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Case 60 - Acute bacterial pyelonephritis

from Section 6 - Urinary imaging

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  05 June 2014

Heike E. Daldrup-Link
Affiliation:
Lucile Packard Children's Hospital, Stanford University
Heike E. Daldrup-Link
Affiliation:
Lucile Packard Children's Hospital, Stanford University
Beverley Newman
Affiliation:
Lucile Packard Children's Hospital, Stanford University
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Summary

Imaging description

A 16-year-old female patient presented with a two-week history of increasing fever, back pain, and dysuria. The clinical evaluation revealed tenderness in the left flank, an elevated C-reactive protein, and leukocytosis. An ultrasound (US) of the kidneys demonstrated a focal lesion of uncertain etiology in the left kidney. A CT scan was obtained for further evaluation and showed two focal wedge-shaped hypodense lesions in the left kidney (Fig. 60.1) suggestive of acute focal pyelonephritis. The patient was placed on antibiotic treatment, which led to resolution of the lesions.

In the clinical setting of fever and laboratory signs of an infection, focal lesions in the kidneys as described above should be considered to be acute bacterial pyelonephritis, previously called “lobar nephronia.”

Renal US examination in a child with acute pyelonephritis is often completely normal and is less sensitive than other imaging modalities such as CT, MR, or nuclear scintigraphy. There may be focal hypo- or hyperechoic areas, depending on the degree of associated edema and/or hemorrhage. In some cases, the focal area of inflammation may produce mass effect on adjacent structures. Color Doppler US, especially power Doppler, tends to show decreased flow in these areas. Diffuse renal involvement may produce diffuse enlargement with hypo- or hyperechogenicity, loss of corticomedullary differentiation, and uro-epithelial thickening. There may be additional features of an underlying renal obstructive anomaly predisposing to infection, including an obstructed duplicated upper pole collecting system, ureteropelvic or ureterovesical obstruction.

Type
Chapter
Information
Pearls and Pitfalls in Pediatric Imaging
Variants and Other Difficult Diagnoses
, pp. 255 - 256
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2014

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References

Chapman, S, Nakielny, R. Urinary tract. In: Aids to Radiological Differential Diagnosis, 3rd edition. London: W.B. Saunders Company Limited, 1995; 307.Google Scholar
Currarino, G, Wood, B, Majd, M. The genitourinary tract and retroperitoneum. In: Silverman, FN, Kuhn, JP, eds. Caffey’s Pediatric X-Ray Diagnosis: An Integrated Imaging Approach, 9th edition. St Louis: Mosby, 1993; 1331.Google Scholar
Klar, A, Hurvitz, H, Berkun, , et al. Focal bacterial nephritis (lobar nephronia) in children. J Pediatr 1996;128(6):850–3.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Rohrschneider, WK, Weirich, A, Rieden, K, et al. US, CT and MR imaging characteristics of nephroblastomatosis. Pediatr Radiol 1998;28(6):435–43.CrossRefGoogle Scholar

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