Properties, functions, and processes of the URINARY TRACT as a whole or of any of its parts.
Inflammatory responses of the epithelium of the URINARY TRACT to microbial invasions. They are often bacterial infections with associated BACTERIURIA and PYURIA.
Physiological processes and properties of the DENTITION.
The duct which coveys URINE from the pelvis of the KIDNEY through the URETERS, BLADDER, and URETHRA.
Properties and processes of the DIGESTIVE SYSTEM and DENTITION as a whole or of any of its parts.
Physiology of the human and animal body, male or female, in the processes and characteristics of REPRODUCTION and the URINARY TRACT.
Properties, and processes of the MUSCULOSKELETAL SYSTEM and the NERVOUS SYSTEM or their parts.
Functional processes and properties characteristic of the BLOOD; CARDIOVASCULAR SYSTEM; and RESPIRATORY SYSTEM.
The properties and relationships and biological processes that characterize the nature and function of the SKIN and its appendages.
Nutritional physiology related to EXERCISE or ATHLETIC PERFORMANCE.
Physiological processes, factors, properties and characteristics pertaining to REPRODUCTION.
The functions and properties of living organisms, including both the physical and chemical factors and processes, supporting life in single- or multi-cell organisms from their origin through the progression of life.
Nutritional physiology of adults aged 65 years of age and older.

The physiology of the mammalian urinary outflow tract. (1/31)

Urinary outflow from the mammalian bladder occurs through the urethra. This outflow tract is a complicated structure composed of striated and smooth muscle and vascular urothelium. It is controlled by somatic and autonomic nerves and has several functions: it generates sustained tone to prevent urinary leakage during bladder filling; it generates transient reflex increases in pressure to prevent opening of the lumen when abdominal pressure rises; it undergoes relaxation preceding micturition and can generate urethral opening and shortening during micturition. A urethral pressure profile shows a peak pressure of > or = 100 cmH2O. The outermost coat is striated muscle, the striated or external sphincter. The fibres are predominantly circularly oriented. The extent varies in different species and between sexes. In the human female it extends the length of the urethra, and is composed mainly of slow twitch fibres. In the male, the sphincter extends from the membranous urethra over the base of the prostate and has nearly equal numbers of slow and fast twitch fibres. In both sexes, the posterior border may be deficient in striated muscle, and filled by circularly oriented smooth muscle. Activity in the slow twitch fibres through somatic nerves may be continuous during bladder filling. Outer circular and inner longitudinal smooth muscle is present Strips from either layer will generate sustained tone particularly if dissected from the high pressure zone. This tone is myogenic, and may be achieved in the absence of action potentials, but relies on influx of calcium through L-type calcium channels. Both layers receive sympathetic and parasympathetic excitatory innervation and nitrergic inhibitory innervation. Normal urethral pressure requires blood flow to the urothelium (lamina propria). Striated and smooth muscles are both thought to contribute to the resting urethral pressure in the human. The precise role of the smooth muscles during micturition is as yet unresolved.  (+info)

KMD-3213, a uroselective and long-acting alpha(1a)-adrenoceptor antagonist, tested in a novel rat model. (2/31)

KMD-3213, an alpha(1a)-adrenoceptor (AR) antagonist, is under development for the treatment of urinary outlet obstruction in patients with benign prostatic hypertrophy. In the present study, we developed a rat model to investigate simply the effects of alpha(1)-AR antagonists on the intraurethral pressure (IUP) response to phenylephrine. Using this model, inhibitory effects of both i.v. and intraduodenally administered KMD-3213 on the IUP response were evaluated and compared to those of other reference compounds, including prazosin and tamsulosin. In addition, the hypotensive effects of these compounds were estimated to evaluate uroselectivity. Intravenously administered alpha(1)-AR antagonists tested, including KMD-3213, potently inhibited the IUP response in a dose-dependent manner. Although the higher doses of those compounds almost completely inhibited the IUP response, yohimbine failed to inhibit the response. When the in vivo potencies of those compounds on IUP response were correlated with their affinities for the human or animal recombinant alpha(1)-AR subtypes, alpha(1a)-AR gave the best correlation. In this model, KMD-3213 had greater uroselectivity than any other compounds examined, by both i.v. and intraduodenal routes. Moreover, 12, 18, and 24 h after the oral administration of KMD-3213, a dose-dependent inhibition of the IUP response was found, whereas the effect of tamsulosin disappeared at 18 h after the oral administration. These data indicate that KMD-3213 is a highly uroselective alpha(1)-AR antagonist with a longer duration of action. In addition, this model is useful for not only estimation of uroselectivity but also some part of the administration, distribution, metabolism, and excretion of many compounds to discover uroselective compounds.  (+info)

Basolateral LAT-2 has a major role in the transepithelial flux of L-cystine in the renal proximal tubule cell line OK. (3/31)

During renal reabsorption, the amino acid transporters b(o,+) and y(+)L have a major role in the apical uptake of cystine and dibasic amino acids and in the basolateral efflux of dibasic amino acids, respectively. In contrast, the transporters responsible for the basolateral efflux of the apically transported cystine are unknown. This study shows the expression of system L and y(+)L transport activities in the basolateral domain of the proximal tubule-derived cell line OK and the cloning of the corresponding LAT-2 and y(+)LAT-1 cDNAs. Stable transfection with a LAT-2 antisense sequence demonstrated the specific role of LAT-2 in the basolateral system L amino acid exchange activity in OK cells. This partial reduction of LAT-2 expression decreased apical-to-basolateral trans-epithelial flux of cystine and resulted in a twofold to threefold increase in the intracellular content of cysteine. In contrast, the content of serine, threonine, and alanine showed a tendency to decrease, whereas other LAT-2 substrates were not affected. This demonstrates that LAT-2 plays a major specific role in the net basolateral efflux of cysteine and points to LAT-2 as a candidate gene to modulate cystine reabsorption.  (+info)

Surgical treatment of renal artery dissection in 25 patients: indications and results. (4/31)

