Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0677481 (urinary frequency)
1,126 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Forty-one cases of infiltrative urethral disease in female dogs were reviewed. The cause was epithelial neoplasia in 29 dogs, granulomatous (chronic active) urethritis in 10 dogs, and leiomyoma in 2 dogs. Clinical signs of disease were similar in dogs with neoplastic and inflammatory disease and included strangury (36/41), hematuria (30/41), pollakiuria (20/41), vaginal discharge (16/41), and complete urinary obstruction (7/41). Results of aspiration biopsy of the urethra correlated with those of surgical biopsy in 11 of 15 dogs. In 4 of 15 dogs, results of cytologic and histologic examinations differed. Granulomatous (chronic active) urethritis is an infiltrative urethral disease in female dogs. Clinical findings are similar, but the prognosis is more favorable than that in dogs with urethral epithelial neoplasia.
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PMID:Infiltrative urethral disease in female dogs: 41 cases (1980-1987). 189 37

30 aged patients, with chronic urinary tract infections, were treated with a thymus extract (thymostimulin, TP-1 Serono), in combination with antibiotic therapy, according to the antibiogram data, or with antibiotic therapy alone. When thymus extracts were added to the treatment, an improvement of the clinical course of the disease was observed and the severity and duration of the subjective symptoms such as strangury, dysuria, and pollakiuria, were reduced. The two groups of patients presented no modifications of the febrile patterns, nor persistence in or recovery from infection after 30 days of treatment, but especially after 90 days, the frequency of reinfections or the persistence of infections were markedly reduced. During treatment with thymostimulin, there was an evident increase in the cellular immunity tests (T-lymphocytes, rosettes, PHA) as compared with the immunodepression found before treatment.
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PMID:Urinary tract infections in the aged: improvement with thymostimulin. 668 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

Nephrogenic adenoma is a benign epithelial tumour localised at the level of the urothelium and caused by metaplasia of the urothelium following prolonged aggressive stimulation over time, for example trauma or chronic urinary infection. Even a diverticulum, in whatever site it is localised, is subject to an increased risk of neoplastic transformation of the urothelium. It above all affects male subjects, with a male/female ratio of 3:1 over the age of 20, which is inverted in younger subjects. The most frequently affected site is the vescical trigonum in 72% of cases, followed by the pelvic tract of the ureter (19%) and urethra. The majority of patients is asymptomatic or reports aspecific symptoms: the most frequent picture is macroscopic hematuria, owing to the rich vascularisation of the tumour. This is followed by irritative type signs such as pollakiuria, strangury, posturination dripping and sometimes painful tenesmus. Differential diagnosis is necessary for pale cell adenocarcinoma, parauretral cysts and Gartner duct's cysts which may be associated with urethral diverticulum, localised on the bottom, and rarely symptomatic. Diagnosis is based on retrograde urethrography, cystography and endoscopic tests, with biopsy if necessary. NMR provides further details regarding the site, localisation and benign or malignant nature of the lesion. Treatment is surgical: endoscopic (transurethral) if the dimension are limited, or traditional using a suprapubic or transvaginal route if it is associated with diverticulum. Prognosis is discrete and depends on the timeliness with which the factors predisposing metaplasia are eliminated.
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PMID:[Nephrogenic adenoma arising from an urethral diverticulum in a female. Report of a case and review of the literature]. 1022 60