Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Pivot Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Target Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Query: UMLS:C0344307 (
analgesia
)
28,200
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
From 1 January 1986 to 30 June 1989, 15 pregnant women were diagnosed as having urolithiasis. Patients presented in the last two trimesters with an infection of the lower part of the urinary tract (60 per cent), flank and abdominal pain (27 per cent) and hematuria (13 per cent). Ultrasonographic findings confirmed the diagnosis in 47 per cent of the patients. Other roentgenologic procedures were required in the remaining patients. Initially, therapy was conservative in all, and in 67 per cent of patients, no further intervention was necessary. Only 33 per cent required invasive measures; cystoscopic passage of an internal ureteral stent was the initial procedure of choice at our institution. Three of five patients who underwent invasive procedures had surgical intervention for relief of ureteral obstruction. Intensive care management was necessary for one of these three patients who had acute hemorrhage occur during the procedure. These data emphasize the need for the accurate diagnosis of urolithiasis during pregnancy. Ultrasonography was a valuable diagnostic technique, but a limited excretory urogram is safe and appropriate when there is uncertainty. Conservative management (hydration,
analgesia
and antibiotics as indicated) of obstructive
uropathy
was successful in the majority of instances. A specific clinical algorithm facilitated the successful management of patients necessitating operative intervention. Optimal management requires clinical suspicion and a precise diagnostic and therapeutic plan.
...
PMID:An algorithm for diagnosis and therapy of management and complications of urolithiasis during pregnancy. 198 41
Forty patients with renal lithiasis in single kidney were treated with extracorporeal shock wave lithotrity in our unit. Nine patients required emergency urinary by-pass, because of original picture of obstructive anuria, and in another 21 cases a double-J catheterism was conducted as prophylaxis prior to lithotrity. Treatment was carried out with
analgesia
and ambulatory, except for 10 patients with calculi of less than 10 mm where by-pass was not performed, and who were kept in preventive hospitalization for 24 hours. Average of sessions per patients was 1.59 (range 1-7). After 6 months follow-up there are 24 free renal units (60%), 12 (30%) with debris that can be expelled, failure in 4 (10%): 2 with debris that can be expelled and 2 which were not fragmented. Renal function has not deteriorated during follow-up, except for 2 patients with obstructive
uropathy
, that subsequently normalized following resolution of the condition. No significant differences were found in the treatment of calculi of less than 10 mm with or without double-J. ESWL is considered to be the choice approach for lithiasis in patients with one single kidney, due to is efficacy and low morbidity, safety in the ambulatory environment, even for calculi of less than 10 mm with no urinary by-pass.
...
PMID:[Extracorporeal shockwave lithotripsy in single kidneys. Our experience]. 865 78