OBJECTIVE: Results of surgical revascularization in 25 patients with renal artery dissection (RAD) over 14 years, with mean follow-up of 55.3 months (range, 10-111 months), were analyzed. Indications for surgery were renovascular hypertension and preservation or improvement of kidney function. PATIENTS AND METHODS: Two patients (both 20 years of age) underwent emergency surgery after severe trauma; 23 patients (mean age, 41 years) underwent elective surgery in a chronic stage of disease. Preoperative, postoperative, and follow-up examinations included duplex ultrasound scanning, determination of serum creatinine and urea concentrations, and evaluation of blood pressure control. All long-term patients underwent digital subtraction angiography preoperatively and postoperatively. All histologic specimens of resected renal arteries were re-evaluated by two independent pathologists. RESULTS: Histologic re-evaluation confirmed the traumatic origin in 2 patients who underwent emergency surgery and 1 who underwent elective surgery. Renal artery dissection developed spontaneously, with no histologic signs of trauma or fibromuscular dysplasia, in 22 patients. In 17 revascularized kidneys (61%) a kidney infarction had already developed preoperatively, and the kidneys were diminished in size or function. Results of revascularization and improvement of hypertension depended on preoperative extent of renal infarction. Hypertension resolved or improved in 86% of patients without preoperative kidney damage, but in only 38% with preoperatively damaged kidneys. Kidney function was preserved in 23 of 28 revascularized kidneys (82%). During follow-up, late renal artery occlusion developed in 3 kidneys. CONCLUSIONS: Renal artery dissection can be effectively treated with surgical revascularization. Primary nephrectomy should be considered only in patients with a large ischemic kidney infarction, with significant deterioration of kidney function, to effectively cure or improve severe renovascular hypertension.  (+info)

Lower urinary-interleukin-1 receptor-antagonist excretion in IgA nephropathy than in Henoch-Schonlein nephritis. (5/31)

BACKGROUND: IgA nephropathy (IgAN) and Henoch-Schonlein nephritis (HSN) share many clinical, histological and immunological features. It has been postulated that these two conditions have a common pathogenesis and that HSN might be a systemic form of IgAN. Activity of interleukin-1beta (IL-1beta) in urine has been found to be higher in IgAN and HSN patients than in healthy controls. Interaction between IL-1beta and interleukin-1 receptor antagonist (IL-1ra) plays a significant role in the regulation of inflammatory responses. We studied levels of urinary excretion of IL-1beta and IL-1ra in patients with IgAN and HSN. METHODS: Amounts of IL-1beta and IL-1ra excreted in 24-h urine samples collected from 241 IgAN, 26 HSN patients and from 33 healthy controls were determined. Results were expressed as cytokine/creatinine (ng/mmol) ratios. RESULTS: Urinary IL-1beta excretion by the IgAN and HSN patients was no greater than urinary IL-1beta excretion by healthy controls. Urinary IL-1ra excretion by the IgAN patients was lower than urinary IL-1ra excretion by healthy controls (P < 0.05) and by the HSN patients (P < 0.01). In both patients and controls women had significantly higher IL-1ra, IL-1beta excretion levels and IL-1ra/IL-1beta ratios. The differences in urinary excretions of IL-1ra by the healthy controls and by the IgAN and HSN patients were significant in both sexes. Excretion of IL-1beta or IL-1ra did not correlate with excretion of urinary protein, duration of the disease or any histopathological variable. However, histopathological changes in renal biopsy specimens from patients with IL-1ra/IL-1beta ratios above normal were significantly milder than in renal biopsy specimens from patients with low or normal IL-1ra/IL-1beta ratios. CONCLUSION: Urinary IL-1ra levels in IgAN patients were lower than urinary IL-1ra levels in healthy controls or HSN patients, a finding which may indicate that the two diseases have a different pathogenesis. Whether the male predominance in IgAN and HSN and the worse outcomes in males that have been reported previously in IgAN and HSN are connected with the lower excretion of IL-1ra and consequently lower IL-1ra/IL-1beta ratios in male patients than in female patients needs more thorough investigation.  (+info)

Nitric oxide and relaxation of pig lower urinary tract. (6/31)

1. We studied the non-adrenergic, non-cholinergic (NANC) nerve-mediated relaxation induced by electrical stimulation in pig isolated lower urinary tract smooth muscle, and the possible involvement of the L-arginine (L-ARG)/nitric oxide (NO) pathway in this response. 2. Trigonal strips, precontracted by noradrenaline (NA), carbachol or endothelin-1 (ET-1), relaxed frequency-dependently in response to electrical stimulation. Maximum relaxation was obtained at 6-8 Hz, and amounted to 56 +/- 2%, 77 +/- 3% and 62 +/- 6% of the agonist-induced tension in preparations contracted by NA, carbachol, or ET-1, respectively. Exposure to NG-nitro-L-arginine (L-NOARG; 10(-7)-10(-5) M) concentration-dependently reduced the relaxant response in preparations contracted by NA. L-NOARG (10(-6) M) reduced the maximal response to 51 +/- 8% of control. L-NOARG (10(-5) M) abolished all relaxation, and unmasked a contractile component; D-NOARG had no effect. Also in trigonal preparations, where the tension had been raised by carbachol or ET-1, L-NOARG (10(-5) M) markedly reduced relaxations evoked by electrical stimulation. 3. In trigonal preparations contracted by NA, maximal relaxation was increased after pretreatment with L-ARG (10(-3) M), and the inhibitory effect of L-NOARG (10(-6) M) was prevented. Incubation of the trigonal strips with methylene blue had no effect on relaxations elicited at frequencies less than 6 Hz, but a small inhibition was observed at higher frequencies. 4. Administration of NO (present in acidified solution of NaNO2) induced concentration-dependent relaxations in trigonal preparations contracted by NA, carbachol, or ET-1.L-NOARG (10-5 M) and L-ARG (10-3M) had no effect on these relaxations. However, methylene blue (10-S M) significantly shifted the concentration-response curve for NO to the right. NANC-relaxation and NO-induced relaxation of trigonal preparations were both inhibited by oxyhaemoglobin (10-5 M) and pyrogallol (10-4 M).5. In urethral preparations precontracted by NA, electrical stimulation caused frequency-dependent relaxations. A maximum relaxation of 73 +/- 4% was obtained at 10 Hz. Also in the urethra, NANCrelaxation was blocked by L-NOARG (10-5 M), and a contractile response generally appeared.6. Detrusor strips treated with alpha-beta methylene ATP (10-i M) and atropine (10-6 M), and then contracted by ET-1, showed relaxations (19 +/- 3% of the induced tension) in response to electrical field stimulation (2-20 Hz) only when the tension was high. No response at all, or small contractions, were found in response to electrical stimulation in K+ (35 mM)-contracted detrusor strips. Detrusor preparations contracted by carbachol were concentration-dependently relaxed by exogenously administered NO, SIN-1 (NO-donor), and isoprenaline, whereas vasoactive intestinal polypeptide had minor effects. NO and SIN-1 induced maximal relaxations of 63 +/- 3% and 70 +/- 4%, respectively, of the tension induced by carbachol. Isoprenaline produced an almost complete relaxation (96 +/- 4%).7. The results suggest that NANC-nerve mediated relaxation, involving the L-ARG/NO pathway, can be demonstrated consistently in the pig trigonal and urethral, but not in detrusor smooth muscle. The importance of this pathway for lower urinary tract physiology and pathophysiology remains to be established.  (+info)

