Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0016199 (flank pain)
2,189 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

A 30-year-old female was admitted to our hospital complaining of hematuria and right flank pain in September, 1987. She had been diagnosed idiopathic thrombocytopenic purpura in 1980, and had similar symptoms before. Hematoma in the right ureter was demonstrated by retrograde pyelography and CT-scanning, and these symptoms improved within one month. Each activity of plasma clotting factors was within normal limits. Enzymatic studies of the urine revealed low values of plasmin-, urokinase-, and kallikrein-like activities in both excerbation and remission. These hemorrhagic tendencies might have been the result of marked thrombocytopenia: After bleeding into the urinary tracts began, the bleeding would tend to form hematoma because of elevated clotting activity; then hematoma would grow due to decreased urine fibrinolytic activities. This suggested that a decline of fibrinolysis in urine might have a promoting effect on the process of hematoma formation.
Rinsho Ketsueki 1990 Sep
PMID:[Possible mechanisms of hematoma formation in the urinary tracts in a patient with idiopathic thrombocytopenic purpura]. 224 28

Computerized tomography was performed on 19 patients diagnosed as having uncomplicated acute pyelonephritis. The relationship was investigated among the laboratory findings, presence of flank pain, clinical course and severity of the lesions detected by computerized tomography. In patients febrile for less than 2 weeks healing as assessed by computerized tomography took an average of 76 days. However, in patients with repeated febrile episodes occurring for longer than 2 weeks healing was delayed until an average 232 days after onset. Computerized tomography findings generally correlated well with the erythrocyte sedimentation rate, C-reactive protein level, and presence of pyuria and flank pain. However, in patients with a prolonged course computerized tomography proved to be a more reliable indicator of progress than either the results of laboratory tests or the symptoms. In conclusion, computerized tomography was useful in the diagnosis, assessment of severity and evaluation of healing of acute pyelonephritis.
J Urol 1990 Sep
PMID:Computerized tomography in acute pyelonephritis: the clinical correlations. 238 15

Two young men, were hospitalized due to acute massive blood loss with left abdominal flank pain. In both cases renal angiography showed signs of a haemorrhagic event in the left kidney, perirenal in one and subcapsular in the other. Microaneurysms indicated a diagnosis of polyarteritis nodosa, supported by renal biopsy in one case. Renal haemorrhage is an infrequent presentation of polyarteritis nodosa. Furthermore, one patient suffered also from familial Mediterranean fever, and is the fifth reported case with this combination of diseases.
Postgrad Med J 1989 Sep
PMID:Perirenal and renal subcapsular haematoma as presenting symptoms of polyarteritis nodosa. 257 53

Nephrolithiasis is a rare but important condition in pregnant women. The most common presenting complaint is flank pain. Recurrent or persistent urinary tract infections may also be due to nephrolithiasis. Ultrasound is the first-line diagnostic study, but a limited intravenous pyelogram can be obtained when indicated. Spontaneous passage of the stone occurs in approximately two-thirds of patients.
Am Fam Physician 1989 Sep
PMID:Nephrolithiasis in pregnancy. 267 50

A 50-year-old man, who had undergone operation of esophageal carcinoma 2 years earlier, was admitted with the complaints of right flank pain and macroscopic hematuria. Intravenous urogram showed right unvisualized kidney. Right retrograde pyelography showed the dilatation of calices and irregularity of middle and lower calices. Computed tomography revealed severe hydronephrosis of the right kidney. Right nephrectomy was performed under the diagnosis of either renal pelvic cancer or esophageal cancer metastatic to the kidney. Pathological examination revealed metastatic squamous cell carcinoma from esophagus. The patient was treated by radiotherapy but died 4 months after the surgical treatment. Literature on eight case of metastatic renal cancer from esophagus is reviewed.
Hinyokika Kiyo 1989 Sep
PMID:[A case of esophageal cancer metastatic to the kidney presenting as renal pelvic cancer]. 268 61

A 7-year-old boy who had been in a traffic accident was hospitalized in Hamamatsu Red Cross Hospital with diagnosis of head abrasion, contusion of abdomen and multiple fractures. On the 17th day of hospitalization, he complained of left flank pain and high fever. Examinations by IVP and enhanced computed tomographic scan revealed a left ureter avulsed at the level of uretero-pelvic junction. Operative reconstruction by end-to-end anastomosis of the ureter was performed immediately. The function of left ureter was recovered 4 months after operation. This rare case of ureteral avulsion is briefly discussed along with a review of the recent literature.
Hinyokika Kiyo 1989 Sep
PMID:[A case of nonpenetrating ureteral avulsion]. 268 65

