29 research outputs found
Technical report:a novel porcine model of acute pyelonephritis
A porcine model of acute Escherichia coli pyelonephritis is described. Nine female pigs with a mean weight of 19 kg were included in the study. Following laparotomy and ureterotomy, catheters were placed bilaterally in the renal pelvis. A culture of a porcine E. coli strain (109 CFU/mL, volume 3.25 mL) was inoculated unilaterally in the renal pelvis. Following bacterial inoculation, the catheter was occluded for 20 min. The inoculation procedure was repeated after two and four hrs. The contralateral kidneys served as controls and were inoculated with sterile saline. Six hrs after the first inoculation pigs were euthanized and samples of blood, abdominal swabs, urine and specimens from kidney, liver and spleen were cultured. The inflammatory response in the kidneys, renal lymph nodes, liver and spleen was evaluated both macroscopically and histologically and E. coli was identified by immunohistochemistry. E. coli was reisolated from all the inoculated kidneys and was detected immunohistochemically in all inoculated kidneys, in four renal lymph nodes from inoculated sides and in four spleens. Evidence of systemic bacterial spread was observed in five pigs. Gross and histological lesions of acute pyelonephritis comparable to human cases were demonstrated in all but one inoculated kidney. In conclusion, a novel porcine model for evaluating the pathogenesis of acute pyelonephritis was established.