Effects of inhibition of the L-arginine/nitric oxide pathway in the rat lower urinary tract in vivo and in vitro. (7/31)

1. The present study was performed to investigate how blockade of the L-arginine/nitric oxide (NO) pathway influences the function of the lower urinary tract in vivo, as studied by cystometry in conscious rats and in vitro, in isolated muscle preparations from the rat detrusor and urethra. 2. L-NG-nitro arginine methyl ester (L-NAME), 10 and 20 mg kg-1, administered intra-arterially, decreased micturition volume and bladder capacity, and increased spontaneous bladder contractions. D-NAME (20 mg kg-1) had no effect. No changes in the urodynamic parameters were recorded if L-NAME (20 mg kg-1) was administered in combination with L-arginine (200 mg kg-1). 3. Cystometries performed after intra-arterial administration of sodium nitroprusside (SNP) (3 mg kg-1) and 3-morpholino-sydnonimin hydrochloride (SIN-1, 2 mg kg-1) showed a decrease in bladder capacity, micturition volume and threshold pressure. SIN-1, but not SNP, induced spontaneous bladder contractions. 4. Isolated precontracted urethral preparations responded to electrical stimulation with a frequency-dependent tetrodotoxin-sensitive relaxation. L-NAME (10(-4) M), but not D-NAME, reduced the maximal relaxation to 31 +/- 8% (n = 8) of the response prior to drug administration. The inhibition induced by L-NAME was completely reversed by L-arginine (10(-3) M). SNP (10(-8)-10(-4) M), SIN-1 (10(-6)-3 x 10(-4) M) and NO (10(-5)-10(-3) M; present in acidified solution of NaNO2), caused relaxation (93-100%) of urethral preparations. L-NAME did not affect these relaxations.5. Detrusor strips contracted by carbachol or K' showed contractions in response to electrical stimulation, even when pretreated with a,p-methylene ATP and/or atropine. Small relaxations (14-41%) of detrusor strips were evoked by SNP (10-6-10-4M), SIN-1 (10-5-3 x 10-4M) and NO (10-5-10-3M). Electrically (20 Hz) induced contractions of the detrusor muscle were unaffected by addition of L-NAME (10-6_10-4 M) or L-arginine (10-3 M).6. The present results suggest that the L-arginine/NO pathway is of functional importance for the bladder outlet region, but that its role in the detrusor is questionable. They also suggest that the site of action of L-NAME for inducing bladder hyperactivity in the rat is the outlet region rather than the detrusor muscle.  (+info)

Regulation of cyclic nucleotides in the urinary tract. (8/31)

Cyclic nucleotide levels are controlled through their synthesis from nucleotide triphosphates by cyclases and their degradation to 5'-monophosphates by phosphodiesterases (PDEs). Components controlling cyclic AMP-induced relaxation in the urinary tract include receptors, inhibitory and stimulatory G-proteins, isoforms of adenylyl cyclase and PDEs. The responsiveness of PDEs to a variety of physiological challenges is related to the presence of multiple families of isoenzymes with specific localization within tissues and within cells. At least 11 families of PDEs encode more than 50 PDE proteins produced in mammalian cells. In the urinary tract, characterization of PDE isoforms has lagged behind other systems and much of the literature was published prior to identification of PDE7, 8, 9, 10, 11. Specific PDE inhibitors regulate smooth muscle function in the bladder, urethra, prostate and ureter. The pharmacological potential of these inhibitors may include treatment of urge incontinence and the low compliance bladder, and treatment of prostate cancer. G-proteins also regulate cyclic AMP production. Changes in specific G- protein isoforms with aging, most prominently Gialpha2, cause decreased relaxation response in the aging bladder. As we have seen here with aging and certainly in other disease processes, levels of the components of adenylyl cyclase/phosphodiesterase/protein kinase can change and thus affect the relaxation response. By exploitation of differences in PDE expression in disease, such as the overexpression of PDEs in cancer, treatment options may present themselves.  (+info)

Symptoms of a UTI can include:

* Painful urination
* Frequent urination
* Cloudy or strong-smelling urine
* Blood in the urine
* Pelvic pain in women
* Rectal pain in men

If you suspect that you have a UTI, it is important to seek medical attention as soon as possible. UTIs can lead to more serious complications if left untreated, such as kidney damage or sepsis.

Treatment for a UTI typically involves antibiotics to clear the infection. It is important to complete the full course of treatment to ensure that the infection is completely cleared. Drinking plenty of water and taking over-the-counter pain relievers may also help alleviate symptoms.

Preventive measures for UTIs include:

* Practicing good hygiene, such as wiping from front to back and washing hands after using the bathroom
* Urinating when you feel the need, rather than holding it in
* Avoiding certain foods that may irritate the bladder, such as spicy or acidic foods
* Drinking plenty of water to help flush bacteria out of the urinary tract.

