1.Clinical investigation on the correlation between lower urinary tract infection and cystitis glandularis.
Zhiqiang, CHEN ; Zhangqun, YE ; Wei, ZENG
Journal of Huazhong University of Science and Technology (Medical Sciences) 2004;24(3):303-4
In order to study the association between lower urinary tract infection and cystitis glandularis (CG), 120 cases of CG were diagnosed by cystoscopic biopsy in the suspicious foci of the bladder. Among them, 72 cases were subjected to bacterial counting culture of urine and microscopic examination of urinary sediment, and 60 cases to fluorescence quantitative polymerase chain reaction (FQ-PCR) assay to detect HPV, CMV and HSV DNA in urine samples. In the 72 cases of CG, the positive rate of bacterial counting culture of urine was 15.3% (11/72), and gray zone rate was 18.1% (13/72). 31.9% (23/72) patients were positive in bacterioscopy of urinary sediment. There was statistically significant difference as compared with the control group (P<0.01). Only 4 of 60 urine samples were positive by FQ-PCR in detection of the three viruses mentioned above with the positive rate being 6.67%. Compared with the control group, there was no significant difference (P>0.05). It was concluded that the genesis of CG was closely correlated with the chronic lower urinary tract infection, especially caused by Esch coli.
Cystitis/etiology
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Cystitis/microbiology
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Cystitis/*pathology
;
*Escherichia coli Infections
;
Metaplasia
;
Urinary Bladder/microbiology
;
Urinary Bladder/*pathology
;
Urinary Tract Infections/complications
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Urinary Tract Infections/*microbiology
;
Urinary Tract Infections/pathology
2.Clinical investigation on the correlation between lower urinary tract infection and cystitis glandularis.
Zhiqiang CHEN ; Zhangqun YE ; Wei ZENG
Journal of Huazhong University of Science and Technology (Medical Sciences) 2004;24(3):303-304
In order to study the association between lower urinary tract infection and cystitis glandularis (CG), 120 cases of CG were diagnosed by cystoscopic biopsy in the suspicious foci of the bladder. Among them, 72 cases were subjected to bacterial counting culture of urine and microscopic examination of urinary sediment, and 60 cases to fluorescence quantitative polymerase chain reaction (FQ-PCR) assay to detect HPV, CMV and HSV DNA in urine samples. In the 72 cases of CG, the positive rate of bacterial counting culture of urine was 15.3% (11/72), and gray zone rate was 18.1% (13/72). 31.9% (23/72) patients were positive in bacterioscopy of urinary sediment. There was statistically significant difference as compared with the control group (P<0.01). Only 4 of 60 urine samples were positive by FQ-PCR in detection of the three viruses mentioned above with the positive rate being 6.67%. Compared with the control group, there was no significant difference (P>0.05). It was concluded that the genesis of CG was closely correlated with the chronic lower urinary tract infection, especially caused by Esch coli.
Adult
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Cystitis
;
etiology
;
microbiology
;
pathology
;
Escherichia coli Infections
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Female
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Humans
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Male
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Metaplasia
;
Middle Aged
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Urinary Bladder
;
microbiology
;
pathology
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Urinary Tract Infections
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complications
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microbiology
;
pathology
3.Prophylactic herbal therapy prevents experimental ascending urinary tract infection in mice.
Yan-Qing TONG ; Min SUN ; Ying CHI
Chinese journal of integrative medicine 2016;22(10):774-777
OBJECTIVETo study the preventive effect of herbal formulation on experimental murine urinary tract infection (UTI) induced by Dr Escherichia coli 11128.
METHODSE. coli 11128 carrying Dr fimbriae was isolated from patients with chronic pyelonephritis. The minimal inhibitory concentration (MIC) value of herbal solution for E. coli 11128 was determined for further studies. Forty C3H/HeJ mice were divided into the herb-treated group (n=20, given Chinese herbs by gavage at an average dose of 20 g/kg body weight daily 3 days before inoculation), and control group (n=20, given the same amount of distilled water by gavage). Three and 6 days after infection, bacteria were counted in the urine and the kidneys of the mice. Kidney histopathologic changes were evaluated. Neutrophils infiltration and accumulation were detected.
RESULTSThe MIC value of herbal solution was 0.1 g/mL for the E. coli 11128. In herb-treated mice, there was a significant reduction in bacterial counts in urine and colonization densities of kidneys. Microscopic studies revealed signs of inflammation in kidneys. In herb-treated mice, herbal administration resulted in significantly reduced neutrophilic infiltrates (P<0.05). The semi-quantitative scores for renal lesions were significantly lower (P<0.05).
CONCLUSIONProphylactic administration of herbal formulation potentiated the effect in partially preventing experimental murine ascending UTI.
