Results 261 to 270 of about 28,484 (289)
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Urologic manifestations of genetic diseases

Drugs of Today, 2005
Many genetic disorders have genitourinary manifestations in childhood. In order to care for these children, the physician should be aware of such potential manifestations. A succinct overview of the pediatric genetic disorders that have urologic manifestations is presented to assist in the evaluation of patients, counseling of parents and treatment of ...
Jeffrey S. Palmer, Katherine C. Hubert
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In utero intervention for urologic diseases

Nature Reviews Urology, 2012
The burgeoning use of prenatal ultrasonography has prompted discussion of the feasibility and capabilities of fetal intervention for urologic disorders. On the basis of the capabilities of fetal intervention, three prenatally diagnosed anomalies are of primary interest to urologists: congenital adrenal hyperplasia (CAH), lower urinary tract obstruction
John W. Brock, Douglass B. Clayton
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Urologic Disease in the Aged

Postgraduate Medicine, 1969
Diagnosis of prostatism becomes more difficult as a man grows older. Treatment also must be tempered to his age and, in the truly geriatric patient, may be only palliative. Postoperative complications often occur. Obstructive lesions do not trouble elderly women as often as men, but incontinence may be a problem, and meatal stenosis may cause urgency ...
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Urological manifestations of vascular disease

Urologic Clinics of North America, 2003
We have detailed several of the urological manifestations of vascular disease. With the aging of the North American population, urologists will encounter the urological complications of vascular disease with ever-increasing frequency.
David A. Goldfarb, Aaron J. Milbank
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Proteomics approaches to urologic diseases

Expert Review of Proteomics, 2006
Biomarkers are greatly needed for several urologic diseases, such as interstitial cystitis, the symptomatic and clinical progression of benign prostate hyperplasia, as well as the specific detection of urologic cancers, including prostate and bladder cancer.
Brian C.-S. Liu, Joshua R. Ehrlich
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Renal and urological disease

2013
The kidney has the vital function of excretion, and controls acid–base, fluid, and electrolyte balance. It also acts as an endocrine organ. Renal failure, with severe impairment of these functions, results from a number of different processes, most of which are acquired, although some may be inherited.
John Hobson, Edwina A. Brown
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The role of nanobacteria in urologic disease

World Journal of Urology, 2006
Recent data proposing an extremely small, self-replicating agent termed "nanobacteria" has raised a great deal of controversy within the scientific community. Since these agents have been isolated within the genitourinary tract, much research has focused attention on the potential role these particles may play in the development of urologic pathology ...
Daniel A. Shoskes, Hadley M. Wood
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Hypertension in Urological Disease

1986
Renal disease has been recognized in association with hypertension since the early nineteenth century [1]. In 1898 Tigerstadt and Bergman demonstrated that a water soluble extract they named renin, derived from the renal cortex of a healthy rabbit could produce a marked and sustained hypertension when intravenously injected into a second rabbit [2 ...
Ernest R. Sosa, E. Darracott VaughanJr
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Asymptomatic Microhematuria and Urologic Disease

JAMA: The Journal of the American Medical Association, 1986
To the Editor.— I read with interest the article by Mohr et al 1 and admire their extensive review of patient records and the literature. Unfortunately, they do not present hard evidence to support their conclusion that complete urologic evaluation of all adult patients with asymptomatic microscopic hematuria is not necessary.
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Urologic manifestations of nonurologic disease

Urologic Clinics of North America, 2003
Patients with nephrolithiasis may have coexistent diseases that play a causative role in stone formation. A stone event may be the initial manifestation of the disorder and the urologist may play a major diagnostic role. Regulation or correction of the disorder may eradicate or dramatically attenuate stone activity.
Brian R. Matlaga, Dean G. Assimos
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