Results 141 to 150 of about 2,283 (194)
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URETEROCELE IN CHILDHOOD

British Journal of Urology, 1955
SUMMARY Three cases of retrocede in children are recorded, each presenting in a different manner. In two the initial symptoms occurred in the first year of life. The first presented as a case of persistent urinary infection due to stasis behind a ureterocele; it subsequently transpired that there was in addition a ...
J B, BINKS, R K, DEBENHAM
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Ureteroceles in disguise

The British Journal of Radiology, 1969
Abstract In two patients the characteristic cobra head appearance of a ureterocele was related to transient dilatation and thickening of the lowermost ureter associated with a stone, and with local instrumentation. Two other patients with this picture had a bladder tumour, not a ureterocele.
T, Sherwood, J J, Stevenson
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Ureteroceles in Siblings

Journal of Urology, 1980
We report on 2 siblings with simple ureteroceles. A simple ureterocele associated with a single ureter is encountered less frequently than an ectopic ureterocele in children. The severity of associated ureterectasis and hydronephrosis is generally greater than in adults.
H J, Abrams   +2 more
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Refluxing Ureteroceles

Journal of Urology, 1980
We report 4 cases of 3 different forms of ureteroceles to illustrate spontaneous reflux without any evidence of obstruction. The presence of reflux tends to support those concepts that ureterocele formation is not on an obstructive basis. The obstruction that is oftern associated with ureteroceles is probably caused by the same stimulus as that which ...
J, Leong, B, Mikhael, J F, Schillinger
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Ureterocele

Urologic Clinics of North America, 1983
In conclusion, the diagnosis and management of the ureterocele, simple or ectopic, require careful and thorough preoperative evaluation, culminating in a carefully planned and precisely done operative procedure. An error of omission can be a catastrophe. The choice of surgical approach is controversial but should be one with few potential complications.
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Blind Ureterocele

European Urology, 1986
Ureterocele without corresponding renal tissue (blind ureterocele) represents a very rare malformation which is of special interest for the understanding of the embryogenesis of this anomaly. Two cases, the first without corresponding kidney seen in an adult and the second in connection with a small multicystic kidney observed in a boy, are considered.
G, Passerini Glazel   +4 more
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Ureteroceles in Children, with Emphasis on the Frequency of Ectopic Ureteroceles

Radiology, 1960
The most common type of ureterocele in infants and children is an intravesical and intraurethral protrusion of a dilated ureter which passes submucosally in the vesical wall before ending ectopically in the urethra. Termed an ectopic ureterocele, it differs significantly in pathologic anatomy from the better known simple ureterocele.
J P, DORST, G H, CUSSEN, F N, SILVERMAN
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[Ureteroceles].

Annales d'urologie, 1992
Four types of ureteroceles are described: A) ureterocele with single ureter (10%); B) ureterocele with total duplication and intra-vesical development (10%); C) ureterocele with total duplication and extra-vesical development (62%); D) ureterocele with ectopic ureter (3%).
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Ureteroceles in Children

Journal of Urology, 1955
G H, GUMMESS   +3 more
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ECTOPIC URETEROCELE

Radiologic Clinics of North America, 1968
W E, Berdon   +3 more
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