Animals ; Disease Models, Animal ; Drugs, Chinese Herbal ; pharmacology ; therapeutic use ; Escherichia coli ; drug effects ; Escherichia coli Infections ; drug therapy ; prevention & control ; Female ; Kidney ; drug effects ; pathology ; Mice, Inbred C3H ; Phytotherapy ; Urinary Tract Infections ; drug therapy ; microbiology ; prevention & control
4.Etiological study on cystitis glandularis caused by bacterial infection.
Xiaogang, LIU ; Zhiqiang, CHEN ; Zhangqun, YE
Journal of Huazhong University of Science and Technology (Medical Sciences) 2007;27(6):678-80
To study the relationship between bacterial infection and the etiology of cystitis glandularis, 36 female Wistar rats were divided into 3 groups. No intervention was given to the rats in the blank group. NS was infused into the bladder of the rats of the control group, and solution containing E. coli was injected into the bladder of experimental group. Three months later, tissue samples of bladder were collected and observed visually and under light microscope. The results showed that tissues of the blank group were normal; one sample in the control group showed Brunn's nests and cystitis cystica, and 10 in the experimental group had the change of cystitis glandularis. Compared to the blank and control group, samples in the experimental group showed significant change (P<0.05). There were no significant difference between blank group and control group (P>0.05). It is concluded that bladder instillation of E. coli can induce cystitis glandularis, which confirms that infection is the cause of cystitis glandularis.
Cystitis/etiology
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Cystitis/*microbiology
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Cystitis/*pathology
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Escherichia coli Infections/*pathology
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Rats, Wistar
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Urinary Bladder/microbiology
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Urinary Bladder/*pathology
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Urinary Tract Infections/complications
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Urinary Tract Infections/*microbiology
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Urinary Tract Infections/pathology
5.New Bacterial Infection in the Prostate after Transrectal Prostate Biopsy.
Journal of Korean Medical Science 2018;33(17):e126-
BACKGROUND: The prostate is prone to infections. Hypothetically, bacteria can be inoculated into the prostate during a transrectal prostate biopsy (TRPB) and progress into chronic bacterial prostatitis. Therefore, we examined new bacterial infections in biopsied prostates after TRPB and whether they affect clinical characteristics in the biopsied patients. METHODS: Of men whose prostate cultures have been taken prior to TRPB, 105 men with bacteria-free benign prostate pathology underwent an additional repeated prostate culture within a year after TRPB. RESULTS: Twenty out of 105 men (19.05%) acquired new bacteria in their naïve prostates after TRPB. Except for one single case of Escherichia coli infection, 19 men had acquired gram-positive bacteria species. Between the culture-positive and negative groups, there were no significant differences in age, serum prostate-specific antigen (PSA) level, white blood cell (WBC) counts in expressed prostatic secretion (EPS), prostate volume, symptom severities in Korean version of the National Institutes of Health-Chronic Prostatitis Symptom Index (NIH-CPSI) questionnaire, and patient-specific risk factors for biopsy associated infectious complications. Additionally, the TRPB procedure increased the WBC counts in post-biopsy EPS (P = 0.031, McNemar test), but did not increase the serum PSA level and symptoms of NIH-CPSI in 20 men who acquired new bacteria after TRPB. CONCLUSION: The TRPB procedure was significantly associated with acquiring new bacterial infections in the biopsied prostate, but these localized bacteria did not affect patients' serum PSA level and symptoms after biopsy.
Academies and Institutes
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Bacteria
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Bacterial Infections*
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Biopsy*
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Escherichia coli Infections
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Gram-Positive Bacteria
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Humans
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Leukocytes
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Male
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Pathology
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Prostate*
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Prostate-Specific Antigen
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Prostatitis
;
Risk Factors
6.Pathogenesis of uropathogenic Escherichia coli: role of outer membrane protein T and the mechanism.
Yarong QU ; Xiaolong HE ; Qin WANG ; Like ZHANG ; Min LONG ; Jun LUO ; Wenbing ZHANG ; Hong CAO
Journal of Southern Medical University 2014;34(2):174-179
OBJECTIVETo study the role of outer membrane protein T (OmpT) in the pathogenesis of uropathogenic Escherichia.coli.
METHODSIn cultured human bladder epithelial cell line 5637, we examined the adhesion ability of wild-type (CFT073), ompT gene knockout (COTD), and revertant (pST) strains of E.coli to the cells and the extracellular matrix (ECM). The expressions of the adhesion gene iha and virulence gene iroN were detected by real-time PCR. Murine models of urinary tract infection with the 3 strains were established to evaluate the bacterial burden of the bladder and kidney tissue and bacterial counts in blood. We also detected the expressions of interleukin-6 (IL-6) and IL-8 in the bladder and kidney tissues of the mice.
