneys associated with reflux and 43% of those without reflux.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)

    Topics: Acute Disease; Animals; Humans; Kidney Cortex; Organotechnetium Compounds; Pyelonephritis; Radionuclide Imaging; Succimer; Sugar Acids; Technetium Tc 99m Dimercaptosuccinic Acid; Vesico-Ureteral Reflux

1992
Dimercaptosuccinic acid renal scintigraphy for the evaluation of pyelonephritis and scarring: a review of experimental and clinical studies.
    The Journal of urology, 1992, Volume: 148, Issue:5 Pt 2

    Renal cortical scintigraphy has been reported to be useful in children for confirmation of the diagnosis of acute pyelonephritis. Subsequent experimental studies have demonstrated that dimercaptosuccinic acid (DMSA) scintigraphy, when compared directly with histopathology, is highly reliable for the detection and localization of parenchymal inflammatory changes associated with acute pyelonephritis. Recent clinical studies of acute pyelonephritis using DMSA scintigraphy reveal that the majority (50 to 91%) of children with febrile urinary tract infections have abnormal DMSA renal scan findings and that the majority of these children do not have demonstrable vesicoureteral reflux. However, when vesicoureteral reflux is present, renal cortical abnormalities are demonstrated by DMSA scintigraphy in 79 to 86% of the kidneys. In children with febrile urinary tract infections routine clinical and laboratory parameters are not reliable in the differentiation of acute pyelonephritis, documented by DMSA renal scan findings, from urinary tract infections without parenchymal involvement. Furthermore, the presence of P-fimbriated Escherichia coli associated with febrile urinary tract infections does not reliably predict those kidneys that have acute parenchymal inflammation demonstrated by DMSA renal scans. DMSA is also the isotope agent of choice for the detection of renal scarring. Clinical studies report greater sensitivity of DMSA renal scintigraphy for the detection of renal scarring when compared with the excretory urogram, particularly in infants and young children. In a recent prospective study of post-pyelonephritic renal scarring in children we found that acquired renal scarring only occurs in sites corresponding exactly to previous areas of acute pyelonephritis demonstrated by DMSA scintigraphy at the time of infection. Furthermore, once acute pyelonephritis occurs, ultimate renal scarring is independent of the presence or absence of vesicoureteral reflux. These findings provide convincing evidence that renal parenchymal infection, rather than vesicoureteral reflux, is the prerequisite for acquired (postnatal) renal scarring. Vesicoureteral reflux as a risk factor for acquired renal scarring is directly related to its role as a risk factor for acute pyelonephritis. We conclude that DMSA scintigraphy is a valid tool for confirming the diagnosis of acute pyelonephritis in children and for identifying kidneys at risk for subsequent renal scarring.

    Topics: Acute Disease; Adolescent; Child; Child, Preschool; Cicatrix; Humans; Infant; Infant, Newborn; Kidney Diseases; Pyelonephritis; Radioisotope Renography; Succimer; Urinary Tract Infections

1992

Trials

3 trial(s) available for succimer and Acute-Disease

ArticleYear
Prospective, randomized trial comparing short and long intravenous antibiotic treatment of acute pyelonephritis in children: dimercaptosuccinic acid scintigraphic evaluation at 9 months.
    Pediatrics, 2008, Volume: 121, Issue:3

    We report a prospective, randomized, multicenter trial that compared the effect of 3 vs 8 days of intravenous ceftriaxone treatment on the incidence of renal scarring at 6 to 9 months of follow-up in 383 children with a first episode of acute pyelonephritis.. After initial treatment with intravenous netilmicin and ceftriaxone, patients were randomly assigned to either 5 days of oral antibiotics (short intravenous treatment) or 5 days of intravenous ceftriaxone (long intravenous treatment). Inclusion criteria were age 3 months to 16 years and first acute pyelonephritis episode, defined by fever of >38.5 degrees C, C-reactive protein level of >20 mg/L, and bacteriuria at >10(5)/mL. All patients underwent 99m technetium-dimercaptosuccinic acid scintigraphy 6 to 9 months after inclusion. A total of 548 children were included, 48 of whom were secondarily excluded and 117 of whom were lost to follow-up or had incomplete data; therefore, 383 children were eligible, 205 of them in the short intravenous treatment group and 178 in the long intravenous treatment group.. At inclusion, median age was 15 months, median duration of fever was 43 hours, and median C-reactive protein level was 122 mg/L. A total of 37% (143 of 383) of patients had a vesicoureteral reflux grades 1 to 3. Patient characteristics at inclusion were similar in both groups, except for a significantly higher proportion of girls in the short intravenous treatment group. The frequency of renal scars at scintigraphy was similar in both groups. Multivariate analysis demonstrated that renal scars were significantly associated with increased renal height at initial ultrasound and with the presence of grade 3 vesicoureteric reflux.. The incidence of renal scars was similar in patients who received 3 days compared 8 days of intravenous ceftriaxone. Increased renal height at initial ultrasound examination and grade 3 vesicoureteric reflux were significant risk factors for renal scars.

    Topics: Acute Disease; Adolescent; Anti-Bacterial Agents; Ceftriaxone; Child; Child, Preschool; Confidence Intervals; Dose-Response Relationship, Drug; Drug Administration Schedule; Drug Therapy, Combination; Female; Follow-Up Studies; Humans; Infant; Infusions, Intravenous; Kidney Function Tests; Logistic Models; Male; Netilmicin; Odds Ratio; Prospective Studies; Pyelonephritis; Radionuclide Imaging; Risk Assessment; Severity of Illness Index; Succimer; Time Factors; Treatment Outcome

2008
Treatment of children with acute pyelonephritis: a prospective randomized study.
    Pediatric nephrology (Berlin, Germany), 2001, Volume: 16, Issue:11

    The aim of this study was to compare, in children with acute pyelonephritis, the efficacy of 7 days' (group A) and 3 days' (group B) intravenous antibiotics, both followed by an oral treatment. Children were randomized after 3 days of intravenous treatment. Technetium-99m dimercaptosuccinic acid (DMSA) scintigraphy was performed within the first days after admission and repeated 6 months later. Total or partial persistence of renal abnormalities on the 6-month DMSA scintigraphy was used as the endpoint of the study. Among the 92 children included in the study, 87 were followed for at least 6 months (43 in group A and 44 in group B) and were eligible for analysis. Late DMSA was abnormal in 9 kidneys of group A and 12 kidneys of group B, representing respectively 24% and 44% of kidneys with abnormalities on the initial DMSA (difference statistically not significant). When the patients were stratified according to the delay of treatment, the percentage of patients with sequelae in group A was comparable, whether the delay was less or more than 1 week. In group B, the percentage of patients with sequelae was significantly higher (P<0.01) when the delay was more than 1 week.

    Topics: Acute Disease; Administration, Oral; Anti-Bacterial Agents; Child, Preschool; Hospitalization; Humans; Infant; Injections, Intravenous; Kidney; Prospective Studies; Pyelonephritis; Radiography; Radionuclide Imaging; Recurrence; Succimer; Time Factors; Treatment Outcome; Urinary Tract Infections

2001
Tc-99m dimercaptosuccinic acid(DMSA) renal scintigraphy in patients with acute pyelonephritis.
    The Korean journal of internal medicine, 1995, Volume: 10, Issue:1

    Recently, several authors reported that Tc-99m DMSA renal scan frequently showed cortical defects of the involved kidneys even in the patients with acute pyelonephritis who did not show abnormal findings in the ultrasonography and intravenous pyelography (IVP).. In order to evaluate the utilities of Tc-99m DMSA renal scan and the clinical meaning of cortical defects in the Tc-99m DMSA renal scan of the patients with acute pyelonephritis, ninety two patients with acute pyelonephritis, from March 1991 to February 1994 in Chungnam National University Hospital(CNUH), were included in this study. Patients were subdivided as Group A:Patients showing normal Tc-99m DMSA renal scan (n = 42) and Group B:Patients with definite cortical defects on the Tc-99m DMSA renal scan (n = 50). We compared clinical characteristics such as age and sex, recurrency, duration of fever, bacterial culture study, incidence of renal insufficiency and the results of renal ultrasonography and intravenous pyelography between the two groups.. Fifty four percents of 92 patients with acute pyelonephritis showed a significantly longer febrile period after admission, higher positive rates on the urine and blood culture studies and higher incidence of renal insufficiency than those of the Group A patients. Sixty nine percents of Group B patients showed normal results in ultrasonography or IVP study.. Tc-99m DMSA renal scan was a more sensitive imaging test than ultrasonography in kidneys and IVP to detect pyelonephritis lesions and may be useful to predict the patient group with a severe disease course. These patients may need more careful management and further studies to evaluate the possibility of complications.

    Topics: Acute Disease; Adult; Aged; Aged, 80 and over; Anti-Bacterial Agents; Female; Humans; Kidney Cortex; Male; Middle Aged; Organotechnetium Compounds; Pyelonephritis; Radiography; Radionuclide Imaging; Recurrence; Succimer; Technetium Tc 99m Dimercaptosuccinic Acid; Treatment Outcome; Ultrasonography

1995

Other Studies

52 other study(ies) available for succimer and Acute-Disease

ArticleYear
Relationship between serum and urine interleukin-6 elevations and renal scarring in children with acute pyelonephritis.
    Scandinavian journal of urology and nephrology, 2009, Volume: 43, Issue:2

    Acute pyelonephritis is a common infectious disease in children and can result in permanent renal damage. Interleukin-6 (IL-6) is an important mediator of inflammation in response to bacterial infection. This study investigated the potential relationship between acute-phase IL-6 and subsequent renal scarring in children with a first time febrile acute pyelonephritis.. In total, 79 children (age range 1-120 months) with a first time febrile urinary tract infection (UTI) were included. The diagnosis of acute pyelonephritis was confirmed by (99m)Tc-dimercaptosuccinic acid (DMSA) renal scan. Serum and urine samples were collected for IL-6 measurement by enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay before antibiotic treatment for the infection.. The 79 children were divided into acute pyelonephritis (n=45) and lower UTI (n=34) groups according to the findings of DMSA scans. The initial serum and urine IL-6 levels of children with acute pyelonephritis were significantly higher compared with lower UTI (p < 0.001). Renal scarring was detected at the follow-up DMSA scans in 15 (34.1%) of the 44 children with acute pyelonephritis. Both serum and urine IL-6 levels during the acute phase of pyelonephritis were significantly higher in children with renal scarring than in those without (p=0.005 and p = 0.002). The median age of children with renal scarring was significantly lower than those without (p=0.034). Multiple regression analysis showed that higher initial serum and urine IL-6 levels and a younger age were associated with renal scarring.. These results demonstrate that in younger children with a first time febrile acute pyelonephritis, elevations of the acute-phase serum and urine IL-6 levels were correlated with an increased risk of subsequent renal scarring.

    Topics: Acute Disease; Chelating Agents; Child; Child, Preschool; Female; Humans; Infant; Infant, Newborn; Interleukin-6; Kidney; Male; Pyelonephritis; Succimer; Vesico-Ureteral Reflux

2009
Procalcitonin as a predictor of renal scarring in infants and young children.
    Pediatric nephrology (Berlin, Germany), 2009, Volume: 24, Issue:6

    The aim of this study was to evaluate the usefulness of procalcitonin (PCT) as a marker of renal scars in infants and young children with a first episode of acute pyelonephritis. Children aged 7 days to 36 months admitted for first febrile urinary tract infection (UTI) to a pediatric emergency department were prospectively enrolled. The PCT concentration was determined at admission. Acute (99m)Tc-dimercaptosuccinic acid (DMSA) scintigraphy was performed within 7 days of admission and repeated 12 months later when abnormal findings were obtained on the first scan. Of the 72 children enrolled in the study, 52 showed signs of acute pyelonephritis (APN) on the first DMSA scan. A follow-up scintigraphy at the 12-month follow-up performed on 41 patients revealed that 14 (34%) patients had developed renal scars; these patients also presented significantly higher PCT values than those without permanent renal lesions [2.3 (interquartile range 1-11.6) vs. 0.5 (0.2-1.4) ng/mL; p = 0.007]. A comparison of the PCT concentration in patients with febrile UTI without renal involvement, with APN without scar development and with APN with subsequent renal scarring revealed a significant increasing trend (p = 0.006, Kruskal-Wallis test). The area under the ROC curve for scar prediction was 0.74 (95% confidence interval 0.61-0.85), with an optimum statistical cut-off value of 1 ng/mL (sensitivity 78.6%; specificity 63.8%). Based on these results, we suggest that serum PCT concentration at admission is a useful predictive tool of renal scarring in infants and young children with acute pyelonephritis.

