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Query: UMLS:C0035078 (
renal failure
)
31,970
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
A case of flunarizine hydrochloride (FZ)-induced severe urinary retention and meteorism which resulted from sphincter spasm of the urinary bladder and the anus is presented. An 81-year-old female had received 10 mg/day FZ orally for 12 months before hypokinesia and general fatigue developed. Physical examination revealed slight rigidity of the extremities, abdominal distention and spasm of the anal sphincter muscle. Laboratory examinations showed uremia (BUN 88 mg/dl, Creatinine 16.8 mg/dl) and abdominal X-ray demonstrated marked distention of the small and large bowels.
Renal failure
improved within 2 days after massive urination using a urethral catheter. Abdominal distention was improved by the ileus and anal tubes. The difficulties of urination and defecation and decreased mobility of the extremities were resolved one month after the cessation of FZ. No organic changes were detected in urinary, intestinal and neurological systems by cystoscopy, CT,
MRI
and gastrointestinal fiberscopy. Serum concentration of FZ was 42.5 ng/ml on admission but decreased slowly to 17.9 ng/ml 80 days later. Serum half life was calculated to be 55 days which was 3 times longer than that healthy younger volunteers.
...
PMID:[A case report of severe urinary retention and meteorism during flunarizine administration]. 159 90
A 59-year-old potter presented with lead polyneuropathy after 37 years of occupational exposure. There was a 25-year history of normochromic normocytic anaemia with moderate basophilic stippling, mild
renal failure
, hyperuricaemia and abnormal porphyrins. Since 1964 three short psychotic episodes were noted. Cranial computed tomography showed extensive bilateral symmetrical calcification in the cerebellar hemispheres and slight calcification in the subcortical area of the cerebral hemispheres and basal ganglia. T2-weighted magnetic resonance imaging disclosed high signal intensities in the periventricular white matter, basal ganglia, insula, posterior thalamus and pons. Differential diagnostic aspects are discussed with special regard to CT and
MRI
findings. A review of the literature on neurological and psychiatric manifestations of lead intoxication in adults is given.
...
PMID:[Neurologic and psychiatric manifestations of lead poisoning in adults (case report and review of the literature)]. 176 Dec 70
A 54-year-old man received insertion of an acupuncture needle into the region extending from the posterior neck to the back on two occasions for the treatment of shoulder stiffness. Two weeks after the second acupuncture, he developed fever, dysarthria and mictionary disturbance, finally reaching the condition of tetraplegia. He was immediately admitted to an emergency room in our hospital, and was diagnosed as sepsis with DIC, ARDS, heart failure,
renal failure
, liver failure, and myelitis. After one month, he recovered with transverse myelopathy as a residual deficit. Neurological findings showed transverse myelopathy below the level of Th2 at that time. Cervical CT revealed an irregular low density at the periphery of the cervical vertebra from the C2 to C4 level. Cervical
MRI
revealed an irregular swelling of his spinal cord from the C2 to C7 level. We explained the mechanism of transverse myelopathy in this case as follows. After the acupuncture, he suffered a focal infection of the region of needle insertion, and then the infection expanded to the cervical vertebra, thus causing osteomyelitis, sepsis, and finally cervical myelitis. Direct injury of the spinal cord and nerve roots as a complication of acupuncture was previously reported, but indirect injury of the spinal cord due to myelitis had not been reported except our present case. Careful attentions should be paid to the complications of acupuncture.
...
PMID:[A case of transverse myelopathy caused by acupuncture]. 178 54
A 10-year-old girl had an infarction in the left brain during an acute viral meningoencephalitis. She initially showed seizure, unconsciousness and fever, and right hemiplegia gradually developed. She died at the 48th day of disease from respiratory disturbance and
renal failure
. Cranial
MRI
during the acute phase of the disease, when there was no clinical sign of right hemiplegia, showed a high intensity lesion in the left parietal and occipital areas on T-2 weight image. Autopsy disclosed the findings suggesting viral encephalitis, including multiple focal necrosis, perivascular round cell infiltration, proliferation of glial cells and spongy degeneration with some intranuclear inclusion bodies, and infarction in the left hemisphere. These findings suggest that T-2 high intensity lesion on
MRI
reflected infarction.
