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Query: UMLS:C0451641 (
urolithiasis
)
3,973
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
In 26 dogs treated surgically for
urolithiasis
, bacteriological examination of the urine and the interior of calculi showed that infection was present in both materials in 14 cases.
Infection
with phosphate calculi, present in 13 of these 14 dogs, was associated with a variety of bacteria including Staphylococcus aureus, Staph epidermidis, Streptococcus faecalis, Escherichia coli and Proteus spp. In a follow-up examination of 16 dogs, organisms different from the original isolates were recovered from some cases. The significance of the persistence of viable bacteria within canine bladder calculi is discussed.
...
PMID:Relationship of bacterial infection in urine and calculi to canine urolithiasis. 80 18
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.
...
PMID:Clinical patterns of paediatric urolithiasis. 188 49
In a retrospective study, 760 Saudi patients with
urolithiasis
were epidemiologically and metabolically studied (41% were from the Central region, 32% South, 14% West, 9% North, and 1% East; the remaining 3% were Saudi but of unknown region). The male to female ratio was 5:1; 87 percent of the patients were aged thirty to sixty years and 11 patients were under age fourteen. There was no clear relation of stone formation to occupation. Sixty-nine percent of calculi were renal, 29 percent ureteric, and only 3 percent were bladder calculi. Two hundred seventy-eight operative procedures were done (36.5% of all patients), including pyelolithotomy, nephrolithotomy, ureterolithotomy, ESWL, cystolithotomy, and extractions by basket.
Infection
was a rarity (6%) and urinary schistosomiasis was found in 33 patients (4.3%), 24 of whom were from a schistosoma-infested region. Raised serum calcium was found in only 5.7 percent and raised serum urate in 13 percent. Increased urinary excretion of urate was found in 60 percent and hypercalciuria in 9 percent. Seventy-six percent of stones analyzed (239) were calcium oxalate, 20.5 percent urate, and 3.3 percent phosphate.
...
PMID:Urolithiasis in Saudi Arabia. 229 13
This is report on a boy with megacalycosis in whom infectious
urolithiasis
after eradication of Proteus mirabilis was maintained by Corynebacterium group D2.
Infection
PMID:Corynebacterium group D2 and urolithiasis in a boy with megacalycosis. 305 58
Infection
stones have an outstanding position in childhood
urolithiasis
. In non-infection stones one can mostly find a certain--for example metabolic--causes of stone formation. In infection stones, the urease-producing and thus urea-cleaving properties of some gram-negative bacteria are responsible for alkalization of the urine and lead especially in combination with disturbances of urine transport to the staghorn calculi. Therefore in such children early diagnosis, adequate therapy and consequent maintenance is the crucial point for good life quality in future. Preliminary condition for therapeutic success is a close coworking between pediatric nephrologist, pediatric urologist, family doctor and parents.
...
PMID:[Infection-induced urinary calculi in children; current therapeutic schedule and prevention of recurrence]. 307 Jan 41
Struvite (magnesium ammonium phosphate) uroliths are found more frequently in the urinary tracts, of dogs than are other types of uroliths.
Infection
of the urinary tract with urease-producing bacteria, especially staphylococci, plays an important role in urolith formation. An inherited predisposition to urinary tract infection may be associated with the high rat of occurrence of struvite uroliths in some dogs. Diagnosis of struvite
urolithiasis
should encompass analysis of the mineral composition of calculi and identification of concomitant urinary tract infection. Since urinary tract infections occur as sequelae to abnormalities in local or systemic host-defense mechanisms, appropriate effort should be directed toward detection of these abnormalities. Therapy of struvite
urolithiasis
should encompass relief of obstruction to outflow when necessary, elimination of existing calculi, eradication or control of urinary tract infection, and prevention of recurrence. Although surgical removal remains as the preferred method to eliminate struvite uroliths from dogs, nonsurgical methods of urolith dissolution should be considered. Recurrence of struvite uroliths may be prevented by various combinations of antimicrobial therapy, administration of urease inhibitors, acidification of urine, and induction of diuresis.
...