    Topics: Acute Disease; Biomarkers; Calcitonin; Calcitonin Gene-Related Peptide; Child, Preschool; Cicatrix; Cohort Studies; Female; Fever; Follow-Up Studies; Humans; Infant; Infant, Newborn; Kidney; Male; Predictive Value of Tests; Prospective Studies; Protein Precursors; Pyelonephritis; Radionuclide Imaging; ROC Curve; Sensitivity and Specificity; Succimer; Time Factors; Ultrasonography; Urinary Tract Infections

2009
Initial presentation of scintigraphic changes during the first episode of acute pyelonephritis in children: simultaneous evaluation with MAG3 and DMSA.
    Nuklearmedizin. Nuclear medicine, 2007, Volume: 46, Issue:4

    99mTc-DMSA scintigraphy is generally accepted as the method of choice for detecting renal parenchymal damage in pyelonephritis. 99mTc-MAG3 dynamic scintigraphy is not routinely used for this purpose. The AIM of this study was to evaluate the MAG3 scintigraphic presentation in the acute phase of pyelonephritis in children and re-evaluate them at least 6 months later, as well as to establish whether a MAG3 in the parenchymal phase is as reliable and sensitive in the detection of a renal parenchymal damage as the DMSA.. The MAG3 scintigraphic pattern was evaluated during the first episode of acute pyelonephritis in 31 children (median age: 2.5 years) and compared to the DMSA scan. The scintigraphy was performed on the same day with both radiopharmaceuticals. After at least 6 months the whole procedure was repeated on 28 patients. A scoring system was designed to evaluate the parenchymal lesions, and categorize them as positive or equivocal. The findings on the initial scans were compared to those obtained in the follow up studies.. When all lesions (equivocal + positive) were analysed, MAG3 sensitivity was 98%, and specificity 78%, while for positive lesions only, the values were 83 and 100%, respectively. The average acute severity score was significantly lower for both MAG3 and DMSA then the follow up score (p < 0.0001). These results corresponded to a clinical convalescence, which was observed in 26/28 children in the follow up.. With the MAG3 scintigraphy a reliable semi quantitative and qualitative detection of the renal inflammatory lesions can be obtained in acute pyelonephritis, as well as their recovery, thus obviating the need for a DMSA scan. Moreover, the duration of the MAG3 procedure is shorter, enabling the visualization of the entire collecting system as well, while the radiation exposure is approximately a half of that delivered by the DMSA scan.

    Topics: Acute Disease; Adolescent; Child; Child, Preschool; Female; Humans; Infant; Kidney; Male; Pyelonephritis; Radionuclide Imaging; Radiopharmaceuticals; Succimer; Technetium Tc 99m Mertiatide

2007
DMSA scan in acute pyelonephritis.
    Indian pediatrics, 2006, Volume: 43, Issue:6

    Topics: Acute Disease; Chelating Agents; Humans; Pyelonephritis; Radionuclide Imaging; Succimer

2006
Arsenic trioxide poisoning: a description of two acute overdoses.
    Human & experimental toxicology, 2004, Volume: 23, Issue:7

    Arsenic is a traditional poison that has a history extending back into ancient times, as a medicinal agent, a homicidal poison and more recently in deliberate and unintentional self-poisoning. We report two cases of acute poisoning with an unwettable formulation of arsenic trioxide. Both patients had early gastrointestinal toxicity and were treated with early whole bowel irrigation (WBI). Chelation therapy with dimercaptosuccinic acid (dimercaptosuccinate, DMSA) was commenced within 24 hours and serial blood and urine arsenic concentrations were measured. Neither patient suffered any adverse outcome in spite of very high blood and urine concentrations of arsenic. Arsenic quantification in blood, urine and faeces suggested that enhanced gastrointestinal decontamination was minimally effective for decontamination and that DMSA for at least two weeks was required.

    Topics: Acute Disease; Adult; Antidotes; Arsenic Poisoning; Arsenic Trioxide; Arsenicals; Drug Overdose; Feces; Humans; Male; Oxides; Powders; Succimer; Suicide, Attempted; Time Factors

2004
Acute pyelonephritis and sequelae of renal scar in pediatric first febrile urinary tract infection.
    Pediatric nephrology (Berlin, Germany), 2003, Volume: 18, Issue:4

    To investigate the incidence of acute pyelonephritis (APN) and renal scarring in children with febrile urinary tract infection (UTI), 191 of 216 (88%) children with their first episode of UTI received (99m)Tc-dimercaptosuccinic acid renal single-photon emission computed tomography. They were investigated within 7 days of admission and were followed for 6 months. One hundred and six patients (49.1%) underwent a voiding cystourethrogram. The incidence of vesicoureteric reflux (VUR) in group I (

    Topics: Acute Disease; Adolescent; Anti-Bacterial Agents; Chelating Agents; Child; Child, Preschool; Cicatrix; Female; Follow-Up Studies; Humans; Infant; Kidney; Male; Pyelonephritis; Succimer; Tomography, Emission-Computed, Single-Photon; Urinary Tract Infections; Vesico-Ureteral Reflux

2003
Dimercaptosuccinic acid and Prussian Blue in the treatment of acute thallium poisoning in rats.
    Journal of toxicology. Clinical toxicology, 2003, Volume: 41, Issue:2

    Despite being banned as a pesticide, thallium still results in human and animal poisonings. Current recommended treatments include the use of the chemical Prussian Blue. Limitations in its availability may result in Prussian Blue not being obtainable in the thallium-poisoned patient. The chelator 2,3-Dimercaptosuccinic acid (DMSA) is currently FDA-approved for use in childhood lead poisoning and has been reported to be beneficial in treating other heavy metal poisonings. The objective of this study was to determine the efficacy of DMSA as a treatment for thallium poisoning by studying mortality and whole-brain concentrations in thallium poisoned rats.. Rats were gavaged with 30 mg/kg of thallium. After 24 hours they were randomized to DMSA (n = 20) 50 mg/kg twice daily for 5 days, Prussian Blue (n = 20) 50 mg/kg twice daily for 5 days, or control (n = 30). Animals were monitored twice daily for weight loss and mortality. Animals losing greater than 20% of their starting weight were euthanized and counted as a mortality. All surviving rats at 120 hours had their brains harvested and digested and underwent subsequent thallium analysis.. The rate of survival in DMSA-treated animals compared to control was 45% vs. 21%, p = 0.07. Mean whole-brain thallium concentrations between DMSA and control rats were 3.4 vs. 3.0 microg/g, p = 0.06. Prussian Blue-treated rats had significantly improved survival (70% vs. 21%, p < 0.01) and lower whole-brain thallium concentrations (1.6 vs. 3.0 microg/g, p < 0.01 tissue) compared to controls.. DMSA failed to reduce brain thallium concentrations in rats poisoned with thallium and had an indeterminate effect on mortality while Prussian Blue significantly reduces both brain thallium concentrations and mortality.

    Topics: Acute Disease; Animals; Antidotes; Brain; Ferrocyanides; Male; Rats; Rats, Sprague-Dawley; Succimer; Survival Analysis; Thallium; Tissue Distribution

2003
Acute renal damage in infants after first urinary tract infection.
    Pediatric nephrology (Berlin, Germany), 2002, Volume: 17, Issue:7

    Urinary tract infection (UTI) is one of the most common causes of unexplained fever in neonates. The aim of this study was to determine the incidence of urinary tract anomalies and acute renal damage in neonates who presented with first urinary tract infection in the first 8 weeks of life. We reviewed the records of 95 infants, who were hospitalised with UTI during a 6-year period (1994-1999). Patients with antenatally diagnosed hydronephrosis and incomplete radiological investigations were excluded from the study. Of the remaining 57 patients, 42 were boys and 15 girls. The mean age at diagnosis was 32 days (range 5-60 days). All patients underwent renal ultrasonography (US), voiding cystourethrogram (VCUG) and (99m)Tc-dimercaptosuccinic acid (DMSA) scan. Urinary tract abnormalities were detected in 20 (35%) patients. Vesicoureteral reflux (VUR) was found in 19 (33%) neonates, 7 girls and 12 boys. Acute cortical defects on DMSA scan were present in 19 kidneys of patients with VUR and in 25 of those without reflux. Only one-third of neonates after first symptomatic UTI had VUR. We recommend that US, VCUG, and DMSA scan should be routinely performed after the first UTI in infants younger than 8 weeks.

    Topics: Acute Disease; Chelating Agents; Female; Humans; Infant; Infant, Newborn; Kidney; Male; Radionuclide Imaging; Retrospective Studies; Succimer; Urinary Tract Infections; Vesico-Ureteral Reflux

2002
Age-related radiological imaging in children with acute pyelonephritis.
    Pediatric nephrology (Berlin, Germany), 2002, Volume: 17, Issue:1

    Accurate diagnosis of acute pyelonephritis (APN) using clinical and laboratory parameters is often difficult in children. The aims of this retrospective study were twofold. Firstly, to correlate the clinical and laboratory manifestations of APN with the results of the dimercaptosuccinic acid (DMSA) renal scan in different age groups. Secondly, to compare the DMSA renal scan, renal ultrasonography (RUS), and voiding cystourethrography (VCUG) in patients with clinical APN. The DMSA renal scan was utilized as the gold standard for renal involvement. We determined the sensitivity of these tests in febrile urinary tract infections (UTI) in three age groups: group I less than 2 years; group II 2-8 years; group III older than 8 years. During the period January 1992 through December 1998, 222 children presented with a febrile UTI. All patients had a DMSA renal scan, 208 had contrast VCUG, and 163 had RUS. The clinical and laboratory manifestation of pyelonephritis correlated better with a positive DMSA renal scan in the older children than in the younger children; 85% of the DMSA renal scans were positive in group III; 69% in group II; 48% in group I (P<0.001). Vesicoureteral reflux detected by contrast VCUG was more prevalent in the younger age groups. Although high grades of reflux (grade IV-V) correlated better with a positive DMSA renal scan, it did not reach a level of statistical significance (P>0.05). RUS did not correlate with a positive DMSA renal scan in any age group.

    Topics: Acute Disease; Child; Child, Preschool; Female; Humans; Infant; Kidney; Male; Pyelonephritis; Radiography; Radionuclide Imaging; Succimer; Ultrasonography; Urethra; Urinary Bladder

2002
Plasma and urinary soluble adhesion molecule expression is increased during first documented acute pyelonephritis.
    Archives of disease in childhood, 2002, Volume: 86, Issue:3

    The degree of inflammatory reaction and leucocyte trafficking during acute pyelonephritis has been related to the risk of developing renal parenchymal scarring. Adhesion molecules play a central role in leucocyte recruitment during inflammation.. (1) To determine whether circulating and urinary concentrations of E-selectin and intercellular adhesion molecule 1 (ICAM-1) were abnormal during first documented acute pyelonephritis; (2) to investigate whether circulating or urinary concentrations were predictive for the development of abnormalities on DMSA imaging.. Plasma and urine samples were collected from 40 children with a first episode of acute pyelonephritis within one week of infection (acute sample) and at six weeks (late sample). Control samples were collected from 21 healthy age matched controls and 18 age matched controls with febrile illness not secondary to urinary tract infection.. Plasma and urinary sE-selectin were higher in acute samples (median 176.3 ng/ml and 0.12 ng/mmol respectively) compared with late (97.8 ng/ml and 0.029 ng/mmol) and both control (65.6 ng/ml and 0 ng/mmol) and febrile control (urine 0 ng/mmol) samples. Plasma sICAM-1 was higher in acute samples (428 ng/ml) than controls (365.2 ng/ml), and acute sICAM-1 urine concentrations were higher than febrile control concentrations (3.2 v 0.7 ng/mmol). No correlations were detected between sE-selectin or sICAM-1 and acute or late DMSA scan changes.. Plasma and urinary sE-selectin and sICAM-1 are significantly increased during acute pyelonephritis, though no correlation exists between the presence of high plasma or urine concentrations and DMSA scan changes, both during acute infection and six weeks post-infection.

