Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0403608 (ureter)
9,655 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

In advanced stages, the three most common inflammatory bowel diseases - colonic diverticulitis, Crohn's disease and ulcerative colitis - cause, in some 10% of cases, secondary urological pathology involving either bladder or ureter. Colovesical fistula is found more frequently in diverticulitis and less often in Crohn's disease, which penetrates predominantly from the ileum into the bladder. On the other hand, if uretic stenosis develops it will be caused on the right side by Crohn's disease and on the left by ulcerative colitis. Vesico-intestinal fistulae will close without sequelae after resection of the diseased bowel segment. On the other hand, retroperitoneal ureteric stenosis - despite bowel resection and ureterolysis - will often require nephrectomy if operation is not carried out early enough. Frequent re-checks with infusion excretory urography will help to prevent this. Nephrolithiasis, amyloidosis and contracted bladder are other, though less common, complications of chronic inflammatory diseases of the bowel.
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PMID:Urological complications in chronic inflammatory diseases of the bowel. 83 55

The three most common inflammatory diseases of the bowel, colonic diverticulitis, regional enteritis and ulcerative colitis, involve the bladder or ureter in the advanced stage in about 10%. The colovesical fistula is found more frequently with diverticulitis and less often with regional enteritis, which penetrates predominantly from the ileum into the bladder. On the other hand, if an ureteric stenosis develops, it will be caused on the right side mainly by regional enteritis and on the other side by ulcerative colitis. The vesicointestinal fistulae will close without sequelae after resection of the involved bowel segment. However, the ureteric stenosis will often be followed by nephrectomy despite bowel resection and ureterolysis, if the operation is not undertaken early enough. Frequent rechecks with infusion urography should help to prevent this. Nephrolithiasis, amyloidosis, and a contracted bladder are futher, yet less common complications of chronic inflammatory disease of the bowel.
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PMID:[Urologic complications od chronic inflammatory intestinal diseases]. 86 76

We describe the case of a 45-year-old woman with a ureterocolic fistula caused by colonic diverticulitis. She had a 10-year history of intermittent left flank pain that had not been treated. The fistulous tract between the left ureter and sigmoid colon was confirmed by retrograde urography and a barium enema. A nephroureterectomy was successfully performed.
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PMID:Ureterocolic fistula secondary to colonic diverticulitis. 985 34

Chronic colonic diverticulitis may be associated with typical complications such as local abscesses, stenosis, bleeding, intraperitoneal bowel perforations or fistulas to other organs. Most commonly, fistulas exist between the colon and the bladder; nevertheless, they may also extend to the small intestine, other areas of the colon, ureter, uterus, salpinx, vagina, abdominal wall, portal- and mesenterial venous system, pleura, urachus, biliary system and the hip. We report on a patient with chronic colonic diverticulitis having an unusual sigmoido-gluteal fistula along the sacrum, the piriformis muscle and sciatic nerve. The patient presented with sciatic nerve symptoms and recurrent gluteal abscess formation, but no other clinical symptoms leading to an abdominal pathology. Initially, that fact caused an unsuccessful local treatment under the differential diagnosis of a local gluteal abscess for about a year. Finally, a sigmoid colon resection with end-to-end anastomosis and a proximal diverting stoma was performed. The colostomy was closed electively five months later without any complication.
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PMID:Sigmoido-gluteal fistula--a rare complication in clinically asymptomatic chronic diverticulitis. 2195 40