RESULTThe COTD strain showed a significantly lower cell adhesion rate than CFT073 strain [(4.62∓0.39)% vs (8.81∓1.13)%, P<0.05] with also a lower ECM-adhesion rate [(4.95∓0.59)% vs (8.85∓0.79)%, P<0.05]. The mRNA expressions of iha and iroN in CFT073 strain were 2.1 and 3.8 times that of COTD strain. In the mouse model, the mean bacterial load of CFT073 strain in the bladder tissue was 6.36∓0.06, significantly greater than that of COTD (6.01∓0.07) and revertant (6.29∓0.06) strains (P<0.05); the bacterial load of CFT073 strain in the kidney tissue was also significantly higher than that of COTD strain (6.25∓0.05 vs 5.87∓0.06, P<0.05). In mice infected with the wild-type, knockout, and revertant strains, the detection rates of IL-6, which were identical to those of IL-8, in the inflammatory bladder and kidney tissues were 60%, 12.5%, and 50%, respectively.
CONCLUSIONSOmpT may regulate the expression of the adhesion gene iha and the transferrin gene iroN to affect the adhesion of uropathogenic E.coli to host cells.
Animals ; Bacterial Adhesion ; Bacterial Load ; Bacterial Outer Membrane Proteins ; metabolism ; Cell Line, Tumor ; Escherichia coli Infections ; pathology ; Escherichia coli Proteins ; metabolism ; Gene Knockout Techniques ; Humans ; Inflammation ; Interleukin-6 ; metabolism ; Interleukin-8 ; metabolism ; Kidney ; microbiology ; Mice ; Peptide Hydrolases ; metabolism ; Receptors, Cell Surface ; metabolism ; Urinary Bladder ; microbiology ; Urinary Tract Infections ; microbiology ; pathology ; Uropathogenic Escherichia coli ; pathogenicity
7.Clinical analysis of 22 cases community-acquired Pseudomonas aeruginosa urinary tract infection.
Xiao-Hong FU ; Wen ZHOU ; Xue-Mei ZHANG ; Yi-Bing YIN ; Chun-Mei JING ; Lan LIU ; Jie ZHAO
Chinese Journal of Pediatrics 2013;51(4):298-301
OBJECTIVETo study the characteristics of community-acquired urinary tract infections (CAUTIs) in children, analyze the risk factors and the susceptibility of antibiotics, thus to provide references to the diagnosis and medication of Pseudomonas aeruginosa (PA)-CAUTIs. Mothod Totally 22 cases of PA-CAUTIs were selected in one hospital from Jan, 2006 to Jan, 2012, their clinical information, laboratory results and radiological images were collected, and were compared with the CAUTIs cased by E. coli of those randomly selected over the same period.
RESULTIn those 22 cases with PA-CAUTIs, the mean value of protein level was (32.25 ± 13.81) mg/ml, 19 of them were hospitalized, 6 had urinary operation history, 7 of them had long-term usage of glucocorticoids or immunosuppressive agents, and 20 had underlying diseases. A total of 22 children with 26 PA-CAUTIs episodes were compared to E. coli-CAUTIs. Compared with E. coli-CAUTIs patients, children with PA-CAUTIs more often presented with a lower albumin (P = 0.017), a history of urinary operation(P = 0.03), more cases had a history of urinary operation (P = 0.03), a long-term usage of glucocorticoids or immunosuppressive medication (P = 0.044). Through multivariate logistic regression of variables that were significant in univariate analysis (with hospitalizations, long-term usage of glucocorticoids or immunosuppressive, albumin, underlying disease and urinary operation histories), and it turned out that underlying diseases (odds ratio 8.500, 95% CI 1.513 - 47.761, P = 0.037) and with urinary operation histories (odds ratio 6.196, 95% CI 1.120 - 34.273, P = 0.037) were proved as the independent risk factors for PA-CAUTIs. Those PA bacterial strains had a 36.36% resistance rate to piperacillin, aztreonam and gentamicin, a 31.82% resistance rate to cefepime and ceftazidime, while the resistance rate (4.55%) to carbapenem antibiotics was relatively low, only to bacillosporin all the strains were sensitive.
CONCLUSIONUnderlying diseases and the urinary operation histories are the independent risk factors of the occurrence of PA-CAUTIs, carbapenem antibiotics and bacillosporin can be considered as the drugs of choice for its treatment.