    Topics: Acute Disease; C-Reactive Protein; Child; Child, Preschool; E-Selectin; Humans; Infant; Intercellular Adhesion Molecule-1; Pyelonephritis; Radionuclide Imaging; Succimer

2002
[Power Doppler sonography and acute pyelonephritis in children: comparison with Tc-DMSA scintigraphy].
    Archives de pediatrie : organe officiel de la Societe francaise de pediatrie, 2002, Volume: 9, Issue:1

    Acute pyelonephritis is a common infection in children. The clinical and biological diagnosis is still sometimes difficult. For most authors, Technecium 99m dimercaptosuccinic acid scintigraphy is considered as the gold standard tool for diagnosis but it is invasive and expensive. The aim of our study was to compare the sensitivity and the specificity of B-mode sonography and power doppler to DMSA-Tc scintigraphy in acute pyelonephritis.. Forty-nine children were enrolled in this study with suspicion of pyelonephritis. All infants underwent doppler sonography and scintigraphy within 48 hours after their hospitalization. Doppler sonography criteria were increased kidney size, thickness of sinus wall, vascular defect, and various echogenicity of the kidneys (focal or diffuse hyperechogenicity or focal hypoechogenicity).. Among 28 children with a positive scintigraphy, 15 had a positive doppler sonography (sensitivity 54%) and 13 had a negative doppler sonography. Among 21 children with a negative scintigraphy, 20 had a negative doppler sonography (specificity 95%) and one had a positive doppler sonography.. In clinically suspected acute pyelonephritis, doppler sonography has a high specificity. A positive doppler sonography should avoid the use of scintigraphy.

    Topics: Acute Disease; Adolescent; Child; Child, Preschool; Humans; Infant; Pyelonephritis; Radionuclide Imaging; Sensitivity and Specificity; Succimer; Time Factors; Ultrasonography, Doppler

2002
Lead poisoning: case studies.
    British journal of clinical pharmacology, 2002, Volume: 53, Issue:5

    Early clinical features of lead toxicity are non-specific and an occupational history is particularly valuable. Lead in the body comprises 2% in the blood (t1/2 35 days) and 95% in bone and dentine (t1/2 20-30 years). Blood lead may remain elevated for years after cessation from long exposure, due to redistribution from bone. Blood lead concentration is the most widely used marker for inorganic lead exposure. Zinc protoporphyrin (ZPP) concentration in blood usefully reflects lead exposure over the prior 3 months. Symptomatic patients with blood lead concentration >2.4 micromol l-1 (50 microg dl-1) or in any event >3.8 micromol l-1 (80 microg dl-1) should receive sodium calciumedetate i.v., followed by succimer by mouth for 19 days. Asymptomatic patients with blood lead concentration >2.4 micromol l-1 (50 microg dl-1) may be treated with succimer alone. Sodium calciumedetate should be given with dimercaprol to treat lead encephalopathy.

    Topics: Acute Disease; Adult; Chelating Agents; Edetic Acid; Humans; Lead; Lead Poisoning; Male; Middle Aged; Occupational Diseases; Succimer

2002
Procalcitonin as a marker of acute pyelonephritis in infants and children.
    Pediatric nephrology (Berlin, Germany), 2002, Volume: 17, Issue:6

    In the absence of specific symptomatology in children, the early diagnosis of acute pyelonephritis is a challenge, particularly during infancy. In an attempt to differentiate acute pyelonephritis from lower urinary tract infection (UTI), we measured serum procalcitonin (PCT) levels and compared these with other commonly used inflammatory markers. We evaluated the ability of serum PCT levels to predict renal involvement, as assessed by dimercaptosuccinic acid (DMSA) scintigraphy. Serum C-reactive protein (CRP), leukocyte counts, and PCT levels were measured in 64 children admitted for suspected UTI. Renal parenchymal involvement was assessed by (99m)Tc-DMSA scintigraphy in the first 7 days after admission. In acute pyelonephritis, the median PCT level was significantly higher than in the lower UTI group (3.41, range 0.36-12.4 microg/l vs. 0.13, range 0.02-2.15 microg/l, P<0.0001). In these two groups, respectively, median CRP levels were 120 (range 62-249 mg/l) and 74.5 (range 14.5-235 mg/l, P=0.012) and leukocyte counts were 15,910/mm(3) (range 10,200-26,900) and 14,600/mm(3) (range 8,190-26,470, P=0.34). For the prediction of acute pyelonephritis, the sensitivity and specificity of PCT were 94.1% and 89.7%, respectively; CRP had a sensitivity of 100%, but a specificity of 18.5%. We conclude that serum PCT may be an accurate marker for early diagnosis of acute pyelonephritis.

    Topics: Acute Disease; Biomarkers; C-Reactive Protein; Calcitonin; Calcitonin Gene-Related Peptide; Child, Preschool; Diagnosis, Differential; Escherichia coli Infections; Female; Humans; Infant; Infant, Newborn; Kidney; Leukocyte Count; Male; Prognosis; Prospective Studies; Protein Precursors; Pyelonephritis; Radionuclide Imaging; Sensitivity and Specificity; Succimer; Urinary Tract Infections

2002
Polymorphonuclear elastase as a diagnostic marker of acute pyelonephritis in children.
    Pediatrics, 2000, Volume: 105, Issue:2

    Experimental evidence suggests that neutrophils and their metabolites play an important role in the pathogenesis of pyelonephritis. The aim of this study was to investigate the diagnostic value of polymorphonuclear elastase-a(1)-antitrypsin complex (E-a(1)-Pi) for the detection of acute pyelonephritis in children.. Eighty-three patients, 29 boys and 54 girls, 25 days to 14 years of age, with first-time symptomatic urinary tract infection were prospectively studied. Fifty-seven healthy children served as controls. Dimercaptosuccinic acid (DMSA) scan and voiding cystourethrography were performed in all patients. Plasma and urinary E-a(1)-Pi, C-reactive protein (CRP), erythrocyte sedimentation rate (ESR), neutrophil count, urinary N-acetyl-beta-glucosaminidase (NAG), N-acetyl-beta-glucosaminidase b (NAG b), and creatinine levels were measured in all patients on admission and 3 days after the introduction of antibiotics. The same markers were also measured in the control subjects.. Planar DMSA scintigraphy demonstrated changes of acute pyelonephritis in 30 of 83 children (group A). It was normal in the remaining 53 children (group B). The sex and age distributions were not significantly different between the 2 groups, as well as between the patients and the control subjects (group C). Nineteen of the 53 children with a normal DMSA had body temperature >/=38 degrees C, whereas all but 4 children with abnormal DMSA had temperature >/=38 degrees C. Therefore, the temperature was significantly different between these 2 groups. The sensitivity and specificity of fever (>/=38 degrees C) as an indicator of renal involvement based on isotopic findings were 86% and 64%, respectively. Given the significant number of the febrile children with normal DMSA scintiscans, group B was subdivided into B(1) with 19 febrile children (14 boys and 5 girls) and B(2) with 34 children whose body temperature was below 38 degrees C (8 boys and 26 girls). The sex and age distribution was significantly different between groups B(1) and B(2). The mean age of group B(1) was.78 years (range: 28 days to 9 years; median:.25 years; standard deviation: 2.1). All but 1 child in this group were younger than 1 year of age. In contrast, in group B(2), there were only 4 infants, the remaining 30 children were older than 2.5 years (mean age: 6 years; median: 7 years; standard deviation: 3.5; range: 34 days to 12 years). The mean duration of fever before hospital admission was 2.8 days for group A and 1.8 days for group B(1). This difference was not statistically significant. Similarly, body temperature was not significantly different between these 2 groups. The distribution of plasma E-a(1)-Pi values was normal in the control subjects. The sensitivity and specificity of plasma E-a(1)-Pi, as an indicator of renal involvement, were 96% and 50%, respectively, taking the 95th percentile of the reference range as a cutoff value. However, considering as a cutoff value the level of 72 microg/dL (95th percentile of group B(2)), its sensitivity and specificity were 74% and 86%, respectively. Plasma E-a(1)-Pi levels were significantly elevated in group A compared with group B and in both groups, the plasma E-a(1)-Pi values were significantly higher than in the control subjects. A significant difference also was noticed between group A and each of the subgroups B(1) and B(2) and also between the subgroups themselves. Plasma E-a(1)-Pi concentrations correlated significantly with neutro

    Topics: Acute Disease; Adolescent; alpha 1-Antitrypsin; Case-Control Studies; Chelating Agents; Child; Child, Preschool; Female; Humans; Infant; Infant, Newborn; Leukocyte Elastase; Male; Pyelonephritis; Sensitivity and Specificity; Succimer

2000
Acute childhood pyelonephritis: predictive value of positive sonographic findings in regard to later parenchymal scarring.
    Academic radiology, 1998, Volume: 5, Issue:5

    The authors evaluated the importance of positive sonographic findings in acute childhood pyelonephritis.. A total of 290 children (91 boys, 199 girls, aged 4 days to 15 years [median, 394 days]) with clinically suspected acute pyelonephritis underwent initial renal gray-scale ultrasound (US) and dimercaptosuccinate scintigraphic examination within 3 days of onset. A total of 173 patients underwent color or energy US examination. One hundred fifteen children with normal scintigraphic or pathologic findings (other than acute pyelonephritis) were excluded from further study; 170 patients with abnormal scintigraphic findings underwent follow-up scintigraphic scanning 60-90 days later.. When pathologic structures other than acute pyelonephritis were not considered, the diagnostic value of gray-scale US was poor, with a sensitivity of 45.5%, a specificity of 86.6%, a positive predictive value of 88.8%, and a negative predictive value of only 40.6%. In regard to future renal scarring, gray-scale US had a positive predictive value of 67.7%, a negative predictive value of 40%, and a likelihood ratio of 1.16. Abnormal Doppler findings helped predict future scarring with a positive predictive value of 85.7%, a negative predictive value of 37.2%, a very low sensitivity of 26.9%, a high specificity of 90.6%, and a likelihood ratio of 2.87.. Positive US Doppler findings in children with clinically suspected acute pyelonephritis indicate the need for immediate treatment. A positive initial gray-scale US examination does not predict future renal scarring, but a positive Doppler examination indicates a high probability of scarring. Negative gray-scale or Doppler US does not exclude a diagnosis of acute pyelonephritis and it cannot predict an absence of future scarring.

