Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0029713 (immaturity)
4,335 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Superficially, the causes of voiding difficulties in children may seem quite simple, but a thorough understanding of the anatomy physiology and neurology of normal and abnormal lower urinary tract function is necessary in uncovering the etiology of often seemingly siple complaints. An ectopic ureter, neurogenic bladder, urinary tract obstruction, or simple urinary tract immaturity, for example, can all cause a child to present with the complaint of "wetting." A familiarity with all the possible causes of voiding dysfunction is required to distinguish significant from insignificant symptoms. While a "wait and see" attitude often results in the spontaneous resolution of a problem such as simple nocturnal enuresis, the misdiagnosis of a severe disorder, such as urinary outflow obstruction, may permit the insidious development of irreversible renal failure. Our purpose in writing this monograph was not to provide a comprehensive guide to the diagnosis of voiding dysfunction in children, but rather to enhance the clinician's appreciation of the complexity of these problems. Our hope is that the perspective that we have provided will obviate the diagnostic and therapeutic exaggeration of insignificant voiding complaints, while assuring that the presence of significant lesions is not overlooked.
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PMID:Voiding dysfunction in children. 741 33

Facticious accumulation of the radiopharmaceutical in the urinary draining system as shown by routine renal tests, like technetium- 99m-diethylenetriamine pentacetic acid, technetium-99m-mercaptylacetyltriglycine or technetium-99m-glucoheptonate renograms can be re-evaluated by administering a diuretic, like furosemide (FS) and obtaining post FS dynamic and static images. Urinary tract obstruction can thus be identified. Partial urinary tract obstruction, the effectiveness of stenting, the effectiveness of obstruction correcting surgery and retroperitoneal lymph nodes, may be diagnosed after FS induced diuresis. However, factors like loss of the compliance of the renal pelvis or the ureter, low renal function, renal immaturity in neonates and full or neurogenic bladder limit the diagnostic effectiveness of FS. Diuretic enhanced Doppler sonography and dynamic contrast-enhanced magnetic resonance imaging can also be used for the evaluation of partial or complete urinary tract obstruction. The FS induced diuresis procedure is compared to other related diagnostic techniques.
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PMID:Furosemide for the diagnosis of complete or partial ureteropelvic junction obstruction. 2041 Nov 63