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Query: UMLS:C0403608 (
ureter
)
9,655
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Of 291 patients who received renal allotransplants in 1964-74, 94 patients developed 121 bacteremic episodes within the first 6 months after transplantation. The death rate was 38%. The bacteremic episodes occurred mainly during the first 2-3 months after transplantation. In 65% of the episodes bacteremia was secondary to urinary tract infections. The bacteria fourn were most often gram-negative rods such as Escherichia coli, Klebsiella and
Proteus
. Predisposing factors were ureteral complications such as leakage or necrosis of the
ureter
, leucopenia, immunosuppression, and source of the kidney. The frequency of bacteremia was the same in patients with infectious and non-infectious primary renal disease.
...
PMID:Bacteremia after renal transplantation. 33 58
Pyelonephritis was produced in 75 white rats by applying a 24-hour ligature on the
ureter
and by intravenous injection of a suspension of 5X10(9) cells of a stable
Proteus
mirabilis L-form. Pyelonephritis was proved microscopically in 44% of the animals. The revertants of the introduced L-form play an etiological role in the development of the infection. The stability of the pathohistological findings makes this model suitable for the purpose of experimental chemotherapy.
...
PMID:Experimental pyelonephritis induced by L-forms of Proteus mirabilis in rats. 34 63
A series of 270 paediatric stone patients was studied retrospectively according to the clinical pattern of urolithiasis (age and sex, stone location, stone analysis, recurrence rate) and aetiology of stone disease (infection, anatomical, metabolic or idiopathic). Infection stones occurred earliest and more commonly in males and were usually upper tract struvite calculi related to
Proteus infection
. Anatomical stones were most commonly associated with pelviureteric junction (PUJ) obstruction and had a high recurrence rate, despite surgical correction of obstruction. Idiopathic stones most resembled those found in adult urolithiasis by virtue of occurring latest, being sited in the
ureter
more often and being more frequently composed of calcium oxalate. Metabolic stones were most frequently calcium phosphate or cystine and virtually all were renal. They comprised the smallest group but had the highest recurrence rate.
...
PMID:Clinical patterns of paediatric urolithiasis. 188 49
During a seven-year period (1975-1981) a total of 1325 patients hospitalized for stone disease were studied as to the occurrence of positive urine cultures. Urinary stones from 535 surgically treated patients were analyzed with infrared spectrophotometry and the relationships between stone composition, level of surgery and bacteriological strains were studied. Positive urinary cultures were found in 34% of the surgically treated patients and in 21% of those not operated upon. Among the surgically treated patients with urinary tract infection (UTI) E. coli was the most frequent microorganism (35%), followed by
Proteus
(28%). Patients with
Proteus infection
had the highest frequency of UTI episodes, most of which occurred before hospitalization. There was a higher frequency of magnesium ammonium phosphate (MAP) calculi among patients with
Proteus infection
than among those with non-
Proteus infection
, in whom no difference in stone composition was found. Patients infected with E. coli had more phosphate-containing stones (CaP+MAP) than non-infected patients. The highest frequency of oxalate calculi (CaOx+CaOx/CaP) was found among patients without infection. No E. coli infections were seen in male patients with CaP and MAP calculi. MAP stones were most often found in the kidney and oxalate stones in the
ureter
.
...
PMID:The relation between urinary tract infections and stone composition in renal stone formers. 266 13
The purpose of this paper is to investigate the outcome of postoperative residual stones and their influence to the renal function. We followed up 65 patients (73 kidneys) with residual stones after conventional operation. The follow-up period was on an average 11 years and 9 months. 50 of 73 kidneys were infected before surgery. The most frequently cultured organisms was
Proteus
mirabilis. Urinary infection persisted in 34 of 50 kidneys after surgery. The residual stones smaller than 5 mm existed in 10 kidneys, of which 7 became sterile. The stones between 5 and 10 mm existed in 18 kidneys, of which 7 (38.9%) became sterile, but in 22 kidneys with stones larger than 10 mm, the infection was not eliminated but in 2 kidneys. Conversely, postoperative infection was never found in 23 kidneys being sterile before operation. Residual stones increased in size in 39 kidneys, did not change in 19 kidneys, diminished in 3 kidneys, fell to the
ureter
requiring surgery in 7 kidneys and the spontaneous passage of stones was observed in 4 kidneys. In comparing the stone increase group with that of stone stable, the former had a high frequency of stones larger than 5 mm, of postoperative urinary infection and of many stone forming factors. We studied the change of renal function only by IVP in 71 kidneys. Thirty-two kidneys with residual stones and infection showed moderate or severe deterioration of renal function in a large majority of cases. Conversely, in 24 of 34 kidneys without infection, the renal function was stable and only 6 kidneys showed moderate or severe deterioration of renal function.
...