    Topics: Acute Disease; Adolescent; Chelating Agents; Chi-Square Distribution; Child; Child, Preschool; Cicatrix; False Positive Reactions; Female; Follow-Up Studies; Humans; Infant; Infant, Newborn; Kidney Diseases; Likelihood Functions; Male; Predictive Value of Tests; Pyelonephritis; Radionuclide Imaging; Sensitivity and Specificity; Succimer; Ultrasonography, Doppler; Ultrasonography, Doppler, Color

1998
The DMSA scan in paediatric urinary tract infection.
    Australasian radiology, 1998, Volume: 42, Issue:4

    The objective of the present paper was to review the use of the dimercaptosuccinic acid (DMSA) scan in urinary tract infection at British Columbia's Children's Hospital to determine the frequency of cortical defects and the association between vesico-ureteric reflux and the presence of cortical defects in children with urinary tract infection. A total of 129 consecutive children with a urinary tract infection referred for a DMSA scan in a 2-year period (January 1992-January 1994) were retrospectively studied. The results were analysed in terms of kidneys, and the incidence of cortical defects was determined. Eighty-eight patients (68%) had a radiographic micturating cysto-urethrogram within 6 months of the DMSA scan, and in this group the relationship of defects with vesico-ureteric reflux was determined. Overall, 81/258 (31%) of kidneys had a cortical defect on a DMSA scan. Of those who had a micturating cysto-urethrogram, 53/176 (30%) kidneys had vesico-ureteric reflux, and of those that had reflux, 21/53 (40%) had a cortical defect on a DMSA scan. In the group of children without reflux, 38/123 (31%) had a cortical defect. Renal cortical scan defects are common findings in paediatric urinary infection, and frequently occur in the absence of vesico-ureteric reflux. These defects represent either established scars or acute pyelonephritis that can proceed to scarring. The micturating cysto-urethrogram alone is insufficient as a screening modality to identify those kidneys at risk of renal scarring.

    Topics: Acute Disease; Adolescent; Chi-Square Distribution; Child; Child, Preschool; Cicatrix; Female; Humans; Infant; Kidney Cortex; Male; Organotechnetium Compounds; Pyelonephritis; Retrospective Studies; Succimer; Tomography, Emission-Computed, Single-Photon; Urinary Tract Infections; Vesico-Ureteral Reflux

1998
Imaging of pyelonephritis.
    Pediatric radiology, 1997, Volume: 27, Issue:2

    Accurate diagnosis of pyelonephritis using clinical and laboratory parameters is often difficult, especially in children. The main aims of this prospective study were to compare the value of different imaging techniques [renal sonography, cortical scintigraphy with technetium-99m dimercaptosuccinic acid (99mTc DMSA) and computed tomography (CT)] in detecting renal involvement in acute urinary tract infections and to determine the sensitivity of DMSA scans for permanent renal scars 6 months later.. Between February 1992 and January 1993, 55 children admitted to our pediatric unit with febrile symptomatic urinary tract infections were eligible for analysis. Ultrasonography (US), DMSA scanning and micturating cystourethrography were performed in every case. Only 18 children underwent CT. A second DMSA scan was performed in 48 children a mean of 7.5 months after the first.. US abnormalities were found in 25 children (45 %). The first DMSA scan showed a parenchymal aspect suggestive of pyelonephritis in 51 patients (93 %). Among the 18 patients studied by CT, 14 had abnormalities. Normal US findings did not rule out renal parenchymal involvement. Scintigraphy appeared to be more sensitive than CT for renal involvement. The frequency and degree of initial renal parenchymal damage seemed to correlate with vesicoureteral reflux, but the most severe initial parenchymal defects were not associated with marked clinical or laboratory manifestations. Repeat DMSA scans, performed on 45 kidneys with abnormalities at the first examination, showed resolution in 19, improvement in 16, persistence in 8 and deterioration in 2. The prevalence of vesicoureteral reflux was not higher in patients with renal scarring on the second DMSA scan than in patients whose scans showed an improvement.. DMSA scans should be considered as a reference in the detection and follow-up of renal scarring associated with acute urinary tract infection as this technique is more sensitive than US and CT, the latter being unsuitable because it entails radiation exposure and sedation of patients.

    Topics: Acute Disease; Adolescent; Child; Child, Preschool; Cicatrix; Diagnostic Imaging; Disease Progression; Female; Follow-Up Studies; Humans; Infant; Infant, Newborn; Kidney; Kidney Diseases; Male; Organotechnetium Compounds; Prevalence; Prospective Studies; Pyelonephritis; Radionuclide Imaging; Radiopharmaceuticals; Sensitivity and Specificity; Succimer; Technetium Tc 99m Dimercaptosuccinic Acid; Tomography, X-Ray Computed; Ultrasonography; Urethra; Urinary Bladder; Urinary Tract Infections; Urination; Vesico-Ureteral Reflux

1997
Kidney swelling. Findings on DMSA scintigraphy.
    Clinical nuclear medicine, 1997, Volume: 22, Issue:5

    To develop criteria identifying swollen kidneys on dimercaptosuccinic acid (DMSA) renal scintigraphy in acute pyelonephritis with regard to the DMSA distribution pattern, kidney functional size, and radioactive uptake.. Thirty-eight children aged 15 days to 7 years with known pyelonephritis were examined with DMSA renal scintigraphy. All children were observed 2 or 3 times. In total, 94 scintigrams were evaluated. Qualitative and quantitative criteria for swelling were defined.. Thirty-one observed kidneys satisfied the criteria of swelling. Quantitatively, kidney length and width/length were greater in swollen kidneys. Kidney uptake in percent of injected dose and kidney uptake/background were lower in swollen kidneys. Qualitatively, focal radioactive uptake defects known from a previous examination were sometimes obscured by swelling, and reappeared at follow-up. In 5 children with signs of swelling on repeat imaging, scintigraphy reinfection at the time of swelling was verified.. Swollen kidneys may be the only sign of acute pyelonephritis on DMSA scintigraphy and swelling may obscure focal radioactive uptake defects. Measurement of kidney size and radioactive uptake can help identify swollen kidneys at DMSA scintigraphy and disclose acute pyelonephritis in the absence of overt clinical symptoms.

    Topics: Acute Disease; Child; Child, Preschool; Edema; Follow-Up Studies; Humans; Infant; Infant, Newborn; Kidney; Organotechnetium Compounds; Pyelonephritis; Radionuclide Imaging; Radiopharmaceuticals; Succimer; Technetium Tc 99m Dimercaptosuccinic Acid

1997
[Acute pyelonephritis and renal gammagraphy with 99mTc-DMSA].
    Anales espanoles de pediatria, 1997, Volume: Spec No 1

    Topics: Acute Disease; Diagnosis, Differential; Humans; Infant; Infant, Newborn; Kidney Function Tests; Pyelonephritis; Radionuclide Imaging; Spectrometry, Gamma; Succimer

1997
Technetium-99m-DMSA renal SPECT in diagnosing and monitoring pediatric acute pyelonephritis.
    Journal of nuclear medicine : official publication, Society of Nuclear Medicine, 1996, Volume: 37, Issue:8

    This study compares the sensitivity of 99mTc-dimercaptosuccinic acid (DMSA) renal SPECT with planar scintigraphy, concluding the importance of 99mTc-DMSA renal SPECT for the early diagnosis of acute pyelonephritis (APN) in patients under 3 yr of age.. Twenty-seven children under 3 yr of age, with clinical and/or laboratory suspicion of APN, were investigated. All 99mTc-DMSA renal SPECT and planar images and voiding cystoureterogram (VCUG) were obtained within 3 days of hospitalization.. In the first examination, renal cortical defects were detected in 23 patients (42 kidneys) with SPECT and in 9 patients (11 kidneys) with planar scintigraphy. One year after treatment, constant renal cortical lesions were observed in 11 patients (14 kidneys) with SPECT and 4 patients (4 kidneys) with planar scintigraphy. The high grades of vesicoureteral reflux (VUR) (grade >or= 3) correlate better with APN diagnosed by SPECT (34 kidneys) than by planar scintigraphy (8 kidneys). Multiple renal cortical defects (number of lesions >or= 4) were only seen in patients under 1.5 yr old and none of those with a negative 99mTc-DMSA renal SPECT had a positive 99mTc-DMSA renal planar scintigraphy at any time. There is a significant difference (p < 0.05) between the diagnostic ability of these two methods of examination.. Our results suggest that 99mTc-DMSA renal SPECT should be used, where possible, instead of planar DMSA in routine examination of children with clinical suspicion of APN, especially for those under 3 yr of age.

    Topics: Acute Disease; Child; Child, Preschool; Diatrizoate; Humans; Infant; Infant, Newborn; Kidney; Kidney Cortex; Organotechnetium Compounds; Pyelonephritis; Radiography; Sensitivity and Specificity; Succimer; Technetium Tc 99m Dimercaptosuccinic Acid; Tomography, Emission-Computed, Single-Photon; Vesico-Ureteral Reflux

1996
Early 99mTc dimercaptosuccinic acid (DMSA) scintigraphy in symptomatic first-time urinary tract infection.
    Acta paediatrica (Oslo, Norway : 1992), 1996, Volume: 85, Issue:4

    During a 2 year period, 175 children below 6 years of age (median 0.4 year) with non-obstructive symptomatic urinary tract infection were studied by 99mTc dimercaptosuccinic acid (DMSA) scintigraphy. DMSA scintigraphy was performed at a median of 10 days after the start of treatment and was abnormal in 73 children (42%), equivocal in 29 (16%) and normal in 73 (42%). Reflux was seen in 27% of all children and in 38% of the renal units that were abnormal at DMSA scintigraphy. A decreasing frequency of abnormalities at DMSA scintigraphy was seen within the first 14 days after the start of treatment. C-reactive protein and grade of reflux correlated significantly with abnormal DMSA studies. To demonstrate renal involvement in acute urinary tract infection, DMSA scintigraphy should be performed within days after the start of treatment. It is noteworthy that reflux was seen in less than half of renal units with abnormal DMSA scintigraphy.

    Topics: Acute Disease; Age Factors; Anti-Bacterial Agents; Body Temperature; C-Reactive Protein; Child; Child, Preschool; Female; Humans; Infant; Infant, Newborn; Male; Organotechnetium Compounds; Radionuclide Imaging; Reproducibility of Results; Risk Factors; Succimer; Technetium Tc 99m Dimercaptosuccinic Acid; Urinary Tract Infections; Urography; Vesico-Ureteral Reflux

1996
Technetium-99m-DMSA renal cortical scintigraphy to detect experimental acute pyelonephritis in piglets: comparison of planar (pinhole) and SPECT imaging.
    Journal of nuclear medicine : official publication, Society of Nuclear Medicine, 1996, Volume: 37, Issue:10

    The purpose of this study was to directly compare the sensitivity and specificity of SPECT and pinhole imaging for the detection of acute pyelonephritis using histology as the standard of reference.. Bilateral vesicoureteral reflux of infected urine was induced in 16 piglets (32 kidneys) by unroofing the intravesical ureter and subsequently instilling a broth culture of E. coli into the bladder. DMSA scans were obtained by both pinhole and SPECT techniques at 24 hr (4 piglets), 48 hr (5 piglets), 72 hr (4 piglets) and 10 days (3 piglets) after instillation of bacteria into the bladder. Kidneys were harvested immediately after scintigraphy for histopathologic examination. Results of the SPECT images, pinhole images and histologic findings were interpreted independently in a blinded fashion. The images of each kidney were classified as positive or negative for pyelonephritis regardless of the severity and number of lesions. To evaluate accuracy of SPECT and pinhole imaging for the detection of individual lesions, each kidney was arbitrarily divided into three zones (upper, middle and lower). Image findings were then compared with the pathology results for the presence or absence of pyelonephritis in each zone.. Histopathology revealed pyelonephritis in 24 of 32 kidneys (58 of 96 zones). The sensitivity of the DMSA scan for detection of affected kidneys was 92% for SPECT and 83% for pinhole; overall accuracy was 88% for both. The sensitivity of SPECT for the detection of affected renal zones was slightly better than pinhole imaging (91% compared with 86%), but its specificity was lower (82% compared with 95%) resulting in a similar accuracy. Excluding four piglets where scans were obtained within 24 hr after instillation of bacteria into the bladder, the sensitivity of SPECT and pinhole for the detection of affected kidneys were 95% and 90%, respectively. Their overall accuracy were 96% and 92%. In this subgroup, the sensitivity, specificity and accuracy of SPECT for the detection of involved zones were 96%, 95% and 96%, respectively. The corresponding values for pinhole imaging were 90%, 95% and 92%, respectively.. Although the sensitivity of SPECT for the detection of acute pyelonephritis is slightly better than pinhole DMSA scan, the overall accuracy of these two imaging techniques is essentially the same.

