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

From 1956 to 1985, autopsy was done on 17 lung cancer patients in our hospital. There were two patients with focal metastasis as the presenting symptom without any primary cancer manifestations. One patient was admitted for severe right epigastric pain followed by severe pain in the left epigastrium. The chest film revealed nothing except some indefinite inflammatory lesions in the left upper lung. The patient died of uremia in 6 months. A primary carcinoma of 2 cm in diameter in the left lower lung was found on autopsy, which widely spread to the right lung, ovaries, upper segment of the left ureter, peribronchial and periaortic lymph nodes. Histological diagnosis was poorly differentiated adenocarcinoma. The other patient had destruction of the sphenoid bone with cranial nerve paralysis and hypothalamic syndrome at first. The primary cancer, a poorly differentiated adenocarcinoma of 2 X 3 X 1.5 cm in size, was found in the right upper lung on autopsy. Focal metastatic symptom as the initial presentation of lung cancer is rare. These tumors, as small lesions, frequently occur in the peripheral part of the lung. However, the site in which the presenting symptom develops may not necessarily be the place prone to metastasis. The presenting symptom, in turn, would depend upon the tendency of causing symptoms in the involved site. The author suggests that careful searching and identifying of the pulmonary lesion be routinely done for patients with metastatic carcinomatous symptoms only.
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PMID:[Focal metastatic symptom as the initial presentation of lung cancer--report of two autopsied cases]. 365 19

638 patients with ureteric stones have been evaluated. 174 patients (28%) were selected for surgical treatment. 129 out of the 174 patients initially underwent open surgery. In the other 45 patients the initial treatment was stone extraction by the Dormia technique after which 27 stones were removed successfully. In the remaining 18 patients catheterisation of the ureter was performed, after which stones passed spontaneously in 15 patients. In one patient the stone was removed by another attempt with the Dormia procedure and two patients underwent operation. At follow-up 4-6 weeks after the diagnosis of ureteric stones was made, no signs of stones were found by urography in either the 464 patients (72%) who never underwent any surgical procedure or in the patients treated by open surgery or other procedures. It is concluded that parameters such as degree of ureteric obstruction, infection, pain and stones not passed within 6 weeks are important factors in selection of patients for operation.
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PMID:Surgical treatment of ureteric stones. 370 26

A case of ureteral intussusception caused by a low-grade papillary transitional cell carcinoma of the ureter is described. This is the first case of ureteral intussusception resulting from a malignant tumor of the ureter. The patient presented with weight loss and vague pain in the right lower abdominal quadrant. Right ureterovesical junction obstruction was seen in the retrograde pyeloureterogram. Right nephroureterectomy including a cuff of adjacent bladder wall was performed.
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PMID:Ureteral intussusception by papillary transitional cell carcinoma. 376 42

Disruption of the ureter is very rarely caused by a blunt trauma, only 12 cases having been reported in Japan. A 20-year-old male suffered from a blunt abdominal trauma in a traffic accident. Although his urinalysis showed no abnormalities, a dull pain in the left flank region persisted for over a week after the injury. Under the suspicion of renal or ureteral injury, an excretory urogram (DIP) was conducted. The form of renal pelvis and calyces was almost normal on both sides, while extravasation of contrast medium was recognized around the lower pole of the left kidney. The retrograde pyelogram of the left side revealed that catheterization was possible up to 30 cm from the ureteral orifice, but the injected medium leaked into the retroperitoneal space making it impossible to visualize the left renal pelvis and calyces. An operation was performed under the diagnosis of left ureteral injury on the 19th day after trauma. The left ureter was completely disrupted 2 cm distally from the ureteropelvic junction. An end to end anastomosis of the ureter was done with 6-0 Dexon sutures. The DIP taken on the 25th day after the operation showed slight dilatation of the left pelvis and calyces. However, the renogram conducted 6 months after the operation demonstrated a normal pattern on both sides.
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PMID:[A case of ureteral disruption caused by a traffic accident]. 389 74

Right ovarian vein syndrome is revealed in pregnancy by right lumbar pains, and even by nephritic colics. It results from a congenital malposition of the right ovarian vein, which presses the right ureter on the external iliac artery. Diagnosis is by intravenous urography and retrograde ureteral pyelography. If pain persists despite treatment by analgesics, it may be necessary to place a double-J catheter, and to operate after delivery to ligate the ovarian vein.
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PMID:[Right ovarian vein syndrome]. 398 76

