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Query: UMLS:C0403608 (ureter)
9,655 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

The excretory urograms performed on 1716 children and 3480 adults have been examined to find the incidence and complications of renal duplication. Ninety-five patients with duplication were found, unilateral in 79 and bilateral in 16 patients. It was equally common on each side and twice as common in females as in males. Non-duplex kidneys had a mean of 9.4 calyces and duplex kidneys had a mean 3.7 upper and 7-6 calyces in lower moieties. In patients without renal disease and with unilateral duplication the two kidneys were equal in size in 39%, and the duplex was smaller in 10%. Twenty-seven per cent of the duplex kidneys examined showed evidence of disease compared to 3% of the non-duplex kidneys-a significant difference (P less than 0-001). Saddle reflux is the only abnormality unique to duplication and was seen in one patient. Extravesical ectopic ureter and ureterocoeles are known to be associated with renal duplication, but in this series ureterocoeles were found only on the non-duplex side. The duplex kidney in children is more susceptible to reflux than is the non-duplex kidney, and this leads to both ureteric and pelvi-calyceal dilation, and to chronic pyelonephritis in the duplex side in those children who develop urinary tract infections. Chronic pyelonephritis was found in 22% of patients under 15, significantly more often than in adults (P less than 0-001), although the incidence of duplication was unchanged. It is concluded that there is no real increase in the number of children with duplex kidneys having urinary tract infections, and the vast majority of duplex kidneys do not become diseased.
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PMID:The incidence and importance of renal duplication. 100 Aug 96

Chronic pyelonephritis was induced in young adult cats by the intravenous injection of a human or a feline strain of Escherichia coli after ligation of one ureter for 24 or 48 h. In the 3 cats infected with the feline strain, scarred kidneys from the obstructed side were removed at necropsy 3, 4 and 5 months later. Collagen was extracted from pyelonephritic and normal kidney tissue with dilute acetic acid and limited proteolysis with pepsin. Scarred kidneys gave higher yields of both acid-soluble collagen (normal = 0.57 +/- 0.12 mg per g tissue; scarred = 0.88 +/- 0.10 mg per g tissue) and pepsin-solubilized collagen (normal = 9.69 +/- 1.79 mg per g tissue; scarred = 20.02 +/- 2.84 mg per g tissue). There was no significant increase in the collagen yield from the kidneys of the 2 cats in which mild focal lesions were found 14 and 16 months after infection with the human strain of E. coli. Pepsin released collagens were separated by fractional salt precipitation and identified by agarose gel chromatography and polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis. Normal kidney was shown to contain collagen of Types I, IV and V (AB). The Type IV collagen extracted consisted of a mixture of 4 major pepsin-resistant chains of apparent molecular weights of 150 000, 115 000, 85 000 and 60 000. The collagen extracted from scarred kidneys was predominantly Type I, only trace amounts of Type IV and V components being present. These findings suggest that basement membrane collagens of the kidney are selectively degraded during the atrophy and scarring of chronic feline pyelonephritis and are preferentially replaced by interstitial Type I collagen.
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PMID:Experimental pyelonephritis in the cat: 3. Collagen alterations in renal fibrosis. 684 96