RESUMO
This article reports a rare case of acute pyelonephritis secondary to left ureteral obstruction by a bladder catheter. The patient was 93years old man hospitalized in the hospital emergency department with a 39°C fever and pyuria from an indwelling catheter. Blood test found hyperleukocytosis, inflammatory syndrome and acute renal failure. Diagnosis was confirmed by non-contrast abdominal CT scan showing distal part of the catheter inside left ureteral orifice with ureterohydronephrosis. Treatment consisted in replacing the catheter by a three-way catheter for irrigation and parenteral antibiotics therapy. Clinico-biological evolution was successful and a urinary tract CT scan could be realized at day 9. The left upper urinary tract function was recovered. With a short review of the literature we propose to describe the different procedures to manage those obstructions.
Assuntos
Cateteres de Demora/efeitos adversos , Pielonefrite/etiologia , Obstrução Ureteral/etiologia , Obstrução Ureteral/terapia , Cateterismo Urinário , Idoso de 80 Anos ou mais , Antibacterianos/uso terapêutico , Humanos , Masculino , Pielonefrite/complicações , Resultado do Tratamento , Cateterismo Urinário/instrumentação , Cateterismo Urinário/métodosRESUMO
BACKGROUND: Escherichia coli strains causing Urinary Tract Infections (UTI) have a fecal origin. METHODS: A fecal sample was collected before Kidney Transplantation (KT) and concomitantly with urine at each of the 15 E. coli UTIs which occurred in 11 KT recipients. Unique E. coli strains were identified among 25 isolates per feces and 5 isolates per urinary sample by random amplification of polymorphic DNA. Phylogenetic group (which is correlated to virulence in the E. coli species) was determined for each E. coli strain by a PCR based method. RESULTS: Forty-three unique fecal strains and 14 unique urinary strains were identified among 650 fecal isolates and 75 urinary isolates. Urinary strains frequently (55% of the cases) belonged to a phylogroup usually not linked to virulence. They were detected in the feces collected concomitantly in 60% of the cases. Urinary strains belonging to a phylogroup usually linked to virulence were more frequently dominant in the feces (100%) than urinary strains belonging to a non-pathogenic phylogroup (42%; P<0.05). Vesical catheter was a facilitating factor only for urinary strains belonging to non-pathogenic phylogroups. Thirty-three percent of the fecal strains were persisting in two consecutive fecal samples and 62% were detected for the first time at the UTI. Numerous pathway lead to UTIs: from a unique, virulent and persisting strain to a non-virulent recently acquired strain facilitated by a vesical catheter. CONCLUSION: Our work shows the diversity of host-microbial interactions which precede extra-intestinal virulence.