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Query: UMLS:C0677481 (urinary frequency)
1,126 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Radiation cystitis with macroscopic hematuria has been a frustrating clinical problem for urologists. Since 1985 hyperbaric oxygen (HBO) has been used to treat this disease, showing favorable results. Between November 1989 and October 1992, 20 female patients with hemorrhagic radiation cystitis were treated with HBO at a pressure of 2.5 atm abs, breathing 100% O2 for 100 min in our multiplace hyperbaric chamber. After an average of 44 HBO sessions, macroscopic hematuria was completely halted in 16 patients (80%) and markedly decreased in 2 patients (10%). Comparison of the cystoscopic findings before and after HBO showed a significant decrease in hemorrhagic sites and telangiectasis of the bladder mucosa. One patient had urinary frequency and urgency without hematuria during her hospital stay. After 30 sessions of HBO therapy, her symptoms subsided, and the cystoscopic findings were much improved. Only one patient failed to respond to HBO and underwent ileal conduit diversion. The mean follow-up period was 14 mo. (5-41 mo.). From our clinical results and cystoscopic findings, we suggest that HBO is an effective and safe treatment for hemorrhagic radiation cystitis.
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PMID:Hyperbaric oxygen therapy in hemorrhagic radiation cystitis: a report of 20 cases. 795 Aug 6

We report a case of cystitis due to Toxoplasma gondii in a patient with AIDS who presented with dysuria and urinary frequency. To our knowledge, this is the first reported case of cystitis due to this organism. Microscopy of bladder specimens revealed inflammatory cystitis, with Toxoplasma cysts disseminated within the mucosa. No other pathogen could be detected by urine culture, cytoscopy, or staining of bladder specimens obtained at autopsy. Diagnosis of cystitis due to Toxoplasma gondii may be difficult because this illness is associated with misleading radiologic and endoscopic findings. Toxoplasmosis is a rare but potentially curable cause of culture-negative cystitis in patients with AIDS.
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PMID:Toxoplasma-induced cystitis in a patient with AIDS. 801 35

It is known that a great number of subjects, mainly little girls, frequently go to pediatric's observation for recurrent episodes of pollakiuria, dysuria or burning miction. They often complain enuresis, sometimes tenesmus so intense that they arrive at the incontinence (urge incontinence). Many of these cases, quickly defined as cystitis, really revealed that they weren't. Repetitively negative bacteriologic examinations allow us to classify them as "sham syndromes", as Stephens called them. According to what we said above, we wondered whether any recurrent cystitis are not favoured by missed observation of definite rules.
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PMID:[Recurrent cystitis in children: do predisposing factors exist for its onset?]. 826 56

Thirty-one children with the extraordinary urinary frequency syndrome are presented. Several possible etiologies were identified including viral cystitis-urethritis, stress, and hypercalciuria. A case definition is provided and the literature is reviewed. The authors suggest that this problem is more common than is generally appreciated. The condition is usually self-limited, and invasive diagnostic imaging studies are unnecessary when the presentation is typical.
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PMID:Extraordinary urinary frequency syndrome. 837 34

We report on 4 male patients with acute hemorrhagic cystitis caused by adenovirus following renal transplantation. These patients showed symptoms of gross hematuria, urinary frequency, burning urination and fever. Adenovirus was isolated in all patients and 3 were positive for serotype 11. Complement-fixing antibody was positive for adenovirus in all cases. Acute hemorrhagic cystitis caused by adenovirus was self-limiting and reduction of immunosuppression was not required for its resolution. Clinical presentation of these patients is described and the literature is reviewed.
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PMID:Acute hemorrhagic cystitis caused by adenovirus following renal transplantation: review of the literature. 845 54

A 45-year-old woman who had been diagnosed as having systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE) at the age of 28 years and who had been in remission developed severe urinary frequency, watery diarrhea, vomiting and weight loss. She also developed acute renal failure and her serological examination was consistent with active SLE. She had a markedly decreased urinary bladder capacity of 20 ml with hydroureteronephrosis. Histopathological study of her urinary bladder biopsy specimen showed mucosal edema, infiltration by lymphocytes and granulocytes, and deposition of IgA in the epithelium and submucosal region. We diagnosed this as a case of lupus cystitis. The patient's symptoms were alleviated by bilateral nephrostomy and corticosteroid therapy. In the present episode the patient showed none of the usual symptoms of SLE. This case and others reported in the literature show that lupus cystitis presents with specific signs and symptoms and therefore, this syndrome may represent a specific clinical manifestation of SLE.
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PMID:Systemic lupus erythematosus relapse with lupus cystitis. 857 46