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Other biological examples of a catch bond mechanism is seen in bacteria that tightly cling to urinary tract walls in response ... This paradoxical phenomenon has not been satisfactorily explained despite the widespread interest. One initially dismissed ... This topic was finally able to be studied thoroughly under physiological shear stress conditions using a typical flow chamber. ... Selectins (E-selectin, L-selectin, and P-selectin) were found to be involved in this phenomenon. The shear threshold ...
Such physiological and cognitive functions are generally not believed to give rise to mental phenomena or qualia, however, as ... Stretch receptors in the gastrointestinal tract sense gas distension that may result in colic pain. Stimulation of sensory ... Stimulation of sensory receptors in the urinary bladder and rectum may result in perceptions of fullness. Stimulation of ... Nociception (physiological pain) signals nerve-damage or damage to tissue. The three types of pain receptors are cutaneous ( ...
Urology - medical and surgical specialty that focuses on the urinary tracts of males and females, and on the reproductive ... Space Science - discipline encompassing the fields of study that involve space exploration and the study of natural phenomena ... Pathophysiology - study of the changes of normal mechanical, physiological, and biochemical functions, either caused by a ... Building science - collection of scientific knowledge that focuses on the analysis and control of the physical phenomena ...
... including aging and lower urinary tract dysfunction. RMDN3 has been shown to interact with: PTP1B, TCPTP, c-Src, 14-3-3β, 14-3- ... Kerr JF, Wyllie AH, Currie AR (Aug 1972). "Apoptosis: a basic biological phenomenon with wide-ranging implications in tissue ... Apoptosis occurs in many physiological and pathological processes. It plays an important role during embryonal development as ...
Females treated with an oxytocin antagonist are unable to recognize the urinary scent of their mate, and will terminate ... The hormone vasopressin is crucial in coupling a chemosensory cue with an appropriate physiological response. When the ... accessory olfactory tract, and stria terminalis. These areas stimulate the hypothalamus to increase the release of dopamine, ... Laboratory artifact or field phenomenon?". Biology of Reproduction. 31 (1): 97-103. doi:10.1095/biolreprod31.1.97. PMID 6380603 ...
Urinary incontinence and fecal incontinence have been linked to all methods of childbirth, with the incidence of urinary ... Postpartum physiological changes Postpartum care Postpartum confinement, a period of rest Romano, Mattea; Cacciatore, ... Postpartum thyroiditis is a phenomenon observed following pregnancy and may involve hyperthyroidism, hypothyroidism or the two ... are any bacterial infections of the female reproductive tract following childbirth or miscarriage. Signs and symptoms usually ...
... is expressed at very high levels in intestinal, urinary, and reproductive tract smooth muscle, at lower levels in ... This could be a physiologically significant phenomenon considering the high concentration of ATP always present in smooth ... Smooth muscle myosin, under physiological conditions in vitro, can adapt two relatively and different stable conformations. ...
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These include (chronic) upper genital tract infections, urinary tract infections and cervical dysplasias. The prophylactic use ... Inactivated material from the eight strains is mixed and diluted with physiological sodium chloride solution. Phenol is added ... Multiple authors have proposed cellular immunological phenomena as the primary mediators of protective effect of lactobacillus ... upper genital tract infection (5) urinary tract infection (6) infertility (7) genital lesions and tumors (8) trichomoniasis ...
An Arginine to Glutamine mutation in TRL2, Arg753Gln, was connected to increased pediatric Urinary Tract Infections caused by ... This phenomenon occurs when complementary molecules on opposing cell surfaces meet. A receptor on one cell surface binds to its ... These interactions can generate the physiological diversity required for antibiotic resistance in bacterial populations. The ... Tabel, Y.; Berdeli, A.; Mir, S. (December 2007). "Association of TLR2 gene Arg753Gln polymorphism with urinary tract infection ...
"Electronic Learning Module for Kidney and Urinary Tract Diseases". Archived from the original on 2008-12-20. Retrieved 2015-12- ... cataracts and thrombotic phenomena and/or embolisms. People with Corticosteroid dependent: proteinuria appears when the dose of ... or in cases with physiological repercussions, such as scrotal, preputial or urethral edema) or in people with one of a number ... The ratio between urinary concentrations of albumin and creatinine can be used in the absence of a 24-hour urine test for total ...
... the urinary tract, and the digestive tract. It is not found in the heart which has cardiac muscle. In single-unit smooth muscle ... This phenomenon is of great value especially for tonically active smooth muscle. Isolated preparations of vascular and visceral ... Sanders, KM; Ward, SM; Koh, SD (July 2014). "Interstitial cells: regulators of smooth muscle function". Physiological Reviews. ... The reproductive, digestive, respiratory, and urinary tracts, skin, eye, and vasculature all contain this tonic muscle type. ...
He went to a doctor... [who conducted a blood test which showed that] he had a blocked urinary tract... [and that] his kidneys ... "psycho-physiological rehabilitation of sportsmen", believed Fischer had schizophrenia. Psychologist Joseph G. Ponterotto, from ... The US grandmaster Robert Byrne labeled the phenomenon "Fischer-fear". Grandmasters would wilt, their suits would crumple, ... He originally had a urinary tract blockage but refused surgery or medication. Magnús Skúlason reported Fischer's response to ...
... to satisfy essential physiological needs because no toilet is available contributes to health issues such as urinary tract ... As an act of protest against this phenomenon, in 1969 California Assemblywoman March Fong Eu destroyed a toilet on the steps of ... and urinary tract infections. According to the Government of Australia, more than 3.8 million Australians of all ages are ... of transgender Americans reported having developed urinary tract infections, kidney infections, and other kidney-related ...
Men tend to experience incontinence less often than women, and the structure of the male urinary tract accounts for this ... Andersson KE, Arner A (July 2004). "Urinary bladder contraction and relaxation: physiology and pathophysiology". Physiological ... This is sometimes termed "double incontinence". Post-void dribbling is the phenomenon where urine remaining in the urethra ... The most common types of urinary incontinence in women are stress urinary incontinence and urge urinary incontinence. Women ...
Andersson KE, Wein AJ (2004). "Pharmacology of the Lower Urinary Tract: Basis for Current and Future Treatments of Urinary ... Scientists believe the phenomenon could be linked to obesity or exposure to chemicals in the food chain, and is putting girls ... Mechanisms of these social effects are unknown, though a variety of physiological processes, including pheromones, have been ... Robinson D, Cardozo L (2011). "Estrogens and the lower urinary tract". Neurourology and Urodynamics. 30 (5): 754-757. doi: ...
