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

The role of the electrogenic Na(+)-Ca(2+)-exchange mechanism in regulating the spike activity of the ureter was studied. The ureter cells were shown to be capable of generating action potentials (AP) in sodium-free Krebs solution. The time during which the spikes are generated is in exponential dependence on the concentration of calcium ions in the medium, [Ca2+]o within 2.5 to 15 mmol/l. Simultaneously with the generation of the spikes, accumulation of calcium in the muscles is observed, proportional to the increase of [Ca2+]o. The addition of as little as 20 mmol/l Na+ or Li+ ions into the solution restores the prolonged electrical activity of the ureter. Under these conditions, the decrease of intracellular Ca2+ within 5 min was more than two times larger as compared with that in sodium-free medium. Upon substituting Ba2+ ions for Ca2+ ions in Krebs solution AP are generated within an interval which was the longer the higher the Ba2+ concentration in the medium. Li+ ions can replace Na+ ions in maintaining AP and in extruding calcium from the cell. It is supposed that the generation of the stable spike activity of the ureter depends on the functioning of Na(+)-Ca(2+)-exchange mechanism.
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PMID:Factors controlling the intracellular concentration of calcium and the spontaneous activity of the ureter. 186 94

A 3.3F electrohydraulic electrode (Wolf 2137.23) has been confined within a spring with a metal end cap, irrigated with water and covered with a 0.003-inch metal sheath (outside diameter 5F). The electrohydraulic lithotripsy discharge (Wolf Generator 2137.50) at E1 causes the metal cap to extend 3 mm. at 1,500 cm. per second and creates an impact pressure of 600 to 800 bar. Stone fragmentation efficiency of the electromechanical impactor was equivalent to unshielded electrohydraulic lithotripsy (gallstone 2.83 mg. per pulse, struvite/apatite 1.41 mg. per pulse, cystine 0.41 mg. per pulse, uric acid 1.48 mg. per pulse and 100% calcium oxalate monohydrate 0.10 mg. per pulse). Studies of the discharge of the electromechanical impactor within the pig ureter showed that minimal ureteral submucosal edema and hemorrhage occurred at 300 shocks discharged at a single point, and disruption of the mucosa and partial injury to the muscle layer occurred after 600 shocks given at the site of a pinched pig ureter. Pushing the electromechanical impactor perpendicular to the wall of the pig bladder will create a mechanical perforation within 35 shocks (electrohydraulic lithotripsy within 2 shocks). One patient had excellent fragmentation of a lower ureteral mixed monohydrate and dihydrate stone under direct vision performed with the electromechanical impactor passed via a 9.5F ureteroscope. There was no evidence of mucosal injury with 500 shocks. The electromechanical impactor has been developed to provide a safe and inexpensive method of ureteral stone fragmentation or disimpaction. These studies were performed to establish limits of safety that may allow use of the electromechanical impactor for stone fragmentation in the ureter without the need for ureteroscopy.
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PMID:Conversion of the electrohydraulic electrode to an electromechanical stone impactor: basic studies and a case report. 187 85

A series of 270 paediatric stone patients was studied retrospectively according to the clinical pattern of urolithiasis (age and sex, stone location, stone analysis, recurrence rate) and aetiology of stone disease (infection, anatomical, metabolic or idiopathic). Infection stones occurred earliest and more commonly in males and were usually upper tract struvite calculi related to Proteus infection. Anatomical stones were most commonly associated with pelviureteric junction (PUJ) obstruction and had a high recurrence rate, despite surgical correction of obstruction. Idiopathic stones most resembled those found in adult urolithiasis by virtue of occurring latest, being sited in the ureter more often and being more frequently composed of calcium oxalate. Metabolic stones were most frequently calcium phosphate or cystine and virtually all were renal. They comprised the smallest group but had the highest recurrence rate.
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PMID:Clinical patterns of paediatric urolithiasis. 188 49

