Results 41 to 50 of about 23,049 (299)
Bladder Calculus Causing Large Bowel Obstruction
Urinary tract calculi are fairly common, though bladder calculi are less common, accounting for only 5% of urinary tract calculi. Bladder calculi, particularly large bladder calculi, are usually associated with pathology in the urinary tract.
Alessandro Bellomo +3 more
doaj
Correlation of the differential expression of PIK3R1 and its spliced variant, p55α, in pan‐cancer
PIK3R1 undergoes alternative splicing to generate the isoforms, p85α and p55α. By combining large patient datasets with laboratory experiments, we show that PIK3R1 spliced variants shape cancer behavior. While tumors lose the protective p85α isoform, p55α is overexpressed, changes linked to poorer survival and more pronounced in African American ...
Ishita Gupta +10 more
wiley +1 more source
A fragment of Foley catheter balloon as a cause of Bladder stone in woman
Urinary bladder calculi are rarely seen in women and any history of previous pelvic surgery must, therefore, raise suspicion of an iatrogenic etiology. According to the literature, fewer than 2% of all bladder calculi occur in female subjects and, thus ...
El Majdoub Aziz +3 more
doaj +1 more source
Jack stone in the bladder: case report of a rare entity
Background Jackstone is a bladder stone that has a similar appearance to toy jacks. However review of the English language medical literature revealed only a few previous reports of jackstone calculus.
Duminda Subasinghe +2 more
doaj +1 more source
RIPK4 function interferes with melanoma cell adhesion and metastasis
RIPK4 promotes melanoma growth and spread. RIPK4 levels increase as skin lesions progress to melanoma. CRISPR/Cas9‐mediated deletion of RIPK4 causes melanoma cells to form less compact spheroids, reduces their migratory and invasive abilities and limits tumour growth and dissemination in mouse models.
Norbert Wronski +9 more
wiley +1 more source
Recent finding and new technologies in nephrolithiasis: a review of the recent literature [PDF]
This review summarizes recent literature on advances regarding renal and ureteral calculi, with particular focus in areas of recent advances in the overall field of urolithiasis.
Bove P +6 more
core +1 more source
A unusual case of 356 vesical calculii
Multiple vesical calculi are rarely seen in urological practice. Males are affected more than the females. Vesical calculi are usually secondary to bladder outlet obstruction.
A Agarwal +4 more
doaj +1 more source
Giant multiple vesical calculi: A case report
Giant multiple vesical calculi are rare entities in modern urological practice. Very few cases of vesical calculi of more than 100 g has been reported in English literature. Largest vesical calculus was of weight 6294 g by Arthur et al.
Aamir Hussain Hela +3 more
doaj +1 more source
Outcome of management of patients with BPH and vesical calculi
INTRODUCTION: The complications of benign prostatic hyperplasia (BPH) among others include bladder stones. The prevalence of vesical calculus is eight times higher in men having BPH (3.4%) as compared with men without BPH (0.4%).
Rajendra B Nerli +4 more
doaj +1 more source
Pathogenic Neurofibromatosis type 1 gene variants in tumors of non‐NF1 patients and role of R1276
Somatic variants of the neurofibromatosis type 1 (NF1) gene occur across neoplasms without clinical manifestation of the disease NF1. We identified emerging somatic pathogenic NF1 variants and hotspots, for example, at the arginine finger 1276. Those missense variants provide fundamental information about neurofibromin's role in cancer.
Mareike Selig +7 more
wiley +1 more source