Upper urinary tract calculi can be difficult to diagnose and to treat. One has to be aware that there is a risk for the mother which is often not recognized in the long term. The authors describe 17 cases of pregnant women aged between 20 and 33 who were treated for calculi in the Urological Service in Poitiers. They were diagnosed at different stages of pregnancy and a few had a previous urological history. The women presented in different ways, several of them with urinary colic and 10 with urinary colic and fever. Urinary tract infection and septicaemia also occurred. Six patients passed the stones spontaneously. The rest had to be treated by some form of operation, either during the pregnancy or afterwards, including one case of a patient who had to have her kidney and ureter removed and another who had to have a kidney removed. One patient had to have an emergency caesarean section for fetal distress although she had had stone removed at the 20th week of pregnancy. It is not possible to know from this series the incidence of stones in the tract. Various theories of the formation of the stones, including the anatomical changes that occur in the urinary tract in pregnancy, are suggested and these include the hormonal theory of dilatation of the ureters as well as the mechanical theory of changes in the course of the ureters. There are also likely to be changes in the phosphocalcium metabolism. Pain in the lumbar and lower abdominal region is the most frequent symptom occurring in 90-100% of cases and urinary tract infection is common.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:[Pregnancy and lithiasis of the upper urinary tract. Clinical aspects and therapeutic management]. 400 92

Obstruction at the ureteropelvic junction (UPJ) is usually intrinsic. Recently, however, 13 (11%) of approximately 120 children with UPJ obstruction were found to have extrinsic obstruction caused by a lower-pole renal vessel. In each case, the obstruction was confirmed at the time of surgery. Most of these patients had intermittent pain. Excretory urograms did not show obstruction between episodes of pain, but when a urogram was obtained during an episode, marked obstruction was noted. Contrast agent trapped in a segment of proximal ureter suggests the presence of an extrinsic obstruction. Properly timed renal imaging, therefore, can identify the urinary tract as the source of the symptoms.
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PMID:Intermittent hydronephrosis: a unique feature of ureteropelvic junction obstruction caused by a crossing renal vessel. 402 25

This is a report on a case of blind-ending ureter. The patient was a 56-year-old female who had complained of a pain in the left flank. There was no urinary tract infection. Excretory urography revealed a left blind-ending bifid ureter. It was resected and the removed specimen was about 8 cm in length. Histologically, it had all layers of the ureteral structure, but no renal tissue was found. The post-operative course was uneventful. We collected 55 cases of blind-ending bifid ureters reported in Japan including our own and discussed the difference between blind-ending bifid ureter and ureteral diverticulum.
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PMID:[Blind-ending bifid ureter: a case report]. 402 85

A new ureteral loop is introduced that, in contrast to other loops, allows the kidney to be drained continuously during stone retrieval. Thus, complications caused by blockage of the ureter by the stone, such as fever and colic pain, are avoided. The basket shape of the loop provides optimum grasping of the ureteral stone.
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PMID:New self-draining basket loop for the treatment of ureteral stones. 403 68

Four males with ectopic ureteral opening are reported herein. Case 1 was a 17 year old who complained of miction pain and macroscopic hematuria. Cystoscopy and radiological examinations showed left ectopic ureteral opening into the seminal vesicle associated with left renal agenesis. The left ureter and seminal vesicle were extirpated. Case 2 was a 21 year old who complained of lower abdominal pain. On physical examination, a child's head sized mass was palpable in the midline of the lower abdomen. Operation was performed under diagnosis of intrapelvic tumor, but the mass was cystic dilatation of left ureter which opened into the seminal vesicle. Case 3 was a 19 year old who complained of right CVA colic pain. On cystoscopy, the right ureteral orifice was absent. During the operation, right ureter was found to open into the posterior urethra. Case 4 was a 57 year old who complained of fever. Plain X-ray on the pelvic cavity showed a 82 X 10 mm calcified shadow. CT revealed a right ectopic ureteral opening into the posterior urethra with a ureteral stone in it. On cystoscopy, the right ureteral orifice was identified and pus discharge was observed to flow out of it. Operative exploration demonstrated that the right ureter was inverted Y duplication; one opened into the posterior urethra and the other into the trigone. Seventy nine males with ectopic ureteral opening and 3 with inverted Y ureteral duplication from the Japanese literature are reviewed briefly.
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PMID:[Ectopic ureteral opening in four males: including a case of inverted Y ureteral duplication]. 409 Nov 41


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