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)

A 75-year-old man initially complained of pollakiuria and low abdominal pain, and died of massive bleeding from an exacerbated gastric ulcer. The diagnosis of primary cardiac lymphoma was made postmortem. The tumor involved only the epicardium and myocardium, which met the criteria of primary cardiac lymphoma as defined by the Armed Forces Institute of Pathology. The lymphoma consisted of large cells and expressed the B cell marker, CD20. Although chronic inflammation due to chronic renal failure was observed in the pericardium around the lymphoma, polymerase chain reaction (PCR) was conducted to detect monoclonality at the DNA level in lymphoma cells, which were shown to comprise a monoclonal population.
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PMID:Case report of primary cardiac lymphoma. The applications of PCR to the diagnosis of primary cardiac lymphoma. 147 62

Medical records of 68 horses with urolithiasis were examined. Calculi were in the bladder in 47 horses, urethra in 11 horses, kidneys in 15 horses, and ureter in two horses. They occurred at several sites in six horses. Common clinical signs included hematuria, altered micturition (pollakiuria, dysuria, urinary incontinence), and tenesmus. Weight loss, possibly attributable to chronic renal failure and colic, was associated more commonly with renal and ureteral calculi. Weight loss also occurred in 13% of horses with cystic calculi only. In male horses, most cystic calculi were removed by perineal (ischial) urethrotomy under epidural anesthesia. Although there were few surgical complications with urethrotomy, seven of 15 horses with follow-up suffered recurrent urolithiasis.
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PMID:Urolithiasis in 68 horses. 158 59

A method has been developed for discovering of antibody covered bacteria in the urine by means of a coagglutination test with a protein A containing strain--St. aureus Cowan's I. The test is based on the ability of staphylococcal protein A to bind Fc-fragment of IgG. As a specificity control St. aureus Wood 46 was used. 38 patients with urinary infections were examined. As pyelonephritic criteria the following were considered: febrile episodes, lumber pains, polyuria, pollakiuria, leukocyturia, proteinuria, raised arterial pressure, anemia, diminished renal function or chronic renal failure, x-ray, ultrasound and isotopic-nephrographic changes. In the presence of antibody covered bacteria the test is positive--there is coagglutination only with st. aureus Cowan's I. If the bacteria are not antibody coated no coagglutination takes place. If there is coagglutination with both strains the reaction is considered non-specific. II samples gave non-specific reaction. In 75% of the pyelonephritic patients the test was positive. In 70% of the patients with urinary infections of the lower urinary tract, i.e. with bacteria without immunoglobulins, the test was negative. In 74.1% of the cases there is a correlation between the coagglutination test and the localization of the urinary infection by means of other clinical and paraclinical methods. It is suggested that the coagglutination test should be included in the examination of patients with urinary infections, the positive test indicates renal localization of the infection.
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PMID:[Coagglutination test to localize a urinary infection]. 343 57

The pattern of urine excretion over 24 hours has been studied in nineteen patients with stable chronic renal failure of varying severity and due to a variety of renal disorders. The patterns were compared with those in eighteen health control subjects of similar age. The 24 hour urine volume was not significantly greater in the patients (1608 +/- 112 compared with 1710 ml +/- 169). A lower urine concentration (341 +/- 79 mOsm compared with 430 +/- 160 mOsm/kg) was associated with a lower total 24 hour solute excretion (596 +/- 224 compared with 699 +/- 169 mOsm/24 hours). Frequency of micturition, expressed in relation to periods of 24 hours, was similar (6.8 +/- 0.6 compared with (6.4 +/- 0.5). There was an alteration in the normal pattern of urine flow, with more urine at night and less in the day. Nocturia, a consistent feature of the patients with renal failure is due to reversal of the normal pattern and not to an increased volume of urine or increased frequency of micturition. The time of onset of decreased urine excretion during the day was associated with the change from recumbency to activity. The morning antidiuresis, and the nocturnal diuresis, are associated with, and probably the result of, changes in sodium and total solute excretion. The circadian rhythm of potassium excretion remained normal in chronic renal failure, except in very severe renal failure when it was reversed. Alterations in sodium, total solute and water excretion were associated with changes in creatinine excretion and were observed even in mild renal failure. In some patients, studied just before commencing regular dialysis, renal function would have been adequate for reasonable health had the rates of excretion observed at night persisted throughout the 24 hours. Nocturia, in nineteen patients with chronic renal failure, was due to a change in the circadian pattern of urine flow; it is suggested that this results, at least in part, from an inability to respond normally to changes from recumbency to activity.
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PMID:Circadian variations in urine excretion in chronic renal failure. 726 62