    Topics: Acute Disease; Animals; Kidney; Kidney Cortex; Male; Organotechnetium Compounds; Pyelonephritis; Sensitivity and Specificity; Succimer; Swine; Tomography, Emission-Computed, Single-Photon

1996
DMSA renal scans in adults with acute pyelonephritis.
    Clinical nephrology, 1996, Volume: 46, Issue:2

    The 99mTc-DMSA scan is accepted as the most sensitive imaging modality for detecting areas of renal parenchymal scarring. More recently the DMSA scan has also been shown to be of value in imaging areas of renal parenchymal involvement in both children and adults with acute pyelonephritis. We assessed the acute DMSA scan findings in a consecutive series of 81 patients hospitalized with acute pyelonephritis. Acute pyelonephritis was diagnosed if the patient had a fever of > 37.8 degrees C, loin pain or tenderness and infected urine (99% Escherichia coli). Patients had a blood culture taken (8 positive), as well as a hematological (leukocytosis 75%) and biochemical screen, C-reactive protein (CRP) (increased in 57 of 66 [86%]) and urinary tract ultrasonography. If the initial DMSA scan was abnormal it was repeated after three months and in some instances again at six months. If persisting defects were noted an intravenous urogram was then undertaken. Of the 81 patients, 37 (46%) had an abnormality on the DMSA scan. Nineteen had a single defect, 12 multifocal defects, five features suggestive of pre-existing renal parenchymal scarring (all later shown to have reflux nephropathy) and one a shrunken kidney. Those patients with an abnormal scan had a higher CRP concentration than those with a normal scan. Of the 31 patients who had either a focal or multifocal defect on their initial DMSA scan there was adequate follow-up on 24 patients. In 18 of these the defects had resolved by six months (usually within three months), while of the remainder, three were shown to have reflux nephropathy, one had a large single renal cyst and another an area of parenchymal calcification. Fifty-three of 76 patients (70%) had normal ultrasonography. In adults with acute pyelonephritis, the DMSA scan may prove to be the most useful renal imaging procedure.

    Topics: Acute Disease; Adolescent; Adult; Aged; Blood Cell Count; Female; Follow-Up Studies; Humans; Kidney; Male; Middle Aged; Organotechnetium Compounds; Pyelonephritis; Radionuclide Imaging; Recurrence; Retrospective Studies; Sensitivity and Specificity; Succimer; Technetium Tc 99m Dimercaptosuccinic Acid; Ultrasonography

1996
99Tcm-DMSA renal scintigraphy for acute pyelonephritis in adults: planar and/or SPET imaging?
    Nuclear medicine communications, 1996, Volume: 17, Issue:10

    A number of authors have indicated a more sensitive detection of renal cortical defects using single photon emission tomography (SPET) compared with planar imaging when performing 99Tcm-dimer-captosuccinic acid (99Tcm-DMSA) renal scintigraphy. The place of SPET in the evaluation of kidneys in adults suspected of acute pyelonephritis (APN) remains controversial, however. The aim of this study was to address the role of SPET in adult patients suspected of having APN. Planar and SPET 99Tcm-DMSA renal imaging was performed in 53 patients. The data sets were separated and presented in random order to three independent observers. The kidneys were divided into three segments, which were classified as normal, definitely abnormal or equivocal. Ir. a second step, the number of lesions (definite or equivocal) on planar and SPET imaging were counted. The overall concordance between the planar and SPET imaging scores was 90.9, 89.9 and 87.7% for the three observers, respectively. Inter-observer discordance was recorded in a small percentage of both planar and SPET images. The number of lesions, based on the average of the three observers, was 22 for planar and 25 for SPET imaging. Obvious differences between observers were noted. The planar images were more often interpreted as equivocal by the least experienced observer. The more experienced observers gained limited additional information using SPET routinely. Most equivocal lesions on the planar scintigrams were observed in the lower segment. For SPET, no such distribution was noted. High-quality 99Tcm-DMSA images allow the detection of the same number of lesions as SPET in adults suspected of APN.

    Topics: Acute Disease; Adult; Aged; Female; Humans; Kidney; Kidney Cortex; Male; Middle Aged; Observer Variation; Organotechnetium Compounds; Pyelonephritis; Reproducibility of Results; Sensitivity and Specificity; Succimer; Technetium Tc 99m Dimercaptosuccinic Acid; Tomography, Emission-Computed; Tomography, Emission-Computed, Single-Photon

1996
Effect of monoisoamyl meso-2,3-dimercaptosuccinate on the pathology of acute cadmium intoxication.
    Journal of toxicology and environmental health, 1995, Volume: 45, Issue:3

    The ability of monoisoamyl meso-2,3-dimercaptosuccinate (Mi-ADMS) to offset the characteristic organ pathology of intraperitoneally administered cadmium chloride (CdCl2) and that of the cadmium-cysteine complex has been examined in male Wistar rats. The tissues examined for damage were the testes, kidney, liver, pancreas, and bone marrow. At a high dose of CdCl2 (0.03 mmol/kg, ip) testicular damage was completely prevented by Mi-ADMS (0.50 mmol/kg, ip) given immediately. A decrease in the protective ability of the antagonist was observed following delayed administration of Mi-ADMS given at 1, 2, 4, and 24 h post CdCl2. At a lower dose of CdCl2 (0.006 mmol/kg, ip), Mi-ADMS furnished essentially full protection from testicular damage when given (0.50 mmol/kg, sc) at 0 and 1 h after CdCl2. The administration of cadmium-cysteine complex (0.01 mmol/kg, ip) induced notable renal tubular damage, which was antagonized by the administration of Mi-ADMS (0.50 mmol/kg, ip) as late as 4 h after the complex. At a 24-h delay, extensive tubular necrosis was found on sacrifice after 4 d. The administration of cadmium-cysteine complex ip reduced, but did not eliminate, the characteristic damage of the seminiferous tubules found for cadmium alone. There is a progressive reduction of testicular weight as the interval between cadmium and antagonist administration increases. The average kidney weights of the animals given CdCl2-cysteine complex were increased in comparison to normal controls. The antagonistic effects of Mi-ADMS treatment on cadmium intoxication in the kidneys and the testes of rats is very similar to that found for effective dithiocarbamate antagonists. In order to obtain complete protection of the testes from the deteterious effects of cadmium, such antagonists must be administered no later than about 1 h after the cadmium.

    Topics: Acute Disease; Animals; Cadmium; Cadmium Chloride; Chelating Agents; Chlorides; Cysteine; Drug Combinations; Kidney; Male; Rats; Rats, Wistar; Succimer; Testis

1995
Sonographic measurement of renal enlargement in children with acute pyelonephritis and time needed for resolution: implications for renal growth assessment.
    AJR. American journal of roentgenology, 1995, Volume: 165, Issue:2

    Failure of a kidney to grow satisfactorily in childhood is evidence of renal disease. Because kidneys may enlarge during an episode of acute pyelonephritis, concomitant renal length measurements cannot be used as baselines for growth assessment. This study was designed to determine the degree of renal enlargement in children with acute pyelonephritis and the time the enlargement takes to resolve after treatment is started to find the optimum time for obtaining baseline measurements.. In a cohort study, 180 children younger than 5 years old with their first proven acute urinary tract infection, with or without pyelonephritis, had renal scintigraphy and sonography within 15 days of starting treatment. The presence of cortical defects on scintigrams indicated pyelonephritis. The lengths of kidneys with and without scintigraphic defects (i.e., with and without pyelonephritis) were compared, adjusting for age and sex, and the length of kidneys with defects was related to time elapsed between the start of treatment and sonography.. Ninety-nine kidneys (28%) in 77 children (43%) had scintigraphic defects. Kidneys with defects were an average of 3.2 mm longer than kidneys without defects. Length and time interval between treatment and sonography in kidneys with defects correlated negatively, with mean length approaching that of kidneys without defects by 10-11 days.. Kidneys with acute pyelonephritis initially increase in length but return to normal on average by the 11th day of treatment. If poor renal growth is used as an indication of renal disease, sonography should be delayed or repeated at least 2 weeks after the start of treatment to determine the length of the uninflamed kidney.

    Topics: Acute Disease; Analysis of Variance; Child, Preschool; Cohort Studies; Dilatation, Pathologic; Female; Gluconates; Humans; Infant; Kidney; Male; Organotechnetium Compounds; Prospective Studies; Pyelonephritis; Radionuclide Imaging; Regression Analysis; Succimer; Technetium Tc 99m Dimercaptosuccinic Acid; Time Factors; Ultrasonography

1995
Tc-99m DMSA SPECT imaging in patients with acute symptoms or history of UTI. Comparison with ultrasonography.
    Clinical nuclear medicine, 1995, Volume: 20, Issue:5

    Although planar cortical scintigraphy has been demonstrated to be a sensitive test for the detection of renal infection and scarring, one criticism has been radiation dose to the renal cortex. Recent studies of cortical SPECT suggest a sensitivity for detection of lesions equal to, or greater than, that of planar scans. The authors prospectively performed SPECT scans on 36 patients referred for recurrent urinary tract infection (UTI) (11 of 36), or recent onset of symptoms of UTI (25/36) after 30-40% of the standard 130 MBq (3.5 mCi) adult dose of Tc-99m DMSA was administered. Comparison was made with ultrasonography (US) performed at, or near, the same time. Of 67 kidneys evaluated, 34 (51%) demonstrated focal cortical loss on Tc-99m DMSA scintigraphy, 1 kidney was small in size, and 32 kidneys were normal. Abnormalities were noticed in only 13 (19%) of kidneys on US. Previously, US has been the primary imaging modality in the evaluation of the young patient with UTI. Triple-headed Tc-99m DMSA SPECT scintigraphy is a more sensitive, low-dose (12 mGy, 1.2 r) method of detecting renal cortical abnormalities. As such, it is a more appropriate test for identifying sites of cortical infection and scarring and for following patients on prophylactic therapy for evidence of asymptomatic break-through infections.

    Topics: Acute Disease; Child; Female; Humans; Kidney Cortex; Male; Organotechnetium Compounds; Prospective Studies; Pyelonephritis; Radiation Dosage; Sensitivity and Specificity; Succimer; Technetium Tc 99m Dimercaptosuccinic Acid; Tomography, Emission-Computed, Single-Photon; Ultrasonography; Urinary Tract Infections

1995
Imaging methods in the study of urinary tract infections in children.
    Acta medica portuguesa, 1994, Volume: 7 Suppl 1

    When studying a child with urinary tract infection it is important to detect and localize any renal (scar) or urologic anomaly. Here we study the information obtained using: renal and vesical ultrasound (US), DMSA scan and radiologic or isotopic cystogram.. We studied 148 children with more than one urinary infection and/or pyelonephritis; their mean age was 35.9 months (1-148 months); 55% were girls. The three diagnostic examinations--US, DMSA scan and cystogram were made in this order; the DMSA scan or cystogram was never made sooner than one month after the UTI.. In 42% of the children the three exams were normal; 4 of these children had another UTI and the urodynamic study revealed vesical disfunction. 11% had renal scars (DMSA scan) with normal US and cystogram; 30% had VUR, 50% of which had an altered US and 57% had renal scars on the DMSA scan. 12% of the children had an altered US with a cystogram showing no VUR; 66% of these had renal scars. 4% had vesical anomalies in the US and cystogram.. The three exams chosen were able to direct the diagnostic approach of UTI, being sufficient in most of the cases. We would like to emphasize the importance of the DMSA scan in diagnosing unsuspected renal scars.