Transgender men taking testosterone are likely at increased risk of developing urinary tract infections, especially if they ... Archived 2012-10-23 at the Wayback Machine in Benjamin H, The Transsexual Phenomenon. Julian Press ASIN B0007HXA76 Barrett, ... physiological and emotional effects of hormone replacement therapy, psychological aspects of expressing sexuality after medical ... Psychiatrist Richard Green, in an appendix to Harry Benjamin's 1966 The Transsexual Phenomenon, considers people who were ...
Lane DR, Takhar SS (August 2011). "Diagnosis and management of urinary tract infection and pyelonephritis". Emergency Medicine ... These phenomena are involved in chronic pain. As the structure of the lumbago back is complex and the reporting of pain is ... which can modify an individual's physiological response to pain. The benefit however is small. Medical providers may develop an ... abscess Low back pain can also be caused by an urinary tract infection. The lumbar (or lower back) region is the area between ...
Uropathogenic E. coli (UPEC) is one of the main causes of urinary tract infections. It is part of the normal microbiota in the ... In 1946, Joshua Lederberg and Edward Tatum first described the phenomenon known as bacterial conjugation using E. coli as a ... vitamins which are implicated in many physiological roles in humans such as cellular and bone metabolism - and so contributes ... "Uropathogenic Escherichia coli: The Pre-Eminent Urinary Tract Infection Pathogen". Nova publishers. Archived from the original ...
... coli in the urinary tract to be eliminated during urination, thus leading to a urinary tract infection. This knowledge is ... The CMR phenomenon indicates that how long a bond can sustain force at a given level can depend on the history of force ... which bear force or generate force in their physiological function. An interesting recent development is the discoveries of ... This "shear-threshold phenomenon" was initially characterized in 1996 by Finger et al. who showed that leukocyte binding and ...
... crosses the blood-brain barrier and has been implicated in a wide array of physiological phenomena including inhibitory ... The sulfonic acid has a low pKa ensuring that it is fully ionized to the sulfonate at the pHs found in the intestinal tract. ... Plasma taurine was 78% of control values, and urinary taurine was 29%. Prematurely born infants are believed to lack the ... Huxtable RJ (January 1992). "Physiological actions of taurine". Physiological Reviews. 72 (1): 101-163. doi:10.1152/physrev. ...
... biochemical phenomena, metabolism, and nutrition G07 - physiological processes G08 - reproductive and urinary physiology G09 - ... respiratory tract diseases C09 - otorhinolaryngologic diseases C10 - nervous system diseases C11 - eye diseases C12 - urologic ... chemical and pharmacologic phenomena G13 - genetic phenomena G14 - genetic structures H - Physical Sciences H01 - natural ... biological phenomena, cell phenomena, and immunity G05 - genetic processes G06 - ...
"Hyperammonemia associated with distal renal tubular acidosis or urinary tract infection: a systematic review". Pediatric ... This rare pattern was observed in the 1960s and 1970s as a transient phenomenon in infants and children with dRTA (possibly in ... metabolic acidosis due to a physiological reduction in proximal tubular ammonium excretion (impaired ammoniagenesis), which is ... Hyperchloremia Urinary stone formation (related to alkaline urine, hypercalciuria, and low urinary citrate). Nephrocalcinosis ( ...
The accumulation of these deposits within the urinary tract due to drinking the waters can then result in urinary tract stones ... In addition to a focus on natural approaches, he also began to look into anatomical and physiological relationships in the body ... he had determined that he would only entertain natural phenomena that are relevant to the medical issue at hand. Another ... especially when urinary tract stones (that is, stones within either the kidneys or the bladder) were present. Urinary tract ...
Diuretic resistance is defined as failure of diuretics to reduce fluid retention (can be measured by low urinary sodium) ... Prolonged usage of loop diuretics will also contributes to resistance through "braking phenomenon". This is the body ... The biological half-life of furosemide is limited by absorption from gastrointestinal tract into the bloodstream. The apparent ... physiological response to reduced extracellular fluid volume, where renin-angiotensin-aldosterone system will be activated ...
He died on 27 October 1854 at St Cuthbert from a urinary tract infection and suffering from kidney stones. His early death at ... Bird began a thorough investigation of this phenomenon in the following year. Using solutions of sodium chloride, potassium ... Lectures on Electricity and Galvanism, in their physiological and therapeutical relations, delivered at the Royal College of ... Urinary Deposits became a standard text on the subject; there were five editions between 1844 and 1857. In the fourth edition ...
In E. coli, these pili operons have important roles in virulence in urinary tract infections. It has been proposed[by whom?] ... Due to the phenomenon of genomic imprinting, maternal and paternal genomes are differentially marked and must be properly ... Ying and Li-Byarlay (2015). Physiological and Molecular Mechanisms of Nutrition in Honey Bees. Advances in Insect Physiology. ... The ability to evaluate other important phenomena in a DNA methylase-deficient genetic background makes Neurospora an important ...
... and the outer urinary tract, along with considerable shrinking and loss in elasticity of all of the outer and inner genital ... At the physiological level, menopause happens because of a decrease in the ovaries' production of the hormones estrogen and ... Menopause in the animal kingdom appears to be uncommon, but the presence of this phenomenon in different species has not been ... urinary incontinence,urinary urgency, interrupted sleeping patterns,heavy night sweats, and hot flashes. Psychological symptoms ...
Urinary or salivary cotinine concentrations are frequently measured for the purposes of pre-employment and health insurance ... A recent systematic review concluded that nicotine was unlikely to be cytotoxic to oral cells in vitro in most physiological ... Analysis of nicotine-induced DNA damage in cells of the human respiratory tract. Toxicol Lett. 2012 Jan 5;208(1):23-9. doi: ... Caponnetto P, Campagna D, Papale G, Russo C, Polosa R (February 2012). "The emerging phenomenon of electronic cigarettes". ...
... is primarily found in the enteric nervous system located in the gastrointestinal tract (GI tract). However, it is ... Page IH (1 July 1954). "Serotonin (5-Hydroxytryptamine)". Physiological Reviews. American Physiological Society. 34 (3): 563- ... Urinary serotonin/creatinine ratio in bitches tended to be higher 4 weeks after surgery. In addition, serotonin was positively ... a phenomenon known as quorum sensing. Outside the gut of a host, there is nothing that the entoamoebas provoke to release ...
This phenomenon can be explained by looking at the role of gonadal hormones, specifically estrogen, which modulate the enhanced ... Dale HH (May 1906). "On some physiological actions of ergot". The Journal of Physiology. 34 (3): 163-206. doi:10.1113/jphysiol. ... This study found genital tract stimulation resulted in increased oxytocin immediately after orgasm. Another study reported ... "Food sharing is linked to urinary oxytocin levels and bonding in related and unrelated wild chimpanzees". Proceedings. ...
