Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
Pivot Concepts:   Target Concepts:
Query: UMLS:C0403608 (ureter)
9,655 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

The renal pelvis of the hamster has been studied by light microscopy (epoxy resin sections), transmission electron microscopy, and morphometric analysis of electron micrographs. Three morphologically distinct epithelia line the pelvis, and each covers a different zone of the kidney. A thin epithelium covering the outer medulla (OM) consists of two cell types: (1) granular cells are most numerous and have apically positioned granules which stain intensely with toluidine blue, are membrane-bound, and contain a fine particulate matter that stains light grey to black in electron micrographs. (2) Basal cells do not have granules, are confined to the basal lamina region, and do not reach the mucosal epithelial surface. The inner medulla (IM) is covered by a pelvic epithelium morphologically similar to collecting duct epithelium of IM. Some cells in this portion of the pelvic epithelium (IM) stain intensely dark with toluidine blue, osmium tetroxide, lead, and uranyl acetate. Transitional epithelium, which separates cortex (C) from pelvic urine, has an asymmetric luminal plasma membrane and discoid vesicles, each of which is similar to those previously observed in mammalian ureter and urinary bladder epithelia. Based on morphological comparisons with other epithelia, the IM and OM pelvic epithelia would appear permeable to solutes and/or water, while the transitional epithelium covering the C appears relatively impermeable. It would also appear that the exchange of solutes and water between pelvic urine and OM would involve capillaries, primarily, since morphometric analysis showed that both fenestrated and continuous capillaries of the OM were extremely abundant (greater than 60% of OM pelvic surface area) just under the thin pelvic epithelium.
...
PMID:Ultrastructural organization of the hamster renal pelvis. 48 9

Brown Norway kininogen-deficient rats had very low levels of plasma kininogens and lower levels of plasma prekallikrein, compared with those of normal rats of the same strain. Systolic blood pressure, determined by the tail-cuff method, of 5-week-old kininogen-deficient rats (106 +/- 0.4 mm Hg, n = 7) and the rate of systolic blood pressure increase with age were not different from those in normal rats. Weekly injections of deoxycorticosterone acetate (5 mg/kg s.c.) with 1% sodium chloride solution in drinking water after uninephrectomy at 7 weeks of age caused a gradual increase in the blood pressure of normal rats, reaching a plateau at 18 weeks of age, whereas that of deficient rats rose rapidly to 158 +/- 6 mm Hg 2 weeks after the start of treatment and continued to increase slightly, becoming significantly higher than normal rats at 8, 9, 10, 11, and 12 weeks of age (p less than 0.05 or 0.01). The levels of urinary prokallikrein and active kallikrein were slightly higher in deficient rats before deoxycorticosterone acetate-salt treatment but were not significantly increased after this treatment, whereas these levels in normal rats were increased 3.6- and 4.7-fold by this treatment. Urinary free kinin, collected from the ureter in untreated deficient rats, was below the detection limit. The plasma level of low molecular weight kininogen, the substrate of glandular kallikrein, was decreased in normal rats during the treatment. Continuous subcutaneous injection of aprotinin by an osmotic pump to normal rats induced significant increase in blood pressure. These results indicate that glandular kallikrein may play a suppressive role in deoxycorticosterone acetate-salt hypertension.
...
PMID:Suppression of rat deoxycorticosterone-salt hypertension by kallikrein-kinin system. 171 Jun 5

A double blind comparative clinical trial was performed with allylestrenol (AE) and chlormadinone acetate (CMA) to investigate the clinical efficacy of AE on prostatic hypertrophy. Both drugs were administered orally for 12-16 weeks in a daily dose of 50 mg. With both drugs marked improvement of disorders of micturition and a slight decrease in the size of the hypertrophied prostatic node were observed. No significant difference was observed between the two drugs in the overall efficacy of the treatments. Significant improvement of practically all parameters used for evaluation of results was observed with both drugs following treatment. Ultrasonotomographic examination revealed diminution of the size of the prostatic node and x-ray examination of the ureter showed improvement in elevation of the fundus of the bladder. These improvements were better after CMA treatment than after AE treatment. With all other parameters used no significant difference was observed between the two drugs. Mild adverse effects such as loss of sexual desire and potency were observed in a few cases. The incidence of side-effects was lower following AE treatment, and the incidence of loss of sexual desire and potency was significantly lower after AE than after CMA. Taking into consideration efficacy and safety of the treatments, no significant difference was observed in usefulness between the two drugs, and we were able to confirm the usefulness of AE for the conservative treatment of prostatic hypertrophy.
...
PMID:[Clinical effects of allylestrenol on benign prostatic hypertrophy by double-blind method]. 242 32

