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Acute suppurative inflammation of the kidney caused by bacterial infection, due most commonly to ascent from a lower urinary tract infection and less commonly to hematogenous spread in septic patients
Common, with 15–17 cases annually per 10,000 population in women and 3–4 cases per 10,000 in men
Incidence varying with age
A trimodal distribution in females, with an elevated incidence in girls aged 0–4 years, a peak in women aged 15–35 years, and a gradual increase after age 50 years to peak at 80 years of age; incidence of 28 cases per 10,000 in US women aged 18–49 years
Bimodal distribution in males with a first peak at 0–4 years; gradual increase after 35 years of age and the second peak at 85 years of age
Predisposing conditions:
Urinary obstruction, congenital or acquired
Instrumentation of urinary tract
Vesicoureteral reflux
Pregnancy: develops in 20%–30% of pregnant women with untreated asymptomatic bacteriuria
Preexisting renal lesions
Diabetes mellitus
Immunosuppression and immunodeficiency
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