...
PMID:[A case of brain infarction associated with viral encephalitis: MRI and pathological findings]. 193 Nov 68
Primary hyperparathyroidism is a common disorder and one that can usually (approximately 95%) be successfully treated by parathyroidectomy. PTH assays have become quite accurate for confirming the diagnosis. In patients with malignancy-associated hypercalcemia, parathyroid-like protein levels are usually increased, and radioimmunoassays being developed to quantitate serum levels of this protein will make the diagnosis easier. Treatment for a parathyroid adenoma is removal of the tumor and identification of the normal parathyroid glands. Treatment for primary or secondary hyperplasia is usually subtotal parathyroidectomy. Recurrent hyperparathyroidism is uncommon, except in patients with familial hyperparathyroidism, MEN-1 parathyroid carcinoma, or
renal failure
and secondary hyperparathyroidism. Persistent hyperparathyroidism is more common and is usually due to surgeon inexperience, but it is also caused by ectopically situated parathyroid glands, multiple abnormal parathyroid glands, or supranumerary parathyroid glands. Preoperative localization studies using ultrasound, thallium-technetium scanning,
MRI
, or CT scanning are reliable in patients with solitary parathyroid adenomas, but often fail to detect all of the abnormal parathyroid tissue in patients with multiple abnormal parathyroid glands. Intraoperative use of urinary cyclic AMP assays and rapid PTH assays have recently been used experimentally during parathyroid explorations to determine whether all hyperfunctioning parathyroid tissue has been removed, but these methods are not yet reliable or fast enough to be generally accepted. Most patients with primary hyperparathyroidism who are successfully treated by parathyroidectomy experience psychological, clinical, and metabolic benefits.
...
PMID:Primary hyperparathyroidism. A surgical perspective. 267 68
There are many reports on the disequilibrium syndrome due to dialysis in patients with chronic renal failure. However, they do not mention the findings of CT cisternography and
MRI
. We intend to investigate the mechanism of CSF dynamics in a patient with disequilibrium syndrome by means of these radiological examinations. A 31 year-old woman who had suffered from
renal failure
for 18 years was found to have prominent increase of serum creatinine (18.1 mg/dl) and BUN (127 mg/dl) 3 years ago. At that time, digital marking of the skull was already present by X-ray examination without other destruction in bone survey of the whole body. She was hemodialysed by the hollow fiber kidney three times weekly (dialysis time 4.5 hours, dialysate osmotic pressure 270 mOsm/kg H2O). Three months ago, she began to complain of severe headache, nausea and vomiting 2 hours after the beginning of dialysis, so that she was referred to Kosei Hospital. On admission, she showed exophthalmus, concentric narrowing of the visual field, optic atrophy and hyperreflexia in jaw and four extremities. After admission, she received hemodialysis therapy thrice weekly (dialysis time 5 hours, dialysate osmotic pressure 290 mOsm/kg H2O). At the same time, 200 ml of glycerol (contents of glycerin 10, fructose 5, NaCl 0.9%) was administered intravenously during dialysis, which ameliorated the symptoms of intracranial hypertension. Laboratory studies revealed marked decrease of serum creatinine, BUN and uric acid levels and osmotic pressure, and increase of blood pH at the time of postdialysis compared with predialysis. Manometric CSF pressure increased up to 310 mmH2O at the day without dialysis before the glycerol administration.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:[A case of chronic renal hemodialysis and intracranial hypertension--a study on CSF dynamics]. 276 3
We performed clinical analysis of 12 patients with renal cell carcinomas associated with tumor thrombosis in the inferior vena cava. Eleven cases were men, and one was a woman; their ages range from 48 to 76 years old with a mean of 58 years. Nine tumors were observed on the right side, the other 3 tumors were observed on the left side. In five cases, the distant metastases of the disease were noticed at the first visiting to our hospital. Lung metastases were found in five and bone or liver in each one. Chief complaints were macroscopic hematuria in 8 cases (67%), and were weight loss or general fatigue. The symptoms of obstruction of the inferior vena cava, such as venous dilatation of abdominal wall, edema of lower extremities and varicocele of the testes, were seen in 6 cases. The level of the tumor thrombosis was preoperatively determined by CT, echography, cavography or