... urinary tract infection and necrotizing enterocolitis. Breastfeeding may protect against sudden infant death syndrome, insulin- ... Breastfeeding delays the return of menstruation, and in very specific circumstances, fertility, a phenomenon known as ... Elling SV, Powell FC (January 1997). "Physiological changes in the skin during pregnancy". Clinics in Dermatology. Dermatologic ... Looking at three of the most common infant illnesses, lower respiratory tract illnesses, otitis media, and gastrointestinal ...
A 10- to 20-fold increase in renal clearance occurs when urine pH is increased from 5 to 8. The use of urinary alkalinization ... Complicating the use of aspirin for prevention is the phenomenon of aspirin resistance. For people who are resistant, aspirin's ... September 2005). "Significance of salicylate intolerance in diseases of the lower gastrointestinal tract" (PDF). Journal of ... Physiological Reviews. 88 (4): 1547-65. doi:10.1152/physrev.00004.2008. PMID 18923189. S2CID 448875. Laine L, Maller ES, Yu C, ...
2012 phenomenon - a range of eschatological beliefs that cataclysmic or otherwise transformative events would occur on or ... Boyd, R. N. (27 May 2019). "Reduction of Physiological Effects of Alcohol Abuse By Substitution of a Harmless Alcohol Surrogate ... In addition to being ineffective, chelation therapy prior to heavy metal testing can artificially raise urinary heavy metal ... encompasses a number of alternative medical therapies claimed to remove nonspecific toxins from the colon and intestinal tract ...
The human gastrointestinal tract is colonized by a vast community of symbionts and commensals. The researchers demonstrate the ... Neural chemically induced progenitor cells (ciNPCs) can be generated from mouse tail-tip fibroblasts and human urinary somatic ... March 2022). "In vivo partial reprogramming alters age-associated molecular changes during physiological aging in mice". Nat ... phenomenon of somatic cell reprograming by bacteria and generation of multipotential cells from adult human dermal fibroblast ...
When the urinary pH is basic, amphetamine is in its free base form, so less is excreted. When urine pH is abnormal, the urinary ... The physiological importance of CART was further substantiated in numerous human studies demonstrating a role of CART in both ... It is not as sensitive to pH as amphetamine when being absorbed in the gastrointestinal tract. Following absorption into the ... Cardiovascular side effects can include hypertension or hypotension from a vasovagal response, Raynaud's phenomenon (reduced ...
... s do not have a urinary bladder or external urethral opening and (with exception of the ostrich) uric acid is excreted ... This physiological adaptation shows in nearly a hundred other species, including owlet-nightjars, nightjars, and woodswallows. ... Yong, Ed (6 June 2013). "Phenomena: Not Exactly Rocket Science How Chickens Lost Their Penises (And Ducks Kept Theirs)". ... Sasanami, Tomohiro; Matsuzaki, Mei; Mizushima, Shusei; Hiyama, Gen (2013). "Sperm Storage in the Female Reproductive Tract in ...
Urinary tract infection Varicose veins. Common complaint caused by relaxation of the venous smooth muscle and increased ... However, this phenomenon also has a strong generational component: in 1996, about 50% of women without a university degree had ... a woman undergoes many physiological changes, which are entirely normal, including behavioral, cardiovascular, hematologic, ... "Urinary tract infections during pregnancy". Merck Manual Home Health Handbook. Archived from the original on 10 November 2011. ...
A 2007 trial observed that elderly men taking 80 mg daily were hospitalized for urinary complications more often than those ... Deficiency of other nutrients such as tyrosine, tryptophan and thiamine could contribute to this phenomenon of "malnutrition- ... Stipanuk, Martha H. (2006). Biochemical, Physiological & Molecular Aspects of Human Nutrition. W. B. Saunders Company. pp. 1043 ... possibly by direct antimicrobial action of the ions in the gastrointestinal tract, or by the absorption of the zinc and re- ...
This phenomenon, although uncommon, is seen in some people receiving palliative care, most often when dose is increased rapidly ... Physical dependence is the physiological adaptation of the body to the presence of a substance, in this case opioid medication ... urinary retention, and falls". As a result, older adults taking opioids are at greater risk for injury. Opioids do not cause ... which are found principally in the central and peripheral nervous system and the gastrointestinal tract. These receptors ...
Short-term physiological effects include increases in blood pressure and heart rate. The increased blood pressure and heart ... Being exposed to propylene glycol may cause irritation to the eyes and respiratory tract. When propylene glycol is heated and ... Vaping was found to have comparable levels of nicotine urinary metabolites to those who were tobacco and smokeless tobacco ... effects of aerosols inhaled from e-cigarettes is still limited partially due to incomplete awareness of physical phenomena ...
Miller, Dennis M.; Woods, James S. (1993). "Urinary porphyrins as biological indicators of oxidative stress in the kidney". ... The HFE gene makes a protein that helps cells regulate the absorption of iron from the digestive tract and into the cells of ... Physiological Research. 55 Suppl 2: S75-83. doi:10.33549/physiolres.930000.55.S2.75. PMID 17298224. S2CID 1787139. Sampietro, M ... It can be a paraneoplastic phenomenon. Alcohol Estrogen Iron Hepatitis C virus Porphyria cutanea tarda is primarily caused by ...
The phenomena described above are dependent on changes at the cellular and molecular levels. Altered expression of ion channels ... The loss of inhibitory inputs may allow fibers to transmit messages via the spinothalamic tract thus causing pain in normally ... Neuropathic pain has profound physiological effects on the brain which can manifest as psychological disorders. Rodent models ... urinary retention, hormonal disturbance and intrathecal granuloma formation have been noted with intrathecal infusion, ...
feather tract See: pterylae. fecal sac Also, faecal sac. A mucous membrane, generally white or clear with a dark end, that ... Birds do not have a urinary bladder or external urethral opening and (with exception of the ostrich) uric acid is excreted from ... Turner, J. Scott (1997). "On the thermal capacity of a bird's egg warmed by a brood patch". Physiological Zoology. Vol. 70, no ... overbrooding The not uncommon phenomenon of birds continuing to brood eggs that are not viable and will not hatch, sometimes ...
Urinary Tract, Urinary Bladder, Neurogenic, Perinatal Care, Adult Health, Urinary Tract Physiological Phenomena, Laboratory and ... Child Nutritional Physiological Phenomena, Prenatal Care, Prenatal Diagnosis, Infant, Newborn, Child Welfare, Child Advocacy, ...
Urinary Physiology Phenomenon Urinary Tract Physiological Phenomenon Urinary Tract Physiology Urinary Tract Physiological ... Urinary Physiology Phenomenon. Urinary Tract Physiological Phenomenon. Urinary Tract Physiological Process. Urinary Tract ... Urinary Tract Tract Physiology, Urinary Urinary Physiological Concept Urinary Physiological Concepts Urinary Physiology Urinary ... Physiology, Urinary Tract. Tract Physiology, Urinary. Urinary Physiological Concept. Urinary Physiological Concepts. Urinary ...