    Topics: Acute Disease; Child; Child, Preschool; Evaluation Studies as Topic; Female; Humans; Infant; Kidney; Male; Organotechnetium Compounds; Pyelonephritis; Radionuclide Imaging; Recurrence; Succimer; Technetium Tc 99m Dimercaptosuccinic Acid; Ultrasonography; Urinary Bladder; Urinary Tract Infections

1994
Functional parameters and 99mtechnetium-dimercaptosuccinic acid scan in acute pyelonephritis.
    Pediatric nephrology (Berlin, Germany), 1994, Volume: 8, Issue:6

    The diagnostic value of 99mtechnetium-dimercaptosuccinic acid (DMSA) scintigraphy, ultrasonography and renal functional parameters [urine N-acetyl-beta-D-glucosaminidase (NAG)/creatinine and urine albumin/creatinine quotients] in acute pyelonephritis (APN) were studied in 39 children (28 girls, 11 boys, median age 9 months, range 2 weeks to 9.4 years, 28 patients < 1 year, 11 patients > 1 year) with first-time urinary tract infection. Ultrasonography of the urinary tract was performed on admission and together with DMSA scintigraphy (< 10 days from admission). Urine NAG/creatinine and urine albumin/creatinine quotients were measured daily and after 6-8 weeks. Ultrasonography revealed abnormalities in 12 of 39 (31%) patients [11/32 patients (34%) with positive DMSA scintigraphy], while DMSA uptake defects were present in 32 of 39 (82%) patients [21/28 < 1 year (75%), 11/11 > 1 year (100%), P = 0.08]. Urine NAG/creatinine and urine albumin/creatinine quotients were significantly higher in children < 1 year with APN, as well as in non-renal fever controls, than in older children. However, in both age groups the urine NAG/creatinine and urine albumin/creatinine quotients were significantly higher in APN than in non-renal fever. The urine NAG and albumin excretion decreased rapidly after the initiation of antimicrobial therapy and had normalized at 6-8 weeks. The size and grade of the DMSA uptake defect (DMSA score) did not correlate with duration of disease at admission, maximum C-reactive protein or maximum fever. The urine NAG/creatinine quotient in the children < 1 year showed, however, a significant correlation with the DMSA score (r = 0.58, P < 0.05), while no correlation was found in the older children. We conclude that DMSA scintigraphy is a sensitive method to confirm the clinical diagnosis of APN, although a substantial number of infants appear to have normal scans. Early determination of the urine NAG/creatinine and albumin/ creatinine quotients may further improve the diagnostics in the infant.

    Topics: Acetylglucosaminidase; Acute Disease; Albuminuria; Child; Child, Preschool; Creatinine; Female; Humans; Infant; Infant, Newborn; Male; Organotechnetium Compounds; Photometry; Pyelonephritis; Radionuclide Imaging; Succimer; Technetium Tc 99m Dimercaptosuccinic Acid; Ultrasonography

1994
The value of urinalysis in differentiating acute pyelonephritis from lower urinary tract infection in febrile infants.
    The Pediatric infectious disease journal, 1994, Volume: 13, Issue:9

    There is an ongoing debate on the best way to screen febrile infants for urinary tract infection. We examined the urinanalysis (UA) findings on admission among infants less than 16 weeks old, with and without acute pyelonephritis (APN), as defined by the dimercaptosuccinic acid (DMSA) renal scan findings, performed during a 57-month period. Forty-nine cases with a positive DMSA scan were compared with 79 negative study cases. A negative UA for leukocytes (< 5 white blood cells/high power field) was found in 4 of 49 (8.1%) cases with APN by DMSA, and in 34 of 79 (43%) cases with a negative DMSA (odds ratio 10.88 (95% confidence interval, 2.31 to 70.3; P < 0.001)). Three of the 4 infants not suspected to have APN by their UA findings would have been admitted for a full sepsis workup based on their clinical presentation and/or their laboratory findings on admission. We conclude that a fresh UA may be a sufficient screening method for the exclusion of APN in infants assessed for fever of no obvious origin.

    Topics: Acute Disease; Bacterial Infections; Diagnosis, Differential; Female; Fever of Unknown Origin; Humans; Infant; Infant, Newborn; Leukocyte Count; Male; Pyelonephritis; Radionuclide Imaging; Retrospective Studies; Succimer; Urinalysis; Urinary Tract Infections

1994
Urine interleukin-6 and interleukin-8 in children with acute pyelonephritis, in relation to DMSA scintigraphy in the acute phase and at 1-year follow-up.
    Pediatric radiology, 1994, Volume: 24, Issue:7

    The relationship between urine interleukin-6 (IL-6) and interleukin-8 (IL-8)/creatinine quotients and 99mTc-dimercaptosuccinic acid (DMSA) scintigraphy, performed within 10 days of acute first-time pyelonephritis and after 1 year, was studied in 41 children. The urine IL-6 and IL-8/creatinine quotients were also related to the urine N-acetyl-beta-D-glucosaminidase (NAG) and albumin/creatinine quotients. Presence of DMSA uptake defects, reflecting local inflammation, in children in the acute phase of pyelonephritis, were associated with elevated urine IL-6/creatinine quotients (median 27 pg/mumol); in children without DMSA changes there was no increase in quotients (median non-detectable) (P < 0.05). Persistent DMSA changes at the 1-year follow-up, probably reflecting renal scarring, were only seen in children with increased urine IL-6/creatinine quotients in the acute phase (P < 0.01). No correlation was found between urine IL-8 and DMSA uptake defects. Vesicoureteral reflux (VUR) at 6-8 weeks did not correlate with the urine cytokine levels in the acute phase. The urine excretion of NAG and albumin, reflecting renal dysfunction, was associated with values of both urine IL-6 and IL-8/creatinine quotients, but not with DMSA defects or VUR. Thus, the initial urine IL-6/creatinine quotients might be used as an indicator of risk for persistent renal damage in acute pyelonephritis.

    Topics: Acetylglucosaminidase; Acute Disease; Albuminuria; Child; Child, Preschool; Creatinine; Follow-Up Studies; Humans; Infant; Infant, Newborn; Interleukin-6; Interleukin-8; Kidney; Organotechnetium Compounds; Pyelonephritis; Radionuclide Imaging; Succimer; Technetium Tc 99m Dimercaptosuccinic Acid; Vesico-Ureteral Reflux

1994
Relevance of Tc-99m DMSA scintigraphy in renal transplant parenchymal imaging.
    Clinical nuclear medicine, 1994, Volume: 19, Issue:9

    Tc-99m DMSA renal scintigraphy was performed in 40 renal grafts. Cyclosporin A and glucocorticoids were given to all patients as antirejection therapy, and 11 also were given azathioprine. The kidneys were transplanted 1 to 97 months before the investigation. Seventy percent of kidneys had diffusely altered distribution of Tc-99m DMSA, and 43% had focal clear-cut parenchymal defects. The frequency of parenchymal defects observed on the DMSA scans was higher in patients who suffered manifest acute rejection episodes (8/16 versus 9/24 patients, borderline significance, P < 0.06), but had no relation to the living or cadaveric donor transplant or its function. A combination of peritubular edema and interstitial fibrosis is considered the most probable explanation of diffuse changes. The high frequency of clear-cut parenchymal defects most likely results from symptomatic or asymptomatic rejection episodes complicated by renal transplant infarcts.

    Topics: Acute Disease; Adult; Azathioprine; Creatinine; Cyclosporine; Edema; Female; Fibrosis; Glucocorticoids; Graft Rejection; Humans; Infarction; Kidney; Kidney Transplantation; Kidney Tubules; Male; Middle Aged; Organotechnetium Compounds; Radionuclide Imaging; Succimer; Technetium Tc 99m Dimercaptosuccinic Acid

1994
Renal scarring after acute pyelonephritis.
    Archives of disease in childhood, 1994, Volume: 70, Issue:2

    Seventy six children, 18 boys and 58 girls, aged 0-15.9 (median 1.0) years, with acute pyelonephritis were prospectively studied with a technetium-99m dimercaptosuccinic acid (DMSA) scan during infection and two months later. Fifty nine of these children were also studied two years after the infection. Seventeen children with a normal DMSA scan during infection or at two months after infection, or both, were not investigated by a DMSA scan at two years after acute pyelonephritis. A micturition cystourethrogram was performed in all the children after two months. Changes on the DMSA scan were found in 65 (86%) children during acute pyelonephritis, in 45 (59%) children at two months, and in 28 (37%) children at two years after infection. Vesicoureteric reflux (VUR) was found in 19 (25%) children at two months. Renal scarring was significantly correlated with the presence of gross VUR and recurrent pyelonephritis, but 62% of the scarred kidneys were drained by non-refluxing ureters. Children with scars were older at the time of acute pyelonephritis than those without scars but no difference was found between the groups with regard to duration of illness, levels of C reactive protein and maximum white cell count, glomerular filtration rate, nor renal concentration capacity at the time of infection. It is concluded that renal scarring after acute pyelonephritis in children is more common than has been previously thought. Although children with gross VUR and recurrent pyelonephritis are at the greatest risk, renal scarring is more often seen without these risk factors.

    Topics: Acute Disease; Adolescent; Age Distribution; Child; Child, Preschool; Cicatrix; Female; Humans; Incidence; Infant; Infant, Newborn; Kidney; Male; Organotechnetium Compounds; Prospective Studies; Pyelonephritis; Radionuclide Imaging; Recurrence; Sex Distribution; Succimer; Technetium Tc 99m Dimercaptosuccinic Acid; Vesico-Ureteral Reflux

1994
Renal pathology and the 99mTc-DMSA image during the evolution of the early pyelonephritic scar: an experimental study.
    The Journal of urology, 1994, Volume: 151, Issue:3

    This study describes the pathologic changes underlying the appearances of the 99mTc-DMSA renal image during acute pyelonephritis induced in piglets by a combination of vesicoureteral reflux (VUR) and urinary infection. In a total of 42 animals examined, pathologic lesions were identified in 36 of the 46 kidneys subjected to VUR and urinary infection, but no lesions developed in the remaining 10 refluxing kidneys. While scintigraphic defects were invariably associated with pyelonephritic lesions (specificity 100%), some small lesions were not identified (sensitivity 80%). There was a significant association (p = < 0.001) between the degree of photon deficiency seen scintigraphically and the histologic changes (early and late lesions). However, the scintigraphic appearance of individual lesions was also influenced by factors such as their extent and density, so that consideration of the macroscopic characteristics was also important for precise correlation.

    Topics: Acute Disease; Animals; Cicatrix; Female; Organotechnetium Compounds; Pyelonephritis; Radionuclide Imaging; Sensitivity and Specificity; Succimer; Swine; Technetium Tc 99m Dimercaptosuccinic Acid; Time Factors; Urinary Tract Infections; Vesico-Ureteral Reflux

1994
Typical technetium dimercaptosuccinic acid distribution patterns in acute pyelonephritis.
    Acta paediatrica (Oslo, Norway : 1992), 1993, Volume: 82, Issue:12

    Technetium dimercaptosuccinic acid renal scintiscans in 37 children with clinical diagnosis of acute pyelonephritis were reviewed. In 18 children, follow-up scintigraphy was obtained after an interval ranging from 5 to 8 months. Uptake abnormalities were found in 89% of the children (74% of the kidneys). We were able to identify four typical pathological uptake patterns: (i) pole defect(s), usually wedge shaped (60%); (ii) lateral wedge shaped defect (4%); (ii) scattered multiple defects (21%); and (iv) swollen kidney without areas of diminished uptake (15%). Remaining pathology at follow-up was found in 52% of the kidneys. Vesicoureteric reflux was present in 33% of the children with scintigraphic signs of pyelonephritis. Frequencies of parenchymal changes in the acute phase and at follow-up were not significantly correlated to the presence of reflux.

