Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0451641 (urolithiasis)
3,973 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Hydroxamic acid, a potent urease inhibitor, having a high urinary excretion rate is expected to be a therapeutic agent for urolithiasis caused by urea-splitting bacterial infection of the urinary tract. Twenty-one new derivatives of N-aliphatic-acylglycinohydroxamic acids (GHAs) were synthesized, and their inhibitory potencies against the urease activity of sword bean in a phosphate buffer and against the ureolytic activity of Proteus mirabilis in human urine, and their urinary excretion rates in rats were also measured for this purpose I50 values of most of GHAs against the urease activity of sword bean were about 1 to 10 microM and 2-ethyl-n-butyroyl GHA was the most potent inhibitor with the value of 0.79 microM. I50 values of most of the GHAs against the ureolytic activity of Proteus mirabilis were about 5 to 50 microM and n-nonaroyl GHA was the most potent inhibitor with the value of 3.6 microM. 2,2-Dimethylpropionyl GHA had the highest urinary excretion rate with the recovery of 11%. Routes of administration of 2,2-dimethylpropionyl GHA and sex of rats used did not affect the amount of urinary excretion at all. The results in this report suggest that DL 2-methyl-n-butyroyl, 2-ethyl-n-butyroyl and 2,2-dimethylpropionyl GHA are the most hopeful therapeutic agents for urolithiasis among them.
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PMID:Therapy for urolithiasis by hydroxamic acids. III. Urease inhibitory potency and urinary excretion rate of N-acylglycinohydroxamic acids. 700 14

Magnesium ammonium phosphate calculi developed in the urinary bladders and urethras of four of five offspring of Miniature Schnauzer parents with recurrent struvite urolithiasis. Calculi were detected by radiograhy when the dogs were 12 to 15 months old. Males and females were affected. A significant number of urease-producing staphylococci were identified in the urine of three of four dogs before urolith formation, and in one dog after urolith formation. The dogs were evaluated until they were 26 months old. Serum concentrations of calcium, phosphorus, and magnesium were inside usual limits throughout the study. Abnormalities that might predispose to urinary tract infection were not identified by radiography or necropsy studies. In one dog, bladder calculi recurred after surgical removal of multiple cystoliths. In another, urethral obstruction and acute generalized pyelonephritis induced a lethal uremic crisis. Gross and microscopic lesions, detected after necropsy of all dogs with uroliths, were typical of bacterial infection.
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PMID:Struvite urolithiasis in a litter of miniature Schnauzer dogs. 740 90

Oral lichen planus (OLP) is a relatively common skin and oral disease that manifests as a mucous reaction to a variety of etiologic factors, including autoimmune disease, drug reaction, diabetes mellitus (DM), hypertension, hepatitis C virus (HCV), urolithiasis, psychogenic factors, and bacterial infection. The purpose of this study was to investigate the relationship between HCV infection and OLP as there is a high prevalence of HCV infection in Taiwan. A total of 1,075 subjects aged at least 15 years participated in the study. The total prevalence of OLP was 3% (32/1,075). OLP was significantly associated with DM (odds ratio, OR, 3.09) and HCV (OR, 2.05). Atrophic-erosive OLP (13/32) and reticular OLP (21/32) were significantly associated with HCV and DM, respectively. Logistic regression analysis showed that elevation of alanine aminotransferase (ALT) significantly increased the risk of atrophic-erosive OLP. We concluded that OLP is significantly associated with HCV and DM in southern Taiwan, particularly in HCV patients with elevated serum ALT levels and atrophic-erosive OLP.
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PMID:Relationship of oral lichen planus to hepatitis C virus in southern Taiwan. 1519 Dec 16

Female Sprague-Dawley rats (n = 100; age, 3 wk) were fed diets that included a vitamin premix and either albumin or milk powder. Rats fed the albumin diet gained weight more slowly than did the other group. Between 19 and 28 wk of being fed the albumin diet, 12 rats died of bacterial cystitis and pyelonephritis. In addition, 2 more rats from the same dietary group developed peritonitis after ovariohysterectomy. Examination of the 44 rats fed the albumin diet that completed the 34-wk experiment revealed pyelonephritis in 68%, cystitis in 66%, urolithiasis in 27%, and nephrolithiasis in 5%. Squamous metaplasia of the transitional epithelium was present in all 44 rats, although other epithelia were histologically normal. Vitamin A deficiency was diagnosed after analyses of blood and liver samples. Analysis of the vitamin premix revealed approximately 25% of the expected amount of vitamin A. Because the milk powder contained sufficient vitamin A, deficiency did not occur in rats fed the milk powder diet. The major consequences of vitamin A deficiency in the rats were squamous metaplasia, bacterial infection, and calculus formation within the urinary tract. This report illustrates the importance of careful formulation and storage of vitamin premixes used in experimental diets. Vitamin A deficiency should be considered in rats with decreased weight gain and urinary tract disease even if ocular lesions are not present.
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PMID:Cystitis, pyelonephritis, and urolithiasis in rats accidentally fed a diet deficient in vitamin A. 1993 Aug 29

Bacterial infection has long been recognized to contribute to struvite urinary stone deposition; however, its contribution to the development of chronic kidney stones has not been extensively investigated. In the present study, we hypothesized another possible method of bacteria contributing to the formation of calcium oxalate (CaOx) that accounts for the biggest part of the kidney stone. Bacteria may play important roles by influencing renal Ca2+-related ion channel activities, resulting in chronic inflammation of the kidney along with rapid aggregation of stones. We examined the correlation among infection-promoted CaOx kidney stones and alterations in Ca2+-related ion channels in an animal model with experimentally induced Proteus mirabilis and foreign body infection. After the bladder was infected for 7 days, the data demonstrated that stones were presented and induced severe renal tubular breakage as well as altered levels of monocyte chemoattractant protein-1, cyclooxygenase-2, osteopontin, and transient receptor potential vanilloid member 5 expression, reflecting responses of kidney ion channels. Monocyte chemoattractant protein-1, osteopontin, and transient receptor potential vanilloid member 5 expression was significantly downregulated over time, indicating the chronic inflammation phase of the kidney and accelerated aggregation of CaOx crystals, respectively, whereas cyclooxygenase-2 exhibited no differences. These results indicated that bacterial infection is considerably correlated with an alteration in renal Ca2+-related ion channels and might support specific and targeted Ca2+-related ion channel-based therapeutics for urolithiasis and related inflammatory renal damage.
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PMID:Activities of Ca2+-related ion channels during the formation of kidney stones in an infection-induced urolithiasis rat model. 3204 67