PMID:[Postoperative outcome of residual pyelocaliceal stones]. 358 41
To induce an experimental model of bacterial cystitis, ten preconditioned dogs underwent bladder irritation with a 0.1% alcoholic solution of salicylic acid followed in 24 hours by an intravesicular infusion of
Proteus
mirabilis. The dogs were observed for the following 14 days (five dogs) and 17 days (five dogs) and then euthanatized and necropsied. Tenesmus, dysuria, hematuria, and pollakiuria occurred in all dogs, but the severity of these signs diminished with time. The total white cell, neutrophil, and monocyte counts in the peripheral blood increased and urinalysis results were consistent with infection and severe inflammation. The infection persisted for the duration of the study, although the average quantitative bacterial count in urine progressively declined. No changes occurred in the measured clinical chemistry values. Severe inflammation was present on gross examination of the bladder and microscopic examination of the bladder, prostate, and renal pelvis. Less severe inflammation was present on microscopic examination of the urethra and
ureter
.
...
PMID:A model for experimental bacterial cystitis in the dog. 377 58
Based on a personal series of 310 observations, the authors have studied the presenting signs, the etiology, the urinary bacteriology and the localization of the stone in children with urolithiasis. Urinary tract infection is the presenting sign in 55% of the cases, hematuria in 23% and abdominal pain in 20%. Urinary malformation is associated in 26% of cases, whatever the age at diagnosis. The urinary bacteria found in 55% of cases is
Proteus
. Localization was in the kidney in 228 cases, in the
ureter
in 71 cases, the bladder in 45 cases and in the urethra in 5 cases.
...
PMID:Urolithiasis in children. Presenting signs, etiology, bacteriology and localisation. 667 90
The effects of bacteria on in vitro ureteric contractility were studied, using a model which allowed selective exposure of organisms to the ureteric mucosa and smooth muscle, respectively. A cannula attached to a pressure transducer was ligated into the proximal lumen of 2.5-cm segments of canine
ureter
. The distal
ureter
was ligated to form a closed pressure monitored system, and the segment suspended in a 20-ml organ bath containing Krebs Henseleit buffer at physiological pH and temperature. Following onset of spontaneous activity, broths of Escherichia coli,
Proteus
mirabilis, Pseudomonas aeruginosa and Staphylococcus aureus were added to either the buffer solution or ureteric lumen in doses of > 10(6) organisms/ml. Experiments were repeated using heat-killed organisms, bacterial filtrates and E. coli endotoxin. Ureteric contractility was stimulated by organisms added to the buffer medium, but reversibly inhibited by bacteria placed in the ureteric lumen. Heat-killed organisms, endotoxin and live filtrates had no effect on normal motility when exposed to either the ureteric mucosa or muscularis respectively. These findings reflect the conflicting changes in ureteric motility seen in vivo when bacteria are administered systemically or directly into the ureteric lumen.
...
PMID:The ureter in vitro: normal motility and response to urinary pathogens. 822 Sep 87
Pyelonephritis was experimentally induced in 10 clinically normal dogs by nephropyelocentesis and introduction of
Proteus
mirabilis into the randomly chosen right or left renal pelvis. Dogs were examined by nephrosonography and excretory urography before and 2 weeks after infection. The major nephrosonographic findings of pyelonephritis were renal pelvic dilatation, usually with proximal ureteral dilatation, and a hyperechoic mucosal margin line within the renal pelvis, proximal portion of the
ureter
, or both. In addition, at least one or more of the following were observed: generalized hyperechoic renal cortex, focal hyperechoic areas within the medulla, and focal hyperechoic or hypoechoic cortical lesions. Interpretation of excretory urograms resulted in 3 false-negative and 1 false-positive conclusions, compared with the histologic findings. Interpretation of nephrosonograms resulted in 2 false-negative and no false-positive conclusions. Of the kidneys with histologic evidence of pyelonephritis, 73% were detected by excretory urography, whereas 82% were detected by nephrosonography. Nephrosonography appeared to be useful for detection of mild to moderate cases of acute pyelonephritis that may be be interpreted as such by excretory urography.
...
PMID:Comparison of excretory urography and ultrasonography for detection of experimentally induced pyelonephritis in dogs. 831 56
Included in the study were 681 patients with stenosis and obstruction of the
ureter
(SOU), diagnosed at the Department of Urology, Clinical Center of Urology, University Aleksandrovska Hospital in Sofia for a period of 5 years. The diagnosis rested on clinical, laboratory, X-ray, radioisotopic, echographic, endoscopic and other investigations. Analysis of the clinical and laboratory data demonstrated an outstanding triad of clinical symptoms: pain (76.8 per cent), hematuria (74.0 per cent), dysuria (70.9 per cent). The laboratory data confirmed the standpoint of other authors that most common is the urinary tract infection, followed in incidence by microhematuria, leukocyturia and hemoglobin content lower than 10 mg %. The most common causative agents of infection were E. coli (29.8 per cent) and
Proteus
(26.28 per cent). The X-ray methods being used were excretory urography (76.8 per cent) and plain X-ray on kidney-
ureter
-bladder film (93.2 per cent of the patients). Excretory urography furnished information on the cause, degree and location of SOU and on the effect upon the kidney. It helped to determine the approach to treatment--conservative transureteral or operative.
...
PMID:[The modern diagnosis of stenosis and obstruction of the ureter]. 841 76
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