Reproductive and Urinary Physiological Phenomena [G08]. *Urinary Tract Physiological Phenomena [G08.852]. *Renal Elimination [ ... The discharge of substances from the blood supply via the URINARY TRACT. ...
The diagnosis of urinary tract infection (UTI) relies on urine culture tests to identify aerobic or anaerobic urinary tract ... Furthermore, there were limitations in explaining the complex physiological and pathological mechanisms of humans only by ... as a single life phenomenon [10]. Subsequently, in 2008, the Human Microbiome Project was started in the U.S. to identify the ... is characterized by inflammation of the lower urinary tract by a specific pathogen, showing symptoms in the lower urinary tract ...
... while another study demonstrated that probiotics could potentially help women stave off urinary tract infections. ... a phenomenon weve previously discussed. This refers to the unseen connection between your brain and your gastrointestinal ... but the specifics of this physiological process are so compelling that they are worth noting in greater detail. ... tract, populated by microorganisms. A published review in 2016 found that certain strains of probiotics were indeed effective ...
6 Myths About Urinary Tract Infections Debunked. While UTIs have often been associated with women, it is important to dispel ... The study also investigates whether other clinical markers such as anxiety and depression are influences this phenomenon in ... Unfortunately, this glamorous depiction often overshadows the physiological, physical, and societal consequences of frequent ...
Urinary Tract Physiological Processes. Procesos Fisiológicos del Tracto Urinario. Processos Reprodutivos Fisiológicos. ... Electrophysiological Phenomena. Fenómenos Electrofisiológicos. Fenômenos Fisiológicos. Physiological Phenomena. Fenómenos ... Integumentary System Physiological Phenomena. Fenómenos Fisiológicos del Integumento Común. Processos Fisiológicos da Pele. ... Musculoskeletal and Neural Physiological Phenomena. Fenómenos Fisiológicos Musculoesqueléticos y Neurales. Filtro Sensorial. ...
Mental phenomena arise two to three hours after ingestion, or almost immediately after inhalation of the drug. The subject ... Pyramidal tract signs are not elicited. There is equilibratory and nonequilibratory ataxia, as revealed by marked swaying and ... Marihuana is unique in the reactions it produces in the users, although its physiological effects have been likened to those of ... The subject complains of urinary urgency, diarrhea and nausea; and may retch or actually vomit. His apprehension may be ...
PM is the main pathogen causing complicated urinary tract infections (UTIs), especially catheter-associated urinary tract ... Swarming motility is an important virulence factor for Proteus mirabilis and Pseudomonas aeruginosa and swarming phenomenon is ... C to induce a physiological or biological effect. ... Moreover, infection of the urinary tract with Staphylococcus ... Pathogenesis of Proteus mirabilis in Catheter-Associated Urinary Tract Infections. Yuan, Fei; Huang, Ziye; Yang, Tongxin; Wang ...
Further in order to treat the symptoms of urinary tract issues, the patient would be encouraged to urinate every hour to ... The phenomenon of insulin resistance is regulated by genetic factors and abdominal obesity. Research studies have revealed a ... You must demonstrate your ability to understand the anatomical and physiological changes that occur for your allocated ... Research studies further suggest that the most obvious mechanisms of neuropathy comprise of phenomenon such as oxidative stress ...
OBJECTIVE: This study aimed to explore the risk factors and etiological characteristics of urinary tract infection (UTI) i... ... OBJECTIVE: One of the most pronounced phenomena of spinal cord injury (SCI) pathology is various changes caused by oxidati... ... An interpretable machine learning model for real-time sepsis prediction based on basic physiological indicators OBJECTIVE: In ... Risk factors and etiological characteristics of urinary tract infection in hospitalized continuous ambulatory peritoneal ...
... a crucial physiological biomechanical role has been attributed to spontaneous contraction activity. This concept is ... I.C.S. The standardization of terminology of low urinary tract function. The International Continence Society Committee on ... We referred to the observed phenomenon that during activation of an isovolumetric bladder the elastic volume would not change [ ... Pressure difference [pd(t) - ∆ph(t)] was the driver for outflow F(t) via tract. The expelled volume Ve (t) increased during ...
It has over time proved effective for clearing headaches, reducing pain, fever, anxiety, and problems with the urinary tract.. ... This rare phenomenon is believed to be credited to the variety of benzophenanthridine alkaloids produced in the root. Many ... which spur the peace and comfort to the physiological function of human emotional. Lavender has been believed by experts to ... The traditional use of butterbur in treating problems in the urinary tract is still applicable today even in modern medicine. ...
... it turns out that its something quite normal that happens to everyone and the explanation for it is rather physiological. ... To begin to understand this physiological phenomenon, the first thing to know is that the body has 2 main ways of eliminating ... This may be due to a urinary tract infection, an infected or inflamed urethra, nerve problems, consumption, or even caffeine ... it turns out that its something quite normal that happens to everyone and the explanation for it is rather physiological. ...
Laboratory findings are anatomical, physiological, or psychological phenomena that can be shown by the use of medically ... Urinary Tract Infections. *Uterine Prolapse. Long Term Disability for Hematological Disorders. *Aplastic Anemia with Bone ... Signs are anatomical, physiological, or psychological abnormalities that can be observed by a medical provider. Signs are ... Psychiatric signs are medically demonstrable phenomena that indicate specific psychological abnormalities, e.g., abnormalities ...
The normal values (of urine) range from pH 4.6 to 8.0, and a high urine pH may indicate kidney dysfunction or urinary tract ... The eyes: "The normal physiological pH of ocular surface in humans to be 7.11±1.5. They also showed an increase in ocular ... Static induction is the principle that guides this phenomenon, which youve experienced if youve ever rubbed a balloon on your ... Association between urine pH and common uropathogens in children with urinary tract infections) ...
Urinary tract. *Urology. *Weight balance. *The first root chakra (Muladhara) balancing. *The second sacral chakra (Svadhisthana ... It helps to balance multiple physiological and psychological factors. *Balancing program profiles in more than thirty core ... We also reach a better understanding of the biology and energy connection and the phenomena described as "energy medicine." ...
Acute kidney diseases and acute disorders of the urinary tract. Our trained therapists are always available to clarify any ... This cold stimulus delivers dramatic biological as well as physiological advantages such as improving blood flow, boosting your ... Raynauds phenomenon. *Fever. *Cancer. *Lung conditions in which symptoms are present. *Bleeding disorders ...