Anti-Bacterial Agents ; therapeutic use ; Case-Control Studies ; Child ; Child, Preschool ; Community-Acquired Infections ; drug therapy ; epidemiology ; pathology ; Drug Resistance, Bacterial ; Escherichia coli ; drug effects ; Escherichia coli Infections ; drug therapy ; epidemiology ; pathology ; Female ; Humans ; Male ; Polymyxins ; therapeutic use ; Pseudomonas Infections ; drug therapy ; epidemiology ; pathology ; Pseudomonas aeruginosa ; drug effects ; Risk Factors ; Urinary Tract Infections ; drug therapy ; epidemiology ; pathology
8.Bilateral Emphysematous Pyelonephritis.
The Korean Journal of Internal Medicine 2012;27(3):366-366
No abstract available.
Anti-Bacterial Agents/therapeutic use
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*Emphysema/diagnosis/microbiology/therapy
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Escherichia coli/isolation & purification
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*Escherichia coli Infections/diagnosis/microbiology/therapy
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Female
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Humans
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*Kidney/pathology/surgery
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Middle Aged
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Necrosis
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Nephrectomy
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*Pyelonephritis/diagnosis/microbiology/therapy
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Renal Dialysis
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Tomography, X-Ray Computed
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Treatment Outcome
9.Comparative proteomic analysis of proteins expression changes in the mammary tissue of cows infected with Escherichia coli mastitis.
Xiao Wei ZHAO ; Yong Xin YANG ; Dong Wei HUANG ; Guang Long CHENG ; Hui Ling ZHAO
Journal of Veterinary Science 2015;16(3):253-263
Cows infected with Escherichia (E.) coli usually experience severe clinical symptoms, including damage to mammary tissues, reduced milk yield, and altered milk composition. In order to investigate the host response to E. coli infection and discover novel markers for mastitis treatment, mammary tissue samples were collected from healthy cows and bovines with naturally occurring severe E. coli mastitis. Changes of mammary tissue proteins were examined using two-dimensional gel electrophoresis and label-free proteomic approaches. A total of 95 differentially expressed proteins were identified. Of these, 56 proteins were categorized according to molecular function, cellular component, and biological processes. The most frequent biological processes influenced by the proteins were response to stress, transport, and establishment of localization. Furthermore, a network analysis of the proteins with altered expression in mammary tissues demonstrated that these factors are predominantly involved with binding and structural molecule activities. Vimentin and alpha-enolase were central "functional hubs" in the network. Based on results from the present study, disease-induced alterations of protein expression in mammary glands and potential markers for the effective treatment of E. coli mastitis were identified. These data have also helped elucidate defense mechanisms that protect the mammary glands and promote the pathogenesis of E. coli mastitis.
Animals
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Cattle
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Electrophoresis, Gel, Two-Dimensional/veterinary
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Escherichia coli/*physiology
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Escherichia coli Infections/genetics/immunology/microbiology/*veterinary
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Female
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Mammary Glands, Animal/*immunology/pathology
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Mastitis, Bovine/*genetics/immunology/microbiology
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Proteome/*genetics/metabolism
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*Proteomics
10.Persistence of uropathogenic Escherichia Coli in the bladders of female patients with sterile urine after antibiotic therapies.
Shu-Cheng LIU ; Xiao-Min HAN ; Ming SHI ; Zi-Li PANG
Journal of Huazhong University of Science and Technology (Medical Sciences) 2016;36(5):710-715
This study aimed to provide evidence of persistent uropathogenic Escherichia coli (UPEC) in female patients with recurrent urinary tract infection (UTI) after antibiotic therapy. We collected biopsies of the bladder, and clean-catch urine samples from 32 women who had episodes of recurrent UTI and were given antibiotic therapy. Urine samples and biopsies were analyzed by conventional bacteriological techniques. Phylogenetic group and 16 virulence factors (VFs) of UPEC were determined using polymerase chain reaction (PCR). The infection capability of UPEC was confirmed in a mouse model. Immunofluorescence and electron microscopy were used to detect intracellular bacterial communities (IBCs) in the mouse model. The results showed that all urine specimens were detected sterile. E. coli was found in 6 of 32 biopsies (18.75%), and was identified to be UPEC by PCR. Different VFs associated with the formation of IBCs were identified in all six UPEC isolates. Each UPEC isolate was capable of forming IBCs within the bladder epithelial cells of mice. In conclusion, UPEC with distinctive pathological traits and the capability of IBC formation was first found in the bladders of women after antibiotic therapy, suggesting that the IBC pathogenic pathway may occur in humans and it plays an important role in UTI recurrence.
Adult
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Animals
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Anti-Bacterial Agents
;
administration & dosage
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Biopsy
;
Escherichia coli Infections
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drug therapy
;
microbiology
;
Female
;
Humans
;
Mice
;
Middle Aged
;
Phylogeny
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Urinary Bladder
;
drug effects
;
microbiology
;
pathology
;
Uropathogenic Escherichia coli
;
drug effects
;
genetics
;
pathogenicity