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Primary Renal Hematuria Presenting as Unilateral Gross Hematuria

American Journal of Nephrology, 1986
A patient with unilateral gross hematuria was found to have mesangial proliferation and IgM deposition on renal biopsy, consistent with the entity of primary renal hematuria. This case refutes previous assumptions that renal biopsy is normal in patients with unilateral hematuria.
D C, Tapp, W R, Whitaker, J B, Copley
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Gross hematuria from renal metastasis

Postgraduate Medicine, 1988
PreviewThe incidence of renal metastasis in lung cancer, the most common neoplasm to metastasize to the kidneys, is about 19% at autopsy. However, antemortem diagnosis of renal metastasis is not common. A rare case of gross hematuria caused by a biopsy-proven renal neoplasm that metastasized from an esophageal carcinoma is reported here by Dr Sivarajan
K M, Sivarajan   +3 more
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Gross hematuria after prostate brachytherapy

Urology, 2003
To summarize the clinical course of postimplant gross hematuria occurring past the perioperative period.From 1998 to 2000, 226 patients were treated for prostate carcinoma by implant alone or implant with supplemental external beam radiotherapy, using palladium-103 or iodine-125.
Jerry, Barker   +2 more
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Gross hematuria

Postgraduate Medicine, 1980
Primary renal candidiasis is an uncommon disorder. It typically presents as urinary tract obstruction secondary to bezoar in the ureter, progressive oliguria (at times alternating with episodes of diuresis), ureteral colic, passage of tissue- or stone-like material, pyuria, and/or progressive renal failure.
R J, Napodano, S, Bansal
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Evaluation of Gross Hematuria

Pediatric Clinics of North America, 2006
Gross hematuria in children is a common complaint that often leads patients to seek urgent care. The diagnostic evaluation can be chosen based on specific patient history and physical examination. When a patient is asymptomatic, hypercalciuria and mild forms of glomerulonephritis are common causes of gross hematuria.
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Gross and Microscopic Hematuria

Obstetrical & Gynecological Survey, 2009
Although gross hematuria is a relatively uncommon condition in general obstetrics and gynecology practice, microscopic hematuria is a common incidental finding during routine antepartum or gynecologic office visits. The proper evaluation and treatment options are understudied in females.
Katherine Shaio, Sandhu   +5 more
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Hematuria: Gross and Microscopic

2010
The etiology of hematuria in the pediatric population is varied and ranges from infections, trauma, medical renal diseases, and urolithiasis, to congenital urologic conditions and, rarely, malignancies of the urinary tract. More often than not, hematuria in children is caused by medical rather than surgical processes.
Akanksha Mehta   +2 more
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Evaluation of Gross and Microscopic Hematuria

Primary Care: Clinics in Office Practice, 1985
In summary, hematuria, either gross or microscopic and with or without any accompanying symptoms, should always alert the clinician to the possibility of serious urologic disease and should virtually always trigger a thorough urologic investigation. This can be done by immediate referral to the urologist, or it can be done by the primary care physician
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Gross (Visible) Hematuria

2013
Gross hematuria, even as a single episode, can be the presenting sign of a cancer of the urinary tract. At the same time, several benign diseases can present with hematuria although it is not always possible to prove a direct relationship between the two.
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