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)

A 23 year old female, born in 1957, was diagnosed as having idiopathic thrombocytopenic purpura at the age of 3 and treated with prednisolone during her childhood with no response. On her regular check-up in 1978, facial edema and proteinuria suggested renal disease. The family history was negative for bleeding diathesis or renal disease. Close examination revealed the following: WBC 4,200/microliters without leukocyte inclusions, RBC 3.42 x 10(6)/microliters, Hb 11.7 g/dl. PT 10.6 sec, APTT 28.9 sec. Platelet count 4,500/microliters by HEMATRAK 360, and 40 x 10(3)/microliters measured by microscopic method. Giant platelets were noted on peripheral blood smear with an average diameter of 6.1 microns. Bleeding time (Duke) was 12.0 min. Number of megakaryocytes was increased although platelet production was remarkably decreased. Results of platelet aggregation and retention tests were normal. Platelet life span (T1/2) was 2.3 days. Sensory neural hearing loss, congenital cataract, double ureter and short small intestine were also found. Chromosome analysis showed 46XX. She underwent splenectomy resulting in increase of the platelet count to 226 x 10(3)/microliters. The increased platelet count, however, gradually decreased to the initial count in 2 years although the bleeding tendency was improved. In 1987, renal function deteriorated, causing intractable hypertension. The serum creatinine was 4.8 mg/dl. The following year she developed cerebral bleeding and died 4 days after the episode. The serum creatinine was 8.6 mg/dl.
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PMID:[Macrothrombocytopenia with deafness, nephritis, cataract, short small intestine, and double ureter]. 221 83

A 30-year-old female was admitted to our hospital complaining of hematuria and right flank pain in September, 1987. She had been diagnosed idiopathic thrombocytopenic purpura in 1980, and had similar symptoms before. Hematoma in the right ureter was demonstrated by retrograde pyelography and CT-scanning, and these symptoms improved within one month. Each activity of plasma clotting factors was within normal limits. Enzymatic studies of the urine revealed low values of plasmin-, urokinase-, and kallikrein-like activities in both excerbation and remission. These hemorrhagic tendencies might have been the result of marked thrombocytopenia: After bleeding into the urinary tracts began, the bleeding would tend to form hematoma because of elevated clotting activity; then hematoma would grow due to decreased urine fibrinolytic activities. This suggested that a decline of fibrinolysis in urine might have a promoting effect on the process of hematoma formation.
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PMID:[Possible mechanisms of hematoma formation in the urinary tracts in a patient with idiopathic thrombocytopenic purpura]. 224 28

Drosophila embryos lacking hindsight gene function have a normal body plan and undergo normal germ-band extension. However, they fail to retract their germ bands. hindsight encodes a large nuclear protein of 1920 amino acids that contains fourteen C2H2-type zinc fingers, and glutamine-rich and proline-rich domains, suggesting that it functions as a transcription factor. Initial embryonic expression of hindsight RNA and protein occurs in the endoderm (midgut) and extraembryonic membrane (amnioserosa) prior to germ-band extension and continues in these tissues beyond the completion of germ-band retraction. Expression also occurs in the developing tracheal system, central and peripheral nervous systems, and the ureter of the Malpighian tubules. Strikingly, hindsight is not expressed in the epidermal ectoderm which is the tissue that undergoes the cell shape changes and movements during germ-band retraction. The embryonic midgut can be eliminated without affecting germ-band retraction. However, elimination of the amnioserosa results in the failure of germ-band retraction, implicating amnioserosal expression of hindsight as crucial for this process. Ubiquitous expression of hindsight in the early embryo rescues germ-band retraction without producing dominant gain-of-function defects, suggesting that hindsight's role in germ-band retraction is permissive rather than instructive. Previous analyses have shown that hindsight is required for maintenance of the differentiated amnioserosa (Frank, L. C. and Rushlow, C. (1996) Development 122, 1343-1352). Two classes of models are consistent with the present data. First, hindsight's function in germ-band retraction may be limited to maintenance of the amnioserosa which then plays a physical role in the retraction process through contact with cells of the epidermal ectoderm. Second, hindsight might function both to maintain the amnioserosa and to regulate chemical signaling from the amnioserosa to the epidermal ectoderm, thus coordinating the cell shape changes and movements that drive germ-band retraction.
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PMID:Control of germ-band retraction in Drosophila by the zinc-finger protein HINDSIGHT. 918 40

A 36-year-old Japanese woman who had been diagnosed as having systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE) at the age of 34 began to complain of severe bowel symptoms and developed severe hydroureteronephrosis. She had a history of idiopathic thrombocytopenic purpura. Biopsy specimens from her bladder showed interstitial cystitis. She was diagnosed as having lupus cystitis, and treated with intravenous methylprednisolone pulse therapy followed by oral prednisolone and ureter catheterization. Her urinary and bowel symptoms were alleviated and the level of hydroureteronephrosis improved. We note that cystitis could be a primary manifestation of SLE. Patients not only with SLE but also with some autoimmune diseases require careful urological evaluation when they complain of severe bowel symptoms.
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PMID:A case of lupus cystitis with a history of idiopathic thrombocytopenic purpura. 1702 7