The pulsed dye laser represents a new tool in the treatment of ureteral calculi. Laser energy channeled through a delicate optical fiber is used to disimpact and fragment calculi. Standard ureteroscopic instruments including graspers, baskets and dilatation balloons can be used with the laser system. Interchangeable optical fibers ranging from 200 to 400 micrometers deliver up to 120 mJ of energy to the stone's surface. For two weeks in 1989 an endourology clinic was held in upper Egypt. Eighty patients ranging in age from nine years to sixty-seven years old were evaluated and treated endoscopically. Endoscopes ranging from 6.9F to 12.5F were used to deliver the optical fiber. All stones visualized endoscopically were fragmented. Greater than 60 percent of the stones fragmented were composed of pure calcium oxalate monohydrate. Schistosoma hematobium was endemic among our study group. Bilharzial strictures of the distal ureter were noted in 30 percent of these patients. Treatment of these strictures using both balloon dilatation and graduated Teflon dilators is reviewed. Techniques in treating different types of ureteral calculi were explored. Large calcium oxalate dihydrate stones were treated most efficiently with the 3-point fragmentation technique. The shear off-center technique was used for the calcium oxalate monohydrate calculi. Variations in total energy delivered and frequency of pulsation allowed for prompt stone disimpaction as well as prevention of retrograde fragment migration. Concurrent use of stone baskets and graspers with the pulsed dye laser was explored.
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PMID:Techniques in endoscopic lithotripsy using pulsed dye laser. 199 81

We report our initial experience using the pulsed dye laser in 26 patients with urolithiasis. The patients ranged in age from 27 to 82 years; 11 patients were female and 15 were male. Of the 26 patients, 4 stones were in the kidney, 21 were in the ureter, and one was in the bladder. Surgical time ranged from 32 to 130 minutes. All patients were treated under spinal or general anesthesia. The size of ureteral stones ranged from 0.2 to 1.5 cm, and the renal stones 3.0 to 4.0 cm. Chemical analysis of the stones was not available on all patients, but when available, chemical analysis revealed the stones to be calcium monohydrate, calcium dihydrate, or struvite. The use of the Candela miniscope in 11 patients permitted access without ureteral dilation. In 19 patients, ureteral stents were placed. One patient suffered a ureteral perforation. Success was defined as adequate disintegration of the stone for passage of the fragments without the necessity of a secondary procedure. Using this criterion, 22 of 26 patients were successfully treated for an overall success rate of 85%.
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PMID:Preliminary experience with the pulsed dye laser for treatment of urolithiasis. 199 74

To minimize urothelial tissue injuries by inadvertent laser irradiation during the laser stone fragmentation, we developed a novel fiber-optic analysis system which is able to distinguish the urothelial tissues from urinary stones. The reflection mode of the pulsed photo-thermal radiometry (PPTR) was employed for non-destructive tissue characterization. We developed the first fiber-optic PPTR system using chalcogenide infrared glass fibers as a transmission line. As excitation light sources for the samples, three different lasers were used in vitro and compared to select the proper excitation laser which is able to distinguish wet urinary stones from urothelial tissues. The e-folding decay time of the PPTR waveform, by which the samples are characterized, was measured as an index. The ultraviolet argon (UV Ar) laser had the best discriminative faculty. Using UV Ar laser, the e-folding decay time of calcium oxalate stones, uric acid stones and the ureter, was 239 +/- 57 ms, 33 +/- 4 ms, and 102 +/- 24 ms (p less than 0.001), respectively. The new analysis system which was composed of the fiber-optic PPTR analyzer using UV Ar laser excitation together with a thin-fiber endoscope was applied to measure the e-folding decay time of PPTR waveform of urinary stones and canine ureters in vivo general anesthesia. The e-folding decay time of calcium oxalate stones, uric acid stones and the ureter was 153 +/- 15 ms, 26 +/- 3 ms and 246 +/- 31 ms, respectively. The canine ureter was clearly differentiable from urinary stones by the measurement of the e-folding decay time of PPTR waveform.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:[The prevention method of inadvertent irradiation during laser stone fragmentation by the fiber-optic radiometry analysis]. 205

In presence of the specific Na(+)-K(+)-pump blocking agent ouabain reestablishment of spike activity of the ureter smooth muscle cells occurred, the latters having been preliminarily incubated in sodium-free solution. The reestablishment lasted not over 15 minutes. After substitution of calcium ions with barium ones, the period of the spike generation increased. The lithium ions are able to substitute the sodium ions for reestablishing the calcium action potentials. The ureter activity seems to be reestablished in sodium-free solution with participation of the Na+/Ca(++)-exchange mechanism, which is quite specific for the calcium ions.
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PMID:[The regulation of the spontaneous activity of the ureter by a Na+/Ca++-metabolic mechanism]. 215

