URINARY GRANULOCYTE EXCRETION IN RENAL DISEASE: COMMENTS ON THE PYROGEN TEST.

In his early studies of the urine sediment and of its significance in renal disease, Addis 1,2 pointed out the need for measuring rate of excretion rather than concentration of formed elements because of the influence of volume, pH, and solute concentration on the latter. Since then sporadic efforts, primarily in England, 3,4 to relate white blood cell excretory rate to urinary tract infection, both as a diagnostic technique and as a means of assessing extent and chronicity of the process, have suggested that such enumeration is indeed more accurate and therefore of greater potential clinical value than the time-honored reporting by high-power field. In a further effort to extend quantitative sediment examination, the pyrogen test was introduced and has been considered helpful in evaluating pyelonephritis. 5,6 This test permits comparison of hourly urinary leukocyte excretion rate before and after the intravenous injection of a standard dose of bacterial endotoxic

[1]  S. Marketos,et al.  Pyrogen Test in Chronic Pyelonephritis , 1963, Lancet.

[2]  J. Montgomerie,et al.  EVALUATION OF THE PYROGEN TEST IN CHRONIC PYELONEPHRITIS , 1963 .

[3]  J. Fine,et al.  Localization of Endotoxin in the Walls of the Peripheral Vascular System During Lethal Endotoxemia.∗ , 1962, Proceedings of the Society for Experimental Biology and Medicine. Society for Experimental Biology and Medicine.

[4]  W. Wood,et al.  Studies on the pathogenesis of fever. VIII. Further observations on the role of endogenous pyrogen in endotoxin fever. , 1961, The Journal of experimental medicine.

[5]  A. Mauer,et al.  Leukokinetic studies. IV. The total blood, circulating and marginal granulocyte pools and the granulocyte turnover rate in normal subjects. , 1961, The Journal of clinical investigation.

[6]  Hoeprich Pd Culture of the urine. , 1960 .

[7]  S. Perry,et al.  Evaluation of marrow granulocytic reserves in normal and disease states. , 1960, Blood.

[8]  B. Houghton,et al.  Response of the infected urinary tract to bacterial pyrogen. , 1958, Lancet.

[9]  Wood Wb Studies on the cause of fever. , 1958 .

[10]  G. Jackson,et al.  Characteristics of leukocytes in the urine sediment in pyelonephritis; correlation with renal biopsies. , 1957, The American journal of medicine.

[11]  B. Houghton,et al.  Cell Excretion in Normal Urine , 1957, British medical journal.

[12]  L. Berman,et al.  Observations on the glitter-cell phenomenon. , 1956, The New England journal of medicine.

[13]  B. Zumoff,et al.  Inhibition of Renal Tubular Responsiveness to Antidiuretic Hormone By Pyrogens.∗ , 1955, Proceedings of the Society for Experimental Biology and Medicine. Society for Experimental Biology and Medicine.

[14]  J. Webb,et al.  Observations on Pyuria in Children , 1953, Archives of disease in childhood.

[15]  Homer W. Smith The Kidney: Structure and Function in Health and Disease , 1952 .

[16]  R. Sternheimer,et al.  Clinical recognition of pyelonephritis, with a new stain for urinary sediments. , 1951, The American journal of medicine.

[17]  T. Addis THE NUMBER OF FORMED ELEMENTS IN THE URINARY SEDIMENT OF NORMAL INDIVIDUALS. , 1926, The Journal of clinical investigation.

[18]  T. Addis THE EFFECT OF SOME PHYSIOLOGICAL VARIABLES ON THE NUMBER OF CASTS, RED BLOOD CELLS AND WHITE BLOOD CELLS AND EPITHELIAL CELLS IN THE URINE OF NORMAL INDIVIDUALS. , 1926, The Journal of clinical investigation.