Monoclonal antibodies have been raised against cytotrophoblast. Two different antigens, defined on cytotrophoblast but not on syncytiotrophoblast were designated ACT-1 and ACT-2, respectively. Chorionic villi were taken from normal early pregnancy and processed for immunization by two different procedures. ACT-1 was demonstrated to be present in lung alveolar cells, endothelial mucosa of the jejunum, colon, ureter, urinary bladder and the fallopian tube, and endometrial gland of the pregnant uterus. On the other hand, ACT-2 was present in the endothelial mucosa of the stomach, endothelium of the renal vessel, and the decidua of the pregnant uterus. Although the monoclonal antibodies did not react with such established cell lines as Bewo, SCH, OVK-18, HHUA, MK-01, FL, BHK and P3 X 63Ag 8 . 653, they did react with some of the cell lines when the cell membrane was destroyed with Triton X-100. Each antibody, therefore, may recognize the antigen not on the cell membrane but in the cytoplasm. The antigens might be shed or may disappear in the process of differentiation from cytotrophoblast to syncytiotrophoblast.
...
PMID:Human cytotrophoblastic antigens defined by monoclonal antibodies. 337 2

This report describes the clinicopathologic features of a 49-year-old woman who was reoperated on for bulky abdominal metastases 20 years after hysterectomy for endometrial stromal myosis (ESM). The levels of estrogen (ER) and progesterone (PR) receptors measured in the resected tumorous tissue amounted to 48.3 and 71.4 femtomoles (fmol)/mg cytosol protein, respectively. After medroxyprogesterone acetate (Depo-Provera; Upjohn) treatment of 16 months duration, the unresected pelvic tumor mass compressing the bladder and the left ureter had decreased in volume and hydroureteronephrosis had regressed. The efficacy of the therapy was monitored by computed tomography. Two years and nine months after surgery, the evolution of the tumor seems well-controlled by continuous progestin therapy and the patient is living without symptoms.
...
PMID:Endolymphatic stromal myosis. Surgical and hormonal treatment of extensive abdominal recurrence 20 years after hysterectomy. 711 13

We have shown that acute (24-hr) unilateral ureteral obstruction (UUO) induces the genes encoding for renin, in juxtaglomerular apparatuses and in tubules, for angiotensin converting enzyme in vascular endothelial cells, and for angiotensinogen in perivascular fat. These molecular changes occur in temporal association to marked reductions in renal blood flow (RBF) and glomerular filtration rate (GFR), suggesting that angiotensin II (Ang II) is at least partly responsible for the renal vasoconstriction. We tested the hypothesis that down-regulation of the Ang II type-1 receptor (AT1-R) gene occurs in UUO in response to Ang II, by examining the effects of an ACE inhibitor [lisinopril (Li), 5 mg/kg/day] and of the specific nonpeptidic AT1-R blocker, losartan (Lo) (10 mg/kg/day). UUO or sham operated (which included manipulation but not obstruction of the ureter) rats (S) were studied. Northern blot analysis of the steady state concentration of AT1-R mRNA corrected for GAPDH mRNA showed a marked decrease in receptor expression (-77%, N = 4, P < 0.01) in the obstructed kidney (UUO) compared to S; sham diminished gene expression modestly compared to the contralateral kidneys (C) of UUO. In situ hybridization for AT1-R mRNA also showed diminished expression in UUO compared to C kidneys (N = 4). Treatment of UUO rats (N = 4) with Lo increased AT1-R mRNA five times above the levels in UUO rats receiving vehicle; the increase induced by Li was 50% that of Lo; S (N = 4) and C (N = 4) did not change. Losartan, but not vehicle treatment increased RBF (sixfold) and GFR (fivefold) in the UUO kidneys.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Regulation of the renal angiotensin II receptor gene in acute unilateral ureteral obstruction. 793 8