1. Calcium channel currents were recorded in single, enzymatically isolated smooth muscle cells of the guinea-pig ureter using a single-electrode whole-cell voltage clamp technique. Calcium and barium currents through voltage-activated Ca2+ channels were recorded in cells dialysed with Cs(+)- or Na(+)-containing saline which suppressed K+ currents. 2. Inward currents in Ca2+ (1.5-7.5 mM) or Ba2+ (1.5-7.5 mM) were recorded at potentials positive to -50 to -30 mV. Inward currents were maximal at 0 mV in 1.5 mM-Ca2+ and at +10 mV in 7.5 mM-Ba2+. Current flow through Ca2+ channels in Cs(+)-filled cells (in 1.5 mM-Ca2+ or 7.5 mM-Ba2+) changed from inward to outward at potentials positive to +70 mV. In Na(+)-filled cells this reversal potential was between +50 and +60 mV. 3. Replacing Ca2+ or Ba2+ with Co2+ (1.5 mM) blocked all inward current flow through these Ca2+ channels; outward currents at potentials positive to +40 mV, however, were increased. Cadmium (100 microM) and nifedipine (0.1-10 microM) reduced both inward and outward current flow. 4. Calcium channel activation showed a sigmoidal relationship with membrane potential; the potential of half-maximal activation was -8.4 mV in 1.5 mM-Ca2+ and -10.8 mV in 7.5 mM-Ba2+. The maximum membrane conductance to Ca2+ (in 1.5 mM-Ca2+) was 2.57 nS/cell or approximately 0.05 mS/cm2. 5. Evidence for a voltage-dependent inactivation mechanism included (a) the time-dependent relaxation of the outward currents at potentials positive to the reversal potential and (b) a steady-state inactivation (f infinity (V] vs. membrane potential relationship (in 7.5 mM-Ba2+) which ranged between -80 and 0 mV, with a half-maximal availability at -40.5 mV. 6. The voltage dependencies of the inward current elicited from -80 and -30 mV were similar, suggesting that depolarization activated only L-type Ca2+ channels. 7. It was concluded that the processes controlling the time course of the Ca2+ current in single ureteral cells bathed in physiological concentrations of Ca2+ were mostly voltage-dependent.
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PMID:The whole-cell Ca2+ channel current in single smooth muscle cells of the guinea-pig ureter. 216 65

Intracellular concentration of Ca++ ions was determined by the isotope analysis method for the guinea-pig ureter smooth muscle cells in solutions containing Ca++, Na+ and Li+. It was shown that the Ca++ concentration in muscles incubated in Na(+)-free solution containing 2.5 to 15 mmol/l Ca++, reached the maximal value during the period in which spikes were recorded. In the muscles enriched by calcium, intracellular Ca++ concentration was reduced by over 2.5 times in solutions containing Na+ and Ca++ ions (120 mmol/l and 10 mmol/l, resp.,) as compared with Na(+)-free medium. The reducing of calcium content was mainly obvious during first 5 min. Na+ ions were not specific for calcium removal from cells, Li+ ions being able to substitute them in this process. The findings suggest a possible participation of Na(+)-Ca(++)-exchange mechanism in the maintenance of the calcium homeostasis in the ureter smooth muscle cells.
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PMID:[The role of cations from the external medium in regulating the intracellular Ca++ ion concentration in ureteral smooth muscle cells]. 217 5

137 patients were treated by ESWL with a Sonolith 2000 lithotriptor using ultrasonography localization. 132 patients were eligible for review. Calculi were caliceal in 85 cases, pelvic in 51 cases, in the upper ureter in 1 case; 26 stones were treated by the "push and bang" technique with ureteric stent. Fragmentation rate was 83.9% and stone free rate at 3 months was 68.5%. Failure cases were reviewed: non fragmentation (16.1%) and insufficient fragmentation (15.6%): 14 calculi were analysed by infra red spectrophotometry and correlated with radiodensity on pre ESWL plain X-ray. Hardness and friability criteria were described. Calculi with different radiographic appearances respond differently to shock wave fragmentation. Some stone compositions such as calcium oxalate monohydrate pure or mixed with apatite and calcified uric acid are difficult to break by ESWL. These calculi represented almost 30% of the series. Another treatment should be proposed to improve the results of ESWL.
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PMID:[Effect of the chemical nature of urinary calculi on the results of extracorporeal shockwave lithotripsy]. 218 23


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