Perinephric abscess is a life-threatening but treatable process. Most infections of the perinephric space occur as a result of extension of an ascending urinary tract infection, commonly in association with nephrolithiasis or urinary tract obstruction. A large portion of the mortality is the result of failure to diagnose this entity in a timely fashion. This failure may be because of the frequently obscure or nonspecific nature of the clinical presentation. Blood cultures as well as urine cultures may fail to identify correctly the bacterial pathogens responsible for the abscess. Perinephric abscess should be considered in the differential diagnosis of any patient presenting with a urinary tract infection that fails to respond promptly to antibiotic therapy, particularly in those known to have anatomical abnormalities of the urinary tract or diabetes mellitus. Consideration of this diagnosis should enter into the differential diagnosis of fever with abdominal pain or flank pain. Early recognition of perinephric abscess and prompt drainage, either percutaneously or surgically, in combination with appropriate antibiotic coverage, should reduce dramatically the morbidity and mortality from this infection.
Med Clin North Am 1988 Sep
PMID:Perinephric abscess: the missed diagnosis. 304 58

Under ultrasound guidance, we treated 25 cases of renal cyst with 99% ethanol instillation to prevent the recurrence of this disease from January 1985 to June 1987. Patients' age was from 17 to 85 years old with the average age of 63 years. Twelve cases were men, and 13 cases were women. Among the 25 cases, eleven were asymptomatic and 14 showed clinical features of lumbago, microhematuria, hypertension or proteinuria. The aspirated site was the right side in 9, left side in 14 and bilateral kidneys in 2 cases. Subsequently, cyst puncture was carried out 27 times. We encountered 12 complications following puncture. These complications were derived from the puncture itself or caused by the ethanol instillation. Flank pain caused by the injection of ethanol, nausea, causalgia or a feeling of drunkenness appeared immediately after the inoculation procedure. However, no serious complications such as pneumothorax, perirenal hematoma or infection were recognized. Some complications arose in 7 cases of 9 examples (77.8%) following more than 50 ml of ethanol injection, but the complications were observed in only 5 cases of 18 examples (22.8%) following less than 50 ml of administration. Based on these findings, ethanol injection in renal cysts appears to be useful for the treatment of this disease. In case of huge cysts when more than 50 ml of ethanol, is instilled the case should be followed up carefully after the instillation procedure.
Hinyokika Kiyo 1988 Sep
PMID:[Renal cyst puncture under ultrasound guidance: complications of ethanol injection]. 306 4

A case of renal leiomyosarcoma ruptured spontaneously is reported. A 36-year-old man was admitted to our clinic with the complaint of right flank pain. The urographic examination, including an excretory urography, renal CT-scan, renal angiography, and ultrasonography revealed a renal tumor with spontaneous rupture on the right side. A nephrectomy through the lumbal flank incision on the right side was performed on February 28, 1984, and histopathological diagnosis was renal leiomyosarcoma. Five courses of adjuvant chemotherapy, VCR, ADM and CPM, combined with maintenance immunochemotherapy using Tegafur and Krestin and with radiotherapy (3,000 rad) were performed post-operatively. The patient was followed for 18 months after operation as an outpatient with no evidence of local recurrence and metastasis. The 40 reported cases including our case with leiomyosarcoma in Japan is reviewed and some characteristics of this entry are discussed.
Hinyokika Kiyo 1986 Sep
PMID:[Spontaneous rupture of renal leiomyosarcoma: report of a case]. 310 46

Three hundred fifty patients in an observation unit attached to an emergency department received diagnostic workup of nine critical diagnostic syndromes (abdominal pain, flank pain, headache, possible cerebrovascular accident, chest pain, dizziness or syncope, head injury, seizure, multiple trauma). The decision to hospitalize for acute care after observation for 11.1 +/- 3.9 hours was examined. The objective diagnosis-related group (DRG) criteria for admission were compared retrospectively with the physician's clinical judgment of need for hospitalization. Clinical outcome was used to establish the correctness of the decision to hospitalize. Clinical judgment was compared with objective DRG criteria for reliability in predicting the presence of serious pathology necessitating acute care hospitalization; respective values were sensitivity, 100% vs 76%; specificity, 86% vs 80%; positive predictive value, 75% vs 62%; and negative predictive value, 100% vs 89%. The difference between the sensitivity of the two admission criteria was highly significant (P less than 10(-8); chi 2, 26.12). We conclude that the physician's clinical judgment outperforms DRG objective criteria in identifying which patients with critical diagnostic syndromes need acute care hospitalization for emergency medical or surgical therapy.
Ann Emerg Med 1988 Sep
PMID:Decision to hospitalize: objective diagnosis-related group criteria versus clinical judgment. 313 51


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