Pulmonary lesions and ureter involvement are rare complications of endometriosis. We describe the first case with an involvement of both sites in this condition. The radiographs showed "pulmonary metastases" together with clinical findings of a hydronephrosis, mimicing a malignant metastatic gynecologic tumor of unknown primary. A laparoscopy showed severe endometriotic lesions; therefore the findings were most likely related to the condition of endometriosis. The patient was treated with gosereline acetate for six months (Zoladex). Control radiographs showed complete regression of the pulmonary lesions and the patient is symptom free at 36 months after diagnosis.
...
PMID:Ureteric and pulmonary endometriosis. 1156 47

A 42-year-old woman was referred to our hospital because of abdominal fullness and a large abdominal mass. Computed tomography (CT) demonstrated bilateral ovarian tumors, uterine myoma and left hydronephrosis. On excretory urography the left kidney was not visualized and retrograde pyelography (RP) revealed left hydronephrosis and a filling defect in the left lower ureter. Based on the diagnoses of endometriosis of bilateral ovaries, uterine myoma and a left ureteral tumor, abdominal total hysterectomy, right salpingo-oophorectomy and partial ureterectomy were performed. Pathologically, in the uterus, both leiomyoma and adenomyosis, and endometriosis of the right ovary and ureter were diagnosed. Medication with buserelin acetate was started.
...
PMID:Ureteral endometriosis: a case report and a review of the Japanese literature. 1157 99

The effect of experimentally induced acute renal failure (ARF) on neuronal cell activation was investigated by immunohistochemistry for Fos and Fra-2 in the rat brain. ARF in rats was induced by bilateral nephrectomy (BNX), bilateral ureter ligature (BUL) and uranyl acetate injection with proper controls (sham-operation or saline injections, respectively). To follow the effect of the development of ARF, rats were killed 30 and 60 min, and 3, 12, 24 and 72 h after surgery, or 3 h to 12 days after uranyl acetate injections. In the BUL and BNX rats, urea and creatinine rose markedly in the plasma within 72 h, while in the uranyl acetate-injected rats the highest levels were observed on the 7th day, followed by a marked decline. At each time-point of the three different, experimentally induced ARF, the presence of Fos- and/or Fra-2-immunoreactive neurons was determined in 120 different brain areas and nuclei. In general, the 73 of 120 brain areas that showed time and intensity dependent activation in response to ARF can be classified into four groups: 1) biogenic amine (noradrenaline, adrenaline, histamine and 5-HT) expressing cell groups in the lower brainstem, 2) "stress-sensitive" forebrain areas, with regard to certain hypothalamic, limbic and cortical areas, 3) neuronal cell groups that participate in the central regulation of body and brain water and electrolyte homeostasis, including the circumventricular organs, and 4) central autonomic cell groups, especially visceral sensory cell groups in the brain, which are in primary, secondary or tertiary connections with renal afferents. Data presented here indicate that a wide variety of neurons in several regulatory mechanisms is affected by ARF-induced peripheral and central alterations.
...
PMID:Neuronal activation in the CNS during different forms of acute renal failure in rats. 1917 83

A concept is proposed laying emphasis on the involvement of cytokines, growth factors, prostaglandins, and nitrogen oxides in the mechanism of formation of reflux-nephropathy in children. It is shown that enhanced production of mediators of inflammation and humoral growth factors in patients with vesico-ureter reflux depends on the degree of infiltrative and sclerotic changes in the kidneys. The accompanying dysbalance of pro- and anti-inflammatory cytokines due to increased endogeneous production of TNF-alpha and concomitant decrease of daily BL-10 excretion constitutes an unfavourable prognostic factor of reflux-nephropathy. There is evidence that inclusion of ACE inhibitors (Enap) in therapy of vesico-ureter reflux during 6 months leads to a marked improvement of the structural and functional state of the kidneys. It suggests high renoprotective potential of these preparations and the possibility of their use for prophylaxis of nephrosclerosis in children.
...
PMID:[Biologically active compounds in the mechanism of formation of reflux-nephropathy in children]. 1918 11


1 2 Next >>