PMID:Canine struvite urolithiasis: problems and their dissolution. 728 47
A retrospective study of Community Health Service patient records revealed 10 cases of
urolithiasis
in Aboriginal children under 5 years of age in a remote central Australian Aboriginal community over a 4 year period, out of a total under-5 population estimate of 62. The highest attack rate was in the 0-2 age group, where nearly one in 10 children presented per year. All children had significant associated morbidity. Two children underwent pyelolithotomy. Aboriginal children in the remote arid zone study community suffer exceptionally high rates of
urolithiasis
. Inadequate diet, dehydration and recurrent
infectious disease
are factors in pathogenesis. Further study may elucidate aetiology, but the implications of these data for improving environmental conditions and health service delivery in Aboriginal communities are urgent.
...
PMID:Paediatric urolithiasis in a remote Australian aboriginal community. 884 43
Renal failure remains a serious cause of mortality in Yemen. Our region has 1.25 million population and our hospital is the central hospital, which has a nephrology department and performs dialysis for the region. Between January 1998 and December 2002, we admitted 547 patients; including children, with acute renal failure (ARF) and chronic renal failure (CRF). CRF was observed in 400 patients, an incidence of 64 per million per year and a prevalence of 320 per million. ARF occurred in 147 persons with an incidence of 23.5 per million per year and a prevalence of 117.5 patients per million. Of all patients, 72% were adults (age range, 20-60 years) with a male preponderance. As a tropical country, malaria (27.9%), diarrhea (13.6%), and other
infectious diseases
were the main causes. Next most common were obstructive diseases causing CRF and ARF (26.8% and 12.9%, respectively), mainly
urolithiasis
, Schistosomiasis, and prostatic enlargement. However the cause of CRF in 57.5% of patients was unknown as most persons presented late with end-stage disease (64.7%), requiring immediate intervention. Other causes, such as hepatorenal syndrome, snake bite, diabetes mellitus, and hypertension, showed low occurrence rates. Patients presented to the hospital mostly in severe uremia and without a clear history of prior medications. The major findings were vomiting, acidosis, and hypertension with serum creatinine values ranging between 2.8-45 mg/dL (mean value, 13.4 mg/dL). Anemia was observed in 80.4% of CRF versus 62.6% of ARF patients. Hypertension prevalence was 65.5% among CRF patients, of whom 25% were in hypertensive crisis, whereas among ARF the prevalence was only 26.5%.
...
PMID:Renal failure in Yemen. 1535 Apr 75
An 8-year-old, female spayed miniature schnauzer was presented for pollakiuria and gross hematuria.
Infection
-induced struvite
urolithiasis
with concurrent bacterial urinary tract infection was diagnosed. The treatment is described, followed by a brief discussion of struvite stones and their medical management.
...
PMID:Dissolution of infection-induced struvite bladder stones by using a noncalculolytic diet and antibiotic therapy. 1553 83
Urinary tract infections belong among the most common
infectious diseases
in adult women. Sporadic infection is usually not a diagnostic and therapeutic problem. Recurrent lower urinary tract infections significantly decrease the quality of life of the affected women. Colonisation of the vagina, vulva and the perineum by the uropathogens is the main risk factor of any urinary infection, but only concomitant action of some other factor (e.g. immunosuppression, urethral stenosis,
urolithiasis
, urethral diverticulum, diabetes and urinary incontinence) can induce the recurrent infection. Correct primary treatment and proper used preventive method is highly advantageous not only from the individual but also from the global point of view (high diagnostic and therapeutic expenses, increase of resistance and imminent success decrease of the modern treatment). Continuous low dose antimicrobial treatment is the most common prophylactic modality. Postcoital antimicrobial prophylaxis and immunomodulative therapy are the other used modalities. Local vaginal estrogen therapy is recommended in postmenopausal women. Estrogens improve the symptoms of the urogenital atrophy and decrease the vaginal pH, which is very important in prevention of the pathological bacterial colonisation of the vagina. Decision about the individual therapy and prophylaxis must be preceded by the evaluation of the risk factors with positives and negatives of the used drug.
...
PMID:[Lower urinary tract infections in urogynaecology]. 1594 85
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