    Topics: Acute Disease; Child; Child, Preschool; Female; Follow-Up Studies; Humans; Infant; Infant, Newborn; Kidney; Male; Organotechnetium Compounds; Pyelonephritis; Radionuclide Imaging; Succimer; Technetium Tc 99m Dimercaptosuccinic Acid; Vesico-Ureteral Reflux

1993
Extent of urinary tract involvement and imaging in childhood urinary tract infections.
    Pediatric nephrology (Berlin, Germany), 1993, Volume: 7, Issue:5

    Topics: Acute Disease; Child, Preschool; Female; Humans; Male; Organotechnetium Compounds; Prospective Studies; Pyelonephritis; Radionuclide Imaging; Succimer; Technetium Tc 99m Dimercaptosuccinic Acid; Ultrasonography; Urinary Tract Infections

1993
Intra- and interobserver variability in interpretation of DMSA scans using a set of standardized criteria.
    Pediatric radiology, 1993, Volume: 23, Issue:7

    A set of criteria was developed to standardize assessment of DMSA renal scintigraphy which were performed to evaluate children for acute pyelonephritis and renal scarring. This study was undertaken to assess intra- and interobserver variability in the interpretation of DMSA renal scintigraphy using these criteria. Renal contours and parenchyma were assessed in three zones. Contours were assessed as normal or abnormal and parenchymal defects were evaluated in terms of character, shape and degree in three regions (upper and lower pole and midzone). Two nuclear medicine physicians blindly reviewed 57 DMSA scintigraphy on two occasions each. Disagreement of each observer's evaluation of the same scintigraphy on two different occasions was described as intraobserver variability, and the comparison between readings by each of the two observers was described as interobserver variability. High levels of intra- (95.9% and 90.6% respectively, p < 0.05) and interobserver agreement (84.4%, p < 0.05) were demonstrated. There were minor differences in inconsistencies between the two kidneys or different kidney zones. We conclude that standardization of criteria resulted in higher intra- and interobserver consistency in interpretation of DMSA scintigraphy.

    Topics: Acute Disease; Adolescent; Child; Child, Preschool; Chronic Disease; Cicatrix; Humans; Infant; Kidney; Observer Variation; Organotechnetium Compounds; Pyelonephritis; Radionuclide Imaging; Succimer; Technetium Tc 99m Dimercaptosuccinic Acid

1993
The diagnosis of acute pyelonephritis in the piglet using single photon emission computerized tomography dimercaptosuccinic acid scintigraphy: a pathological correlation.
    The Journal of urology, 1993, Volume: 150, Issue:2 Pt 2

    Single photon emission computerized tomography (SPECT) scintigraphy has proved to be an extremely sensitive renal imaging modality in children with genitourinary pathology, including pyelonephritis, particularly when compared to 2-dimensional planar imaging. This study was undertaken to corroborate SPECT dimercaptosuccinic acid (DMSA) scintigraphic findings with specific histopathology in acute pyelonephritis. Unilateral vesicoureteral reflux was produced in 19 Yorkshire piglets 3 to 4 weeks old. The bladders of 12 animals were inoculated with Escherichia coli 2 weeks later, after baseline SPECT DMSA scans had been obtained. The animals were then re-imaged at 3 (4), 7 (4) or 14 (4) days after infection and sacrificed for histological evaluation. Seven purposefully uninfected piglets with unilateral reflux served as controls and were followed for up to 6 weeks before imaging and sacrifice. SPECT proved to be 97% sensitive and 93% specific in providing the diagnosis of acute pyelonephritis. The SPECT findings were manifest by a spectrum of abnormal findings (mottling, striations, inner cortical scalloping and focal cortical defects), which correlated precisely with the extent and severity of cortical involvement in the acute pyelonephritic process. We propose a new classification scheme for SPECT DMSA renal scintigraphic imaging, and believe that this modality is exquisitely sensitive in providing the diagnosis as well as in evaluating the extent of renal parenchymal involvement when acute pyelonephritis is induced in the animal model.

    Topics: Acute Disease; Animals; Kidney; Pyelonephritis; Sensitivity and Specificity; Succimer; Swine; Tomography, Emission-Computed, Single-Photon

1993
Replacing 99Tcm-DMSA for renal imaging?
    Nuclear medicine communications, 1992, Volume: 13, Issue:7

    We have tried to evaluate the usefulness of an early 99Tcm-MAG3 image, obtained during the second minute after injection of the tracer, in predicting the renal alterations seen on a 99Tcm-DMSA scintigraph, in children clinically suspected of pyelonephritis. It appears that the accuracy of the MAG3 image is population dependent: when, in most of the patients of a study group, DMSA scintigraphy is either normal or very abnormal, the MAG3 image will correctly reflect the DMSA scintigraph. However, when the DMSA alterations are less pronounced, the early MAG3 image will miss the lesions in about 50% of the cases.

    Topics: Acute Disease; Adolescent; Belgium; Child; Child, Preschool; Humans; Infant; Oligopeptides; Organotechnetium Compounds; Pyelonephritis; Radionuclide Imaging; Retrospective Studies; Succimer; Technetium Tc 99m Dimercaptosuccinic Acid; Technetium Tc 99m Mertiatide

1992
Involvement of the renal parenchyma in acute urinary tract infection: the contribution of 99mTc dimercaptosuccinic acid scan.
    European journal of pediatrics, 1992, Volume: 151, Issue:7

    We performed 99mTc dimercaptosuccinic acid (DMSA) scan and ultrasonography in 146 children during the acute phase of a proven urinary tract infection (UTI). In 99 a micturating cysto-urethrography and in 83 an intravenous urography was also done. The occurrence of fever and increased WBC count, CRP and ESR were also studied. It appeared from this retrospective study that 47% of the kidneys had a cortical or patchy pattern of decreased uptake of 99mTc DMSA, as compared to 23% with abnormal findings on US. Vesico-ureteral reflux was present in 38% of the kidneys with parenchymal involvement on 99mTc DMSA scan. Although fever, leucocytosis and elevated CRP and ESR were significantly correlated with abnormal 99mTc DMSA scan, they were also observed in children without renal parenchymal involvement. Our results suggest that 99mTc DMSA scan is a sensitive method for the detection of parenchymal involvement during acute UTI. The exact nature of these lesions and their relation with scars need, however, to be defined.

    Topics: Acute Disease; Adolescent; Child; Child, Preschool; Female; Humans; Infant; Infant, Newborn; Kidney; Male; Organotechnetium Compounds; Radionuclide Imaging; Succimer; Technetium Tc 99m Dimercaptosuccinic Acid; Ultrasonography; Urinary Tract Infections; Urography

1992
Evaluation of acute urinary tract infection in children by dimercaptosuccinic acid scintigraphy: a prospective study.
    The Journal of urology, 1992, Volume: 148, Issue:5 Pt 2

    A prospective study examining the incidence of dimercaptosuccinic acid (DMSA) abnormalities in children at the time of acute urinary tract infection, the progression of these abnormalities following treatment and their correlation with the presence of vesicoureteral reflux is reported. DMSA scans performed within 72 hours of presentation in 65 previously healthy children with acute urinary tract infection were abnormal in 34 (52%). The scan appearances of 30 of 36 (83%) initially abnormal kidneys improved or became normal on the repeat DMSA study performed at 3 to 6 months after the acute urinary tract infection. A cystogram demonstrated significant vesicoureteral reflux in 11 of 45 cases (24%). Of these 11 cases 10 had abnormal DMSA studies and 1 had dilated upper tracts on ultrasound. Several conclusions may be drawn from our study. The incidence of DMSA abnormalities at the time of acute urinary tract infection is high but these abnormalities tend to resolve with time. An abnormal DMSA study at the time of urinary tract infection identifies most children with significant vesicoureteral reflux, and in our series a combination of ultrasound and DMSA identified all cases. This study may have major implications for the clinical investigation of children with urinary tract infection.

    Topics: Acute Disease; Child, Preschool; Female; Follow-Up Studies; Humans; Infant; Kidney Diseases; Male; Prospective Studies; Radiography; Radionuclide Imaging; Succimer; Urinary Tract Infections; Vesico-Ureteral Reflux

1992
99mTechnetium-dimercaptosuccinic acid scan in the diagnosis of acute pyelonephritis in children: relation to clinical and radiological findings.
    Pediatric nephrology (Berlin, Germany), 1992, Volume: 6, Issue:4

    Seventy-two children, 59 girls and 13 boys, 0.1-15.9 (median 1.1) years of age, with acute pyelonephritis (APN) were investigated with the aid of a dimercaptosuccinic acid (DMSA) scan, renal ultrasonography (US) and a desmopressin test within 5 days of admission. Sixty-two children were reinvestigated approximately 2 months later when intravenous urography (IVU) and micturition cysto-urethrography were also performed. During infection, 92% of the children showed changes in the DMSA scan with 69% by US, and the two investigations agreed in 58% of the kidneys. At follow-up, 68% showed changes in the DMSA scan, 47% by US and 48% by IVU. The DMSA scan and IVU agreed in 60% of the kidneys. Twenty-nine percent of the children had vesico-ureteric reflux (VUR). The presence of grade greater than or equal to 3 VUR was associated with greater defects on the DMSA scan during infection, and at follow-up with a higher frequency of persistent changes compared with no VUR (P less than 0.02 and 0.01, respectively). During infection the size of the defect on the DMSA scan correlated with renal volume and C-reactive protein and inversely with the glomerular filtration rate, and at follow-up it correlated inversely with the renal concentration capacity. The DMSA scan is a sensitive method for diagnosing and localizing APN in children, and findings on DMSA scan show a weak but significant correlation with routine clinical and radiological parameters. It is suggested that persistent renal damage after APN in children without VUR may be more common than previously assumed.

    Topics: Acute Disease; Adolescent; Child; Child, Preschool; Female; Follow-Up Studies; Glomerular Filtration Rate; Humans; Infant; Kidney; Male; Organotechnetium Compounds; Pyelonephritis; Radionuclide Imaging; Succimer; Technetium Tc 99m Dimercaptosuccinic Acid; Ultrasonography; Urography

1992
Diagnosis of acute pyelonephritis in children: comparison of sonography and 99mTc-DMSA scintigraphy.
    AJR. American journal of roentgenology, 1991, Volume: 157, Issue:3

    Ninety-one children 1 week to 10 years old with culture-documented febrile urinary tract infection were evaluated with renal sonography and renal cortical scintigraphy by using 99mTc-labeled dimercaptosuccinic acid (DMSA). On the basis of previous experimental studies, DMSA scintigraphy was used as the standard of reference for the diagnosis of acute pyelonephritis. The DMSA scans showed changes consistent with acute pyelonephritis in 63% (57/91) of the patients. Sonograms showed changes consistent with acute pyelonephritis in 24% (22/91) of the whole group and in only 39% (22/57) of the patients with scintigraphically documented acute pyelonephritis. Pertinent sonographic findings were areas of increased cortical echogenicity in 14 patients and decreased echogenicity in eight, including three patients with renal abscesses. Dilatation of the renal collecting system was noted in nine patients and renal enlargement was noted in three. We conclude that renal sonography is a relatively insensitive test for the detection of acute inflammatory changes of renal cortex. Therefore, it should not be used as the primary imaging technique for the diagnosis of acute pyelonephritis. However, sonography is a useful technique in evaluating the nature of the defects seen on the DMSA scan and in detecting obstructive uropathies that may be associated with urinary tract infections.

