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Query: UMLS:C0451641 (
urolithiasis
)
3,973
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Ninety-six urine samples were collected by a sterile technique from 75 dogs affected with urinary tract disease (cystitis,
urolithiasis
, prostatitis, etc) involving bacteruria. The infecting organisms were isolated and tested against sensitivity discs (penicillin G, streptomycin, chloramphenicol, tetracycline, sulphamethoxazole/trimethaprin and Sulphatriad). The commonest isolate was Escherichia coli, which was generally sensitive to several agents, though in eight cases it was resistant to all drugs. Next in order were Streptococcus faecalis, Staphylococcus epidermidis and
Proteus
spp. A double infection was present in 11 cases. Further data give a breakdown for sex and the clinical diagnosis, neither of which was related to any particular organism.
...
PMID:Lower urinary tract pathogens in the dog and their sensitivity to chemotherapeutic agents. 33 57
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
In a retrospective analysis of 438 cases of canine
urolithiasis
, a total of 561 urolithic episodes were found to have occurred in a 6 1/2-year period. The hospital incidence of
urolithiasis
during that period, defined as the proportion of dogs hospitalized with
urolithiasis
to the total number of dogs hospitalized, was 2.8%. The major chemical component of the calculus in 307 dogs was phosphate; in 95 dogs, cystine; in 21 dogs, urate; in 12 dogs, oxalate; and in 3 dogs, carbonate. The Miniature Schnauzer, Dachsund, Dalmatian, Pug, Bulldog, Welsh Corgi, Beagle, and Bassett Hound were breeds that had a significantly higher (P less than 0.05) incidence of calculi than did breeds of other dogs hospitalized. Predisposition for calculi, by sex, was not found. Most dogs with calculi were between 3 and 7 years old. Most calculi were radiopaque and were located in the bladder or in the bladder and urethra. Specimens for bacteriologic culture were obtained by catheterization or by swabbing of tissue at the surgical site. Of 259 specimens obtained, 181 were culture-positive. The most common organisms isolated were Staphylococcus spp, Escherichia coli,
Proteus
spp, Streptococcus spp, and Klebsiella spp. Most of the bacteria were sensitive to gentamicin, chloramphenicol, nitrofurantoin, cephalothin, and methanamine mandelate.
...
PMID:Canine urolithiasis: retrospective analysis of 438 cases. 83 15
It has been hypothesized that urinary urokinase and sialidase may play a role in
urolithiasis
. If these theories have substance it is to be expected that microorganisms may also affect these enzymes, since the association between urinary tract infection and renal stone formation is well known. It is generally assumed that
Proteus
mirabilis and Staphylococcus albus, which produce the urea-splitting enzyme urease, are responsible for stone formation. However, the importance of non-urease-producing microorganisms (Escherichia coli and Enterococcus) in
urolithiasis
is unclear. Spectrophotometric studies were therefore devised to clarify this problem. Microorganisms associated with infection-induced stones (
Proteus
mirabilis and Escherichia coli) respectively inhibited the urokinase and stimulated the sialidase activity. In contrast, microorganisms which were not associated with infection stones (Bacillus subtilis) had significantly less effect on urokinase and sialidase activity. This study may explain infection-induced stone formation and could open a completely new line of research.
...
PMID:Effects of bacteria involved with the pathogenesis of infection-induced urolithiasis on the urokinase and sialidase (neuraminidase) activity. 146 76
The composition of 3,084 urinary calculi was determined using an infrared spectrophotometer. Mixed calcium oxalate-calcium phosphate stones were most frequently implicated. Of the urinary calculi analyzed 199 were associated with urinary tract infection. Escherichia coli was most frequently isolated (43 strains) and urease-producing organisms, such as
Proteus
mirabilis, were cultured from 40 patients. The core culture of 20 staghorn calculi yielded 15 isolates from 14 stones. There were 13 identical species isolated from the urine and stone specimens of 13 patients (65%), including 7 strains of P. mirabilis. These results suggest that cultures of urine specimens of
urolithiasis
patients, especially those with staghorn calculi, may help to elucidate the bacteriology of the stones.
...
