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 38-year-old man visited our hospital complaining of severe right flank pain with hematoemesis. Imaging studies including computerized tomographic (CT) scan demonstrated a right ureter stone and retroperitoneal abscess. His septic condition and presence of disseminated intravescular coagulation (DIC) necessitated percutaneous nephrostomy and drainage of the abscess. The patient recovered from DIC and infection within a week. To our knowledge, 5 similar cases of retroperitoneal abscess secondary to ureteral rupture have been reported in the Japanese literature.
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PMID:[A case of retroperitoneal abscess and disseminated intravascular coagulation as a complication of upper ureteral rupture caused by ureteral calculus]. 880 63

Two cases of spontaneous rupture of the renal parenchyma caused by the renal pelvic and the ureteral cancer are reported. Case 1 was in a 53-year-old male who had left flank pain 2 weeks before admission to the hospital. In retrograde pyelography, the left upper ureter was visualized irregularly, but the left pelvis was not visualized. Computed tomography (CT) and magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) showed perirenal hematoma. Left nephroureterectomy with bladder cuff was performed under diagnosis of left renal pelvic and ureteral cancer. The rupture of the left renal parenchyma with extracapsular hematoma was identified. Pathological diagnosis was transitional cell carcinoma, grade 2 and pT1 of the left renal pelvis and the left ureter. Case 2 was in a 57-year-old male who had left flank pain 2 hours after he had enhanced CT study. MRI showed the left pelvic and the ureteral cancer with perirenal hematoma after 4 days. Left nephrourererctomy and partial cystectomy were performed. The rupture of the renal parenchyma with subcapsular hematoma was identified. Pathological diagnosis was transitional cell carcinoma, grade 2 and pT1 of the left renal pelvis and the left ureter.
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PMID:[Spontaneous rupture of renal parenchyma caused by renal pelvic and ureteral cancer: a case report]. 888 69

Fibroangiomatous polyps and its histological variants most often occur in the ureters of young adult. They may be multiple, and rarely occur in the renal pelvis. Microscopically, normal or hyperplastic urothelium cover loose, vascular, edematous, fibrous stroma that may be inflamed. Etiologic factors are unknown. Intermittent flank pain is the most common symptom; dysuria and hematuria occur less frequently. A case of fibroangiomatous polyps of the left ureter, in a 37-years old woman, is presented. We emphasize the endoscopic conservative treatment of this lesion as a valid alternative to the surgical approach; beside, it's important to obtain pre-operative histological finding, confirming the benign lesion.
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PMID:[Polyp fibroangioma of the ureter. Endoscopic treatment]. 892 90

An 81-year-old woman was admitted to our hospital with left flank pain. Excretory urography revealed left hydronephrosis. Abdominal computed tomography (CT) revealed a large heterogenous tumor in the upper pole and marked hydronephrosis and hydroureter in the lower portion of the left kidney. Left total nephroureterectomy was performed under the diagnosis of renal pelvic and ureter tumor. The pathological diagnosis was of renal cell carcinoma (spindle type, grade 3) in the kidney and transitional cell carcinoma (grade 2) in the ureter. Postoperative chemotherapy was not given. Convalescence was uneventful and fifteen months after the operation she is alive with no recurrence or metastasis.
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PMID:[Unilateral and synchronous occurrence of renal cell carcinoma and ureteral tumor: a case report]. 895 65

We treated 17 patients with severe endometriosis involving the genitourinary tract. Eight women presented with persistent right or left flank pain, two presented with known ureteral obstruction, and five presented with urinary frequency and burning, and/or hematuria with their periods. Presented are the results of laparoscopic management in these patients. We performed segmental bladder resection in six patients and ureteral resection and reanastomosis in two. Nine additional patients underwent partial resection of the ureteral wall for complete removal of endometrial implants. The ureter was repaired with 4-0 PDS in seven patients and a stent was left in place for 4 to 6 weeks. Two required only a stent due to the small size of the ureterotomy. The postoperative course of these patients was uneventful. Following ureteral repair/reanastomosis, all women underwent an intravenous pyelogram at follow-up, and normal bilateral excretion was demonstrated. Cystoscopy revealed no abnormal findings in five patients who had undergone partial bladder resection. All patients reported significant pain relief or complete resolution of symptoms. Operative laparoscopy can be safely used to achieve relief from severe symptomatic endometriosis of the genitourinary tract.
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PMID:Laparoscopic Management of Genitourinary Endometriosis 907 28