In an open study, 172 male and female adult patients with acute uncomplicated bacterial cystitis were randomly allocated to three treatment groups. Two groups received brodimoprim 200 mg tablets as follows: a single dose of two 200 mg tablets on day 1, followed by one tablet per day on days 2 and 3 (58 patients); or a single daily dose of two tablets, for 2 days (63 patients). The third group received a single dose of pefloxacin, as two 400 mg tablets, for 1 day (51 patients). Complete urinalysis, sediment and urine culture examinations were carried out before treatment and 10 days after the last dose. Evaluation also comprised, at the time of enrolment and 48 h after the last dose, measurement of corporal temperature and assessment of symptoms (dysuria, pollakiuria, strangury, suprapubic pain, burning sensation during urination and urgency) on a 4-point scale. The eradication rate for the pathogen concerned was 98.3% and 96.7% in the groups receiving brodimoprim for 3 and 2 days, respectively, and 92.8% in the pefloxacin group (between-group comparison n.s.). There was significant regression of symptoms (P < 0.001) in the three groups (between-groups comparison n.s.). Mainly gastrointestinal adverse events occurred in 3 patients receiving brodimoprim for 2 days and in 4 patients from each of the other two groups.
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PMID:Efficacy and tolerability of brodimoprim at two different dosage schedules in the treatment of acute uncomplicated bacterial cystitis: comparative study vs. pefloxacin. 882 4

We described for the first time an alkaline encrusting cystitis in a patient with the acquired immune deficiency. This is an entity characterized by severe dysuria and long standing urinary frequency, alkaline urine and radiographically visible calcification of the urinary bladder. It has been observed in patients with permanent Foley catheter, persistent infections due to microorganisms with urolytic activity, urinary bilharziosis or tuberculosis, or malignant bladder tumors. None of these entities were described and the patient had all conditions for this syndrome.
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PMID:[Alkaline encrusted cystitis secondary to Proteus mirabilis infection in a HIV infected patient]. 909 Oct 33

Although most cell membranes permit rapid flux of water, small nonelectrolytes, and ammonia, the apical membranes of bladder epithelial umbrella cells, which form the bladder permeability barrier, exhibit strikingly low permeabilities to these substances. In cystitis, disruption of the bladder permeability barrier may irritate the bladder wall layers underlying the epithelium, causing or exacerbating inflammation, and increasing urinary frequency, urgency, and bladder pain. To determine the effects of inflammation on the integrity of the permeability barrier, guinea pigs were sensitized with ovalbumin, and the bladders were exposed subsequently to antigen by instillation on the urinary side. Inflammation of the bladder wall markedly reduced transepithelial resistance of dissected epithelium mounted in Ussing chambers and increased water and urea permeabilities modestly at 2 h and more strikingly at 24 h after induction of the inflammation. Transmission and scanning electron microscopy of bladders at 30 min and 24 h after antigen exposure revealed disruption of tight junctions, denuding of patches of epithelium, and occasional loss of apical membrane architecture. These permeability and structural effects did not occur in nonsensitized animals in which the bladders were exposed to antigen and in sensitized animals exposed to saline vehicle rather than antigen. These results demonstrate that inflammation of the underlying muscle and lamina propria can disrupt the bladder permeability barrier by damaging tight junctions and apical membranes and causing sloughing of epithelial cells. Leakage of urinary constituents through the damaged epithelium may then exacerbate the inflammation in the underlying muscle layers.
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PMID:Disruption of guinea pig urinary bladder permeability barrier in noninfectious cystitis. 945 41

Eosinophilic cystitis (EC) is a rare form of bladder inflammation characterized by massive eosinophilic infiltration of the bladder wall. The most frequent signs and symptoms are pollakiuria, urgency, macroscopic haematuria and hypogastric pain: the involvement of the ureters may cause hydronephrosis and renal failure. Eosinophilia and eosinophiluria are present in 35% and in 50% of the cases respectively. EC may evolve towards sclerosis up to the anatomoclinical picture of small retracted bladder, which requires to be differentiated from tubercular cystitis, interstitial cystitis and cancer. Imaging techniques are not definitely diagnostic. Diagnosis can be reached only by biopsy with the microscopic demonstration of eosinofilic infiltration of the whole bladder wall in the early and acute stages, while fibrosis with poor cellularity predominates in the chronic stages. Etiology is unknown and the hypothesis of an allergic origin is unproved even though remissions or recoveries induced by steroidal therapy have been reported. Surgical therapy of EC, as in our observation, is absolutely required to correct urgency and incontinence and to prevent renal failure when the urinary upper tract has been primarily or secondarily involved.
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PMID:Augmentation ileocystoplasty in a case of eosinophilic cystitis. 955 6


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