    Topics: Acute Disease; Child; Child, Preschool; Female; Humans; Infant; Infant, Newborn; Male; Organotechnetium Compounds; Pyelonephritis; Radionuclide Imaging; Succimer; Technetium Tc 99m Dimercaptosuccinic Acid; Ultrasonography

1991
99mTechnetium dimercaptosuccinic acid scintigraphy in the diagnosis of acute pyelonephritis in rats.
    Pediatric nephrology (Berlin, Germany), 1990, Volume: 4, Issue:4

    The use of 99mtechnetium dimercaptosuccinic acid (99mTc-DMSA) scintigraphy for the early diagnosis of pyelonephritis has been evaluated in a study performed on adolescent female Sprague-Dawley rats exposed to an ascending Escherichia coli infection. The rats were studied with DMSA scintigraphy either before and 5 days after the infection or 5 and 28 days after the infection. One group of rats received anti-microbial treatment during days 6-11. After the last DMSA scintigraphy the rats were sacrificed and the kidneys prepared for light microscopy study. Kidney morphology was normal and DMSA uptake was high and homogeneous in all control rats. The majority of the rats exposed to E. coli developed inflammatory changes, on light microscopy which extended to various degrees in the renal parenchyma. Five days after the infection the DMSA uptake was consistently reduced, if the inflammatory lesion on light microscopy involved more than 15% of the renal cortex. Twenty-eight days after infection the inflammatory changes were less extensive than at 5 days. The DMSA uptake had usually improved. At this time, however, areas of decreased DMSA uptake could be detected even if the light microscopy changes involved less than 15% of the parenchyma. Microscopical lesions were less frequent and less extensive in the treated than in the untreated rats. The complete return to normal of previously abnormal DMSA uptake was only observed in treated rats. In a few untreated rats cortical scars had formed by day 28. The scars appeared in areas with decreased DMSA uptake at 5 days.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)

    Topics: Acute Disease; Animals; Escherichia coli Infections; Female; Kidney; Organotechnetium Compounds; Pyelonephritis; Radionuclide Imaging; Rats; Rats, Inbred Strains; Succimer; Technetium Tc 99m Dimercaptosuccinic Acid

1990
99mTc-DMSA scintigraphy in acute urinary tract infection in children.
    Pediatric radiology, 1990, Volume: 20, Issue:7

    24 children with symptomatic urinary tract infection (UTI) underwent systematically ultrasound studies (US) and 99mTc-DMSA renal scans. Among the 15 patients considered as acute pyelonephritis (APN) on clinical grounds, the scan was abnormal in 12 cases, in contrast with only 1 abnormal scan in the clinical subgroup of the lower UTI. Among the 10 abnormal scans that were repeated later on, 6 did completely normalize. US showed only once a parenchymal appearance suggestive for APN. Our findings suggest that the DMSA scan has to be considered at present as the most sensitive imaging technique for the detection of APN.

    Topics: Acute Disease; Child, Preschool; Female; Humans; Kidney; Male; Organotechnetium Compounds; Pyelonephritis; Succimer; Technetium Tc 99m Dimercaptosuccinic Acid; Tomography, Emission-Computed, Single-Photon; Ultrasonography; Urinary Tract Infections

1990
Development of renal scars after acute nephronia in childhood: a study of sequential DMSA scans.
    Contributions to nephrology, 1990, Volume: 79

    Topics: Acute Disease; Child, Preschool; Cicatrix; Humans; Infant; Infant, Newborn; Kidney Diseases; Organotechnetium Compounds; Radionuclide Imaging; Succimer; Technetium Tc 99m Dimercaptosuccinic Acid; Urinary Tract Infections

1990
Renal imaging with 99Tcm-labelled DMSA in the detection of acute pyelonephritis: an experimental study in the pig.
    Nuclear medicine communications, 1989, Volume: 10, Issue:1

    Serial renal 99Tcm-labelled dimercaptosuccinic acid (DMSA) scintigrams were acquired 2-58 days after the introduction of urinary tract infection in 33 pigs with experimentally induced vesicoureteric reflux (VUR). In 29 animals VUR was unilateral and in four bilateral, a total of 37 refluxing systems. Animals were killed either at varying intervals after a scintigraphic defect was noted (24 refluxing kidneys) or after a period when sequential scintigrams were normal (13 refluxing kidneys). The appearance of the scintigram acquired on the day prior to death was compared with the renal pathology, each kidney and renal image being divided into three zones (upper, middle, lower) for separate consideration. Of the 37 refluxing systems pyelonephritic lesions were seen in 27, in a total of 61 zones. In the remaining ten kidneys no scintigraphic defect was detected and no pathological lesions were identified either macroscopically or microscopically. Where an abnormality was detected on the scintigram a lesion was always identified in the kidney (sensitivity 100%). Small pyelonephritic lesions in a total of 12 zones in six kidneys were not detected on the scintigram (specificity 82%). Of the lesions undetected by scintigraphy only one occurred in the upper pole.

    Topics: Acute Disease; Animals; Escherichia coli Infections; Kidney; Organometallic Compounds; Pyelonephritis; Radionuclide Imaging; Succimer; Swine; Swine, Miniature; Technetium; Technetium Tc 99m Dimercaptosuccinic Acid; Vesico-Ureteral Reflux

1989
A prospective study of children with first acute symptomatic E. coli urinary tract infection. Early 99mtechnetium dimercaptosuccinic acid scan appearances.
    Acta paediatrica Scandinavica, 1989, Volume: 78, Issue:6

    Between 1985 and 1987 102 children, age 0-14 years, presented with a first acute symptomatic E. coli urinary tract infection. Investigations included early 99mtechnetium dimercaptosuccinic acid (DMSA) scan (which was performed at a median of 27 days), ultrasonography, micturating cysto-urethrography and indirect voiding radionuclide cystography using 99mTc DTPA. Follow-up DMSA scan was carried out after 6 months. Twenty-one of 102 of initial DMSA studies showed diminished uptake of radionuclide and 12 showed cortical scarring. Twenty-nine patients had significant vesicoureteral reflux (VUR). The finding of diminished uptake on the initial scan was significantly associated with fever, systemic upset, length of symptoms and a peripheral blood leucocytosis, (p less than 0.05). In addition the finding was associated with fever and loin pain in the older child. Both diminished uptake and scarring were more common in refluxing kidney units. We propose that, in children with UTI, diminished uptake on early DMSA scan localises infection in the renal parenchyma.

    Topics: Acute Disease; Adolescent; Child; Child, Preschool; Escherichia coli Infections; Female; Humans; Infant; Kidney; Male; Nephritis; Organotechnetium Compounds; Prospective Studies; Radionuclide Imaging; Succimer; Sulfhydryl Compounds; Technetium Tc 99m Dimercaptosuccinic Acid; Urinary Tract Infections; Vesico-Ureteral Reflux

1989
Evaluation of 99mtechnetium-dimercapto-succinic acid renal scans in experimental acute pyelonephritis in piglets.
    The Journal of urology, 1988, Volume: 140, Issue:5 Pt 2

    We evaluated the sensitivity and specificity of 99mtechnetium-dimercapto-succinic acid renal scans in the detection and localization of experimental acute pyelonephritis in piglets. To create pyelonephritis vesicoureteral reflux of infected urine was surgically induced in 22 piglets. Nine animals were evaluated with a dimercapto-succinic acid renal scan at 1 week and 13 at 2 weeks. Autopsy and histopathological examination of the kidneys were performed subsequently. The location and extent of the inflammatory response found on histopathological examination were compared to dimercapto-succinic acid renal scan findings in a blinded fashion. Of the 22 kidneys subjected to vesicoureteral reflux 15 had positive histopathological findings of acute pyelonephritis, including 13 detected by the dimercapto-succinic acid renal scan findings. The 2 kidneys in which inflammation was not detected had only minimal grade I lesions and were grossly normal. There were no false positive scans in any of these kidneys. The sensitivity of the scan for detection of acute pyelonephritis in the kidneys subjected to reflux was 87 per cent and the specificity was 100 per cent. Furthermore, in these same kidneys the dimercapto-succinic acid renal scan findings correctly predicted the presence or absence of individual pyelonephritic lesions in 62 of 66 poles for an over-all agreement rate of 94 per cent. Thus, dimercapto-succinic acid renal cortical imaging is a highly sensitive and reliable imaging modality to detect and localize experimental acute pyelonephritis in piglets.

    Topics: Acute Disease; Animals; Female; Kidney; Organometallic Compounds; Pyelonephritis; Radionuclide Imaging; Sensitivity and Specificity; Succimer; Sulfhydryl Compounds; Swine; Technetium Tc 99m Dimercaptosuccinic Acid

1988
Evaluation of 99mTc-dimercaptosuccinic acid renal uptake as an index of individual kidney function after acute ureteral obstruction and desobstruction. An experimental study in rats.
    European urology, 1983, Volume: 9, Issue:4

    The evolution of the 99mTc-dimercaptosuccinic acid (DMSA) renal uptake is followed after ligation of the right ureter in rats. The DMSA uptake falls rapidly from 35% before ligation to 13% after 24 h, and decreases further to 1.5% after 31 days. The ligated ureter was desobstructed after 10, 17, 24 and 31 days, respectively, DMSA uptake was controlled 4, 11 and 18 days after desobstruction. In the first group, deobstruction after 10 days, the DMSA uptake rose from 7 to 15%, while in the fourth group it rose from 1.5 to 2%. It is concluded that DMSA uptake provides a reliable index for renal function after acute urinary tract obstruction in rats. If the DMSA uptake has fallen below 4% very little renal function can be expected to be regained, whereas above 4% the function can improve considerably.

    Topics: Acute Disease; Animals; Kidney; Kidney Function Tests; Male; Rats; Rats, Inbred Strains; Succimer; Sulfhydryl Compounds; Technetium; Technetium Tc 99m Dimercaptosuccinic Acid; Time Factors; Ureteral Obstruction

1983
Decreased effectiveness of chelation therapy with time after acute cadmium poisoning.
    Toxicology and applied pharmacology, 1982, Volume: 63, Issue:2

    Topics: Acute Disease; Animals; Cadmium; Cadmium Poisoning; Chelating Agents; Edetic Acid; Liver; Male; Metallothionein; Mice; Mice, Inbred Strains; Pentetic Acid; Succimer; Time Factors

1982
Nuclear renal imaging in acute pyelonephritis.
    Seminars in nuclear medicine, 1982, Volume: 12, Issue:3

    Patients with acute pyelonephritis may present with a spectrum of clinical signs and symptoms. There are few noninvasive diagnostic studies, however, to confirm or exclude this diagnosis. A small number of patients, generally those with severe disease, will demonstrate radiographic changes on excretory urography, but the lack of sensitivity of the IVP in early, acute pyelonephritis is well documented. Several radionuclide techniques have been proposed to assist in the earlier detection of this clinical problem including imaging with Mercury-197 chlormerodrin, Gallium-67 citrate, Technetium-99m glucoheptonate. Technetium-99m DMSA, and, more recently, Indium-111 labeled white blood cells. The success of the renal cortical imaging agents as well as those which localize in infection are described in this report. There appears to be a complimentary role or the cortical imaging agents and the radiopharmaceuticals which localize in bacterial infection. Cortical agents offer the advantage of specific assessment of functioning renal tissue and a convenient, rapid method for following the response to treatment in a noninvasive manner. A pattern is described which may be diagnostic; correlation with Gallium-67 citrate of Indium-111 WBCs may increase the probability of infection as the cause for the cortical abnormality. The measurement of differential renal function using cortical agents provides additional information to assist the clinician in predicting the late effects of infection. Improved sensitivity and specificity, and a reproducible method for following the response to therapy in patients with acute pyelonephritis are the advantages of the techniques described.

    Topics: Acute Disease; Adolescent; Adult; Bacterial Infections; Child; Child, Preschool; Female; Gallium Radioisotopes; Humans; Indium; Infant; Infant, Newborn; Leukocytes; Male; Middle Aged; Organotechnetium Compounds; Pyelonephritis; Radioisotopes; Succimer; Sugar Acids; Technetium; Technetium Tc 99m Dimercaptosuccinic Acid; Tomography, Emission-Computed

1982