PMID:Composition of urinary calculi related to urinary tract infection. 150 58
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
A group of 44 patients, aged from 10 months to 14 years, underwent surgery for urinary calculi over a 7-year period (1982-1989). Eleven patients had bilateral or multiple calculi (total number of stones = 55, 20 of which were staghorn). Metabolic disorders (n = 25) and
Proteus
urinary infection (n = 15) were the 2 factors most often associated with lithiasis. Of the 55 stones, 51 were removed by open surgery. Complete stone clearance was achieved in 29 of 36 kidneys. Follow-up periods in the remaining 7 renal units (with small residual fragments) ranged from 3.5 to 7.5 years (mean 6.2) and revealed stone recurrence in only 2 patients. Evaluation of childhood
urolithiasis
should include thorough metabolic investigation and sound surgical judgment; effective management requires prolonged post-operative follow-up.
...
PMID:Paediatric urolithiasis in Greece. 200 38
A retrospective study of childhood
urolithiasis
was performed from July 1978 to December 1989 in the National Taiwan University Hospital. During the eleven years, fourteen patients aged from 1 to 16 years were enrolled. The male to female ratio was 10:4, but no sex predilection was found in seven children with bladder stone(s) (M:F = 4:3), Hematuria and pyuria were the commonest symptoms and signs. Bladder stone was the most frequently encountered stone while renal stone was the second. The underlying factors included urinary tract anomalies, and surgical intervention of the urinary tract and trauma.
Proteus
species was the most common bacterium isolated from the urine of stone patients. However, half of the patients' urine specimens were sterile. Calcium oxalate and struvite were the two main components of the stones irrespective of renal, ureteral, or bladder stone origin. Lithotomy, endourological removal, and extracorporeal shock wave lithotripsy were the major therapeutic procedures, but the last procedure might replace the others.
...
PMID:Urolithiasis in children. 206 81
The authors studied the features of
urolithiasis
in three different geographical regions: Moscow, the Kirghiz SSR, and Berlin from the findings of examination of the composition and structure of uroliths removed by operation or passed spontaneously, (602 concrements from Moscow, 10,000 from Berlin, and 127 from Kirghizia). X-ray diffraction measurement, infrared spectrophotometry, and polarizing microscopy were conducted to analyze the composition and structure of the stones. Complex biochemical examination was carried out in patients from Moscow and Kirghizia. According to the results of the study, the following features of
urolithiasis
are common in the studied regions: (1) prevalence of oxalate lithiasis on the whole, which points to the principal role of metabolic factors in lithogenesis; (2) approximately similar amounts of apatite carbonate crystals in the uroliths; (3) certain similarity in composition of concrements from Berlin and Kirghizia. The most essential differences are: (1) the frequency of renal oxalate stones is highest in Berlin and lowest in Moscow. The prevalent types of calcium oxalate stones are: whewellite of concentric structure (linked with hyperuricemia) in Kirghizia; whewellite of small randomly orientated crystals (linked with hypercalciuria) and stones with signs of transformation of weddellite to whewellite in Moscow; (2) lesser distribution of phosphate lithiasis in Berlin than in Kirghizia and particularly in Moscow. Prevalence of struvite crystals in stones from Moscow, the formation of which is linked with the vital activity of
Proteus
and E. coli; (3) higher distribution of urate lithiasis in Moscow and particularly in Kirghizia where significant metabolic risk factors of lithogenesis were revealed.
...
PMID:[The characteristics of the chemical composition and structure of urinary stones and their prevalence in the cities of Moscow, Berlin and of the Kirghiz SSR]. 214 36
Struvite
urolithiasis
forms as a consequence of a urinary tract infection by urease-producing species of bacteria such as
Proteus
mirabilis. Ammonia, produced by the enzymatic hydrolysis of urea, elevates urine pH causing a supersaturation and precipitation of Mg++ as struvite (NH4MgPO4). Calcium often precipitates as well, forming the mineral carbonate-apatite (Ca10(PO4)6CO3). We have developed a procedure based on direct observation by light microscopy whereby struvite crystal growth can be quickly monitored in response to chemical changes in urine. As struvite crystals assume a characteristic shape or crystal habit based on their growth rate, the effect of urine chemistry and the action of various crystallization or urease inhibitors on struvite formation can be quickly shown. In addition preliminary effects of alkaline pH, or the presence of toxic compounds on bacteria can also be shown through their loss of motility.
...
PMID:A simple technique for studying struvite crystal growth in vitro. 218 Jan 68
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