A case of mucinous adenocarcinoma of the renal pelvis and ureter presenting as chronic flank pain, calculus, and hydronephrosis in an immigrant from India is presented. A literature review reveals a high frequency of reporting this otherwise rare tumor in India and suggests an inflammatory, environmental, or dietary etiology.
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PMID:Mucinous adenocarcinoma of the renal pelvis in natives of India. 909 76

In 58 patients with acute recurrent or persistent flank pain, straight x-ray (kidney, ureter, bladder region) detected stones in the urinary tract in 50 cases (86.2%), whereas ultrasonography detected stones in the urinary tract in 55 patients (94.8%). Ultrasound also detected unilateral hydronephrosis in 20 patients (34.48%). The presence of calculus was subsequently proved by intravenous urography/surgery or spontaneous passage. Ultrasonography is safe, quick, reliable and most effective diagnostic tool in such cases in rural areas. Intravenous urogram should be reserved for cases which need surgical intervention.
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PMID:Ultrasonography in acute flank pain. 914 63

A 26-year-old woman presented with a colicky right flank pain. Retrograde pyelogram showed extravasation of the contrast medium from the right renal pelvis and a filling defect in the right ureter 4.5 cm proximal to the ureteral orifice. Urinary cytology was negative for malignancy. A partial ureterectomy with a vesicoureteroneostomy was performed. Gross inspection of the resected distal ureter revealed a 3-mm polyp with a grayish-white smooth surface as well as a ureteral stenosis of 2 cm in length just distal to the polyp. Pathological diagnosis was a fibroepithelial polyp. In our case, urinary extravasation probably resulted from an impacted polyp in the stenotic ureter.
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PMID:[Spontaneous urinary extravasation from the renal pelvis associated with ureteral fibroepithelial polyp: report of a case]. 916 60

The incidence of tuberculosis has risen in many parts of the world, and more attention is being focused on genitourinary tuberculosis (GT), the second most common extrathoracic form of tuberculosis. Although chemotherapy is the mainstay of treatment, ablative surgery as a first-line management may be unavoidable for sepsis or abscesses. In cases with hydronephrosis and progressive renal insufficiency caused by obstruction, renal drainage (by stenting or nephrostomy) must be performed immediately. In all other situations triple-drug chemotherapy should be undertaken for at least 6 months and stable conversion obtained before ablative or reconstructive surgery is planned. Nephrectomy or partial nephrectomy is indicated for nonfunctioning or poorly functioning kidneys, particularly if continuous flank pain or hypertension is present. Stenosis of the ureter usually can be managed by temporary stenting and adjuvant corticosteroid therapy. Today the indications for augmentation are rare, but bladder replacement may be combined with ureter replacement using segments of intestine.
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PMID:Indications for surgical management of genitourinary tuberculosis. 920 38

Acute urinary tract obstruction, a common disease in daily practice, often requires performance of emergency intravenous urography (IVU). However, the spectrum of urographic abnormalities seen with acute obstruction has not been thoroughly addressed. The purpose of this study was to explore the IVU findings in patients with acute urinary tract obstruction. Records of 380 patients who underwent IVU in our hospital during a 6-mo period were reviewed for IVU evidence of acute urinary tract obstruction. Of the 380 patients, 53 (14%; 39 men, 14 women; average age = 43 yr) had acute urinary tract obstruction. All obstructions except one were located in the lower one-third of the ureter. The causes of acute urinary obstruction included ureteral stones in 34 (64%), ureteral edema or lucent stones in 16 (30%), neoplasms in 2 (4%), and inflammatory disease in 1 (2%). Abnormal radiologic findings were hydroureter in 46, nephropyelographic delay in 36, hydronephrosis in 35, interureteric ridge edema in 11, persistent dense nephrogram in 6, urine extravasation in 5, vicarious excretion in 1, striation in 1, and stricture in 1. Radiographic results were normal in one patient. The most common clinical indications of acute ureteral obstruction are flank pain and hematuria, and calculi are the major cause. In one-third of patients, radiopaque calculi are not detectable with IVU during acute urinary tract obstruction. A careful and thorough evaluation of the IVU should be performed in patients with clinical indications of acute urinary obstruction.
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PMID:Radiologic findings in acute urinary tract obstruction. 925 84


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