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Target Concepts:
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Query: UMLS:C0403608 (
ureter
)
9,655
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Bilateral hydronephrosis
identified by a local physician brought a 65-year-old man to our hospital. Emergency percutaneous nephrostomy was bilaterally established for obstructive renal failure. After recovering renal function, the patient underwent radical cystectomy under the diagnosis of invasive bladder cancer and the construction of an ileal conduit. The pathology reported well differentiated adenocarcinoma (pT2, pL1, pV1). Five years after the surgery, gross hematuria developed. A computed tomographic scan revealed right hydronephrosis with a solid mass in the upper calyx. The urinary cytology was negative. The patient underwent right nephrectomy in May, 1999. The pathology then revealed well differentiated adenocarcinoma in the renal pelvis and
ureter
(pT3, pL0, pV0 and pT1, pL0, pV0, respectively). He is alive with mild chronic renal insufficiency with evidence of tumor at ten months after surgery. To our knowledge, this is the first case of metachronous adenocarcinoma of the urinary bladder and the upper urinary tract reported in the Japanese literature.
...
PMID:[A case of metachronous adenocarcinoma of the urinary bladder and the right upper urinary tract]. 1096 53
We report a case of ammonium acid urate stone due to laxative abuse. A 27-year-old female complained of left flank pain. Computed tomography revealed bilateral
ureter
stones (right 16.5 x 9.0 mm; left 4 mm), while left
ureter
stone was radiolucent on the plain X ray film.
Bilateral hydronephrosis
was seen, but no therapy was performed for the right stone, because 99mTc-MAG3 scintigraphy revealed that right kidney had no function. The left stone was successfully removed by transurethral approach. The stone was revealed to be an ammonium acid urate by infrared spectrophotometry. She had been taking many laxatives (bisacodyl, sennoside, aloe extract) for 12 years to control her body weight. Ammonium acid urate stones are rarely seen in developed countries. We have reviewed 9 cases in Japan, describing ammonium acid urate stones due to laxative abuse. Among these patients, 24-hour urine volume and excretion in urinary sodium were decreased, and serum aldosterone was increased. The involvement of laxative abuse should be considered when ammonium acid urate is formed in a woman with a low body mass index.
...
PMID:[Ammonium acid urate stone due to laxative abuse: a case report]. 1562 42