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09/05/2007 10:02

Genetic background to severe urinary tract infections

Ingela Björck Informationsavdelningen / Communications Department
Schwedischer Forschungsrat - The Swedish Research Council

    If you sit on cold boulders or forget to wear your woolen pants, you can develop a urinary tract infection. This is what we used to, and still do, hear. But these diseases are more complicated than that, and in some cases they have a genetic background. Scientists at Lund University in Sweden have found a gene that appears to lie behind many of the most severe urinary tract infections.

    It is well known that certain people have a tendency to get urinary tract infections again and again. These infections often start in childhood. In serious cases they can lead to infections of the renal pelvis, which ultimately can damage the kidneys so severely that the patient will need dialysis or a kidney transplant.

    Doctors have long been hoping for a method for early detection of the small group of people who are in the risk zone for renal pelvis infections. If they could single them out early, it would be unnecessary to subject all children who get a urinary tract infection to a thorough and sometimes unpleasant examination. Instead, such examinations and any preventative treatment could be reserved for those who really need it.

    "Many research teams have long been looking for a genetic background to the disease. We have found a gene that could be used as a risk marker and a method for singling out the susceptible group," says researcher Ann-Charlotte Lundstedt and Professor Catharina Svanborg.

    The gene in question produces a protein that is involved in the immune defense system. It regulates the migration of white blood corpuscles to the kidneys and their work with neutralizing infectious bacteria. The Lund team has previously shown that the gene protects against renal pelvis inflammation in animal experiments. Now, in studies of children and adults with recurrent renal pelvis infections, they have also shown that mutations of this very gene are much more common in kidney patients than in healthy control individuals.

    "We also saw that even patients without genetic changes have low levels of this protein. Therefore, a combination of a genetic examinations and a protein measurement could be a good way to find those who are most clearly in the risk zone," says Catharina Svanborg.

    The Lund scientists' findings have been published in the international Web journal PLoS ONE.

    More information Catharina Svanborg, phone +46 (0)709-42 65 49 and Catharina.Svanborg@med.lu.se, or Ann-Charlotte Lundstedt, +46 (0)70-304 11 03 and Ann-Charlotte.Lundstedt@med.lu.se. The address of the journal is www.plosone.org/


    More information:

    http://www.plosone.org/


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    Medicine, Nutrition / healthcare / nursing
    transregional, national
    Research results
    English


     

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