MRI
. The level was near the right atrium in one, near the hepatic vein in 8 and near the renal vein in 3, although there was no case extending into the right atrium. Transperitoneal nephrectomy and thrombectomy in the inferior vena cava were performed in 9 cases. Surgery could not be performed in the other 3 patients of their poor general condition or severe heart disease. One patient died because of massive hemorrhage during the operation. The other complications were transient
renal failure
in 3 cases and postoperative bleeding in one case. In 4 patients without distant metastases or regional lymph nodes metastasis, two died of multiple metastasis of renal cell carcinomas and diabetic coma. The other two cases are alive without disease for 4 and 40 months after operation. For renal cell carcinoma extending into the inferior vena cava without metastasis, nephrectomy and thrombectomy should be performed using the extracorporeal circulation.
...
PMID:[Clinical analysis of renal cell carcinoma with extension into the inferior vena cava]. 279 51
Many musculoskeletal conditions have in the past been best defined on a clinical basis. However, because of pain, limitation of motion and hematomas, tendon ruptures can often be misdiagnosed clinically and it would be quite helpful to the clinician to have a noninvasive imaging technique. This communication defines the role of
MRI
in the early diagnosis of a nontraumatic rupture of the quadriceps tendons bilaterally in a patient with
renal failure
and known secondary hyperparathyroidism. The imaging techniques accurately defined the presence of hemorrhage extending into muscle from the ruptured tendons as well as the actual site and extent of tendon rupture. Since tendons have low mobile proton content and have low signal on
MRI
--disruptions are easily seen--
MRI
is the ideal noninvasive imaging technique for tendon injury, acute.
...
PMID:MRI visualization of bilateral quadriceps tendon rupture in a patient with secondary hyperparathyroidism: implications for diagnosis and therapy. 280 45
The amount of functioning renal parenchyma can be estimated by
MRI
by considering the ratio between the mean intensities of cortical and medullar zones of the kidney. Fifty-six patients and 5 healthy volunteers were studied by
MRI
in our department. Scanning was performed with a superconductive magnet system operating at 0.5 Tesla. Pulse sequence was Spin-Echo with TR 300/TE 30 ms. The cortico-medullary ratio (CMR) and differentiation (CMD) were standardized and related with creatine blood levels. CMR data ranged from 1.05 to 3.00, while CMD data ranged from 0.04 to 0.50. High values (good cortico-medullary contrast) were observed in subjects with normal renal function. Patients with renal diseases had low CMR and CMD, proportionally to the degree of
renal failure
, as proved by laboratory findings. Our preliminary study seems to demonstrate that
MRI
is an useful technique in the follow-up of patients with chronic renal disease.
...
PMID:[Magnetic resonance study of renal function. Preliminary evaluation]. 328 2
MR is able to detect and characterize the majority of disease entities which affect the adrenal glands and kidneys. In the evaluation of the adrenal glands in-phase and out-of-phase T1-weighted imaging may be the most effective noninvasive method to distinguish benign adenomas from malignant masses. T2-weighted images are sensitive and relatively specific for the investigation of pheochromocytoma. Although
MRI
is excellent at evaluating the kidneys, the lower cost and good image quality of CT render it the primary diagnostic tool for renal imaging. The major current applications for
MRI
of the kidneys include evaluation of patients with allergy to iodinated contrast,
renal failure
, and the characterization of complicated renal lesions. Evaluation of venous thrombus in the context of renal cancer is likely also a useful role for
MRI
.
...
PMID:Magnetic resonance imaging of the adrenal gland and kidney. 777 74
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