Urinary Elimination.. In urine, CPT-11, APC, and SN-38G are the main compounds detected within 24 h after CPT-11 administration ... These phenomena are of particular importance in cancer chemotherapy when cytotoxic agents are used, because of the increased ... Because it has been discovered that CEs are widely expressed in the human liver and gastrointestinal tract, it may be possible ... 21-fold more efficient at physiological pH than UGT1A1 (67). ... Cumulative urinary and fecal excretion of CPT-11 and ...
Drug addiction is a cluster of behavioral, cognitive, and physiological phenomena that develop after repeated substance use and ... Effects on the Gastrointestinal Tract and Other Smooth Muscle Morphine causes a reduction in motility associated with an ... The concomitant use of anticholinergic drugs may increase risk of urinary retention and/or severe constipation, which may lead ... Monitor patients for signs of urinary retention or reduced gastric motility when Morphine Sulfate Oral Solution is used ...
Thus, given that dietary melatonin is absorbed in the gastrointestinal tract and transported into the bloodstream, the ... and physiological processes at cellular, tissue, and organic levels. It is well-known for its ability to cross the blood-brain ... The physiological changes in human plasma melatonin have also been investigated after beer consumption. Eighteen brands of beer ... The plasma melatonin levels increased after bean sprout ingestion (16%, p , 0.05). This increment correlated with the urinary 6 ...
Quinolones are utilized when treating urinary tract diseases, respiratory tract, intestinal contaminations, ear/nose/throat ... Levine C., Hiasa H., Marians K. J. DNA gyrase and topoisomerase IV: biochemical activities, physiological roles during ... However, this phenomenon well described in Klebsiella sp. and Escherichia coli appear to be rare for other bacterial families, ... which has direct action against Gram-negative bacteria and has been utilized to treat urinary tract diseases. Within the taking ...
This phenomenon has been observed in the digestive tract.[24] Since bacterial translocation into the blood is not only possible ... This phenomenon has been postulated to contribute to a physiological resistance to weakly basic drugs in vivo. Doxorubicin is ... Bottom-line chickens do not have urinary tract system and are more likely to absorb their urine into their connective tissues. ... urinary tract, or bowels.. 7) After a rich animal protein or dairy product meal, the urine pH becomes alkaline. The ingestion ...
It is also used in treating cramps, spasmodic coughs, neuralgia, diarrhea, kidney and urinary tract infections, cold, headache ... One of the studies by the Brown University on the physiological effects of aromatherapy oils like Neroli proved that such aroma ... Depression has become a common phenomenon in people of all ages including teenagers, professionals (both men and women) and ...
Proceedings: Physiological changes encountered in hypothermia. Proc R Soc Med. 1973 Oct. 66(10):1053-8. [QxMD MEDLINE Link]. ... Any practitioner who sees a reasonable amount of frostbite is familiar with this phenomenon; despite healing of the involved ... gastrointestinal tract irrigation; arterial venous shunting including hemodialysis; extracorporeal bypass; or warm irrigation ... and bladder thermistors embedded in a urinary catheter. The tympanic probe accurately measures hypothalamic temperature and ...
  • A 2003 study found that certain strains of probiotics were effective in protecting cells against specific bacteria-caused infections, while another study demonstrated that probiotics could potentially help women stave off urinary tract infections. (purityproducts.com)
  • Proteus mirabilis (P. mirabilis) is a frequent cause of catheter-associated urinary tract infections. (bvsalud.org)
  • tiotropium) can cause side systemic effects that include cardiac events such as tachycardia and gastrointestinal involvement such as constipation, as well as urinary retention and urinary tract infections. (biomedcentral.com)
  • They report relatively low prevalence of menopausal symptoms, with the most significant being irregular menstrual cycles and increased blood pressure and urinary tract infections. (bvsalud.org)
  • In a concept of accommodation of detrusor pressure to volume as an autonomous potency of the bladder, a crucial physiological biomechanical role has been attributed to spontaneous contraction activity. (polscientific.com)
  • In 1962, Lesher G. Y. and his collaborators presented the primary derivative of quinolone, nalidixic acid, which has direct action against Gram-negative bacteria and has been utilized to treat urinary tract diseases. (extrica.com)
  • The diagnosis of urinary tract infection (UTI) relies on urine culture tests to identify aerobic or anaerobic urinary tract pathogens. (euti.org)
  • OBJECTIVE: This study aimed to explore the risk factors and etiological characteristics of urinary tract infection (UTI) i. (cn1699.cn)
  • This may be due to a urinary tract infection, an infected or inflamed urethra, nerve problems, consumption, or even caffeine intake. (brightside.me)
  • This refers to the unseen connection between your brain and your gastrointestinal tract, populated by microorganisms. (purityproducts.com)
  • A new next-generation sequencing (NGS) method has gradually helped overcome these limitations, and the microorganisms present in the human urinary tract are gradually being revealed. (euti.org)
  • Based on of a microbiologic phenomenon, first described by van Leeu- observations of dental plaque and sessile communities in wenhoek, that microorganisms attach to and grow universally mountain streams, Costerton et al. (cdc.gov)
  • Properties, functions, and processes of the URINARY TRACT as a whole or of any of its parts. (bvsalud.org)
  • Acute uncomplicated cystitis, the most common type of UTI, is characterized by inflammation of the lower urinary tract by a specific pathogen, showing symptoms in the lower urinary tract. (euti.org)
  • Not all of these phenomena occur in every sub ject, but when any of them does, it lasts for about twelve hours. (druglibrary.org)
  • You must demonstrate your ability to understand the anatomical and physiological changes that occur for your allocated condition. (123essaywriting.com)
  • OBJECTIVE: One of the most pronounced phenomena of spinal cord injury (SCI) pathology is various changes caused by oxidati. (cn1699.cn)
  • The disease is diagnosed based on the presence of pyuria in the urine test or culture of urinary tract pathogens in the urine culture test. (euti.org)
  • Mental phenomena arise two to three hours after ingestion, or almost immediately after inhalation of the drug. (druglibrary.org)
  • The discharge of substances from the blood supply via the URINARY TRACT. (musc.edu)
  • Cryotherapy is an effective approach of exposing your body for a maximum of 3 minutes to an intense cold temperature ranging from -110 ° C to -180 ° C. This cold stimulus delivers dramatic biological as well as physiological advantages such as improving blood flow, boosting your immune function, assisting in speedy muscle rehabilitation, enhanced skin glow as well as uplifting your mood among others. (cryokinesis.in)
  • Marihuana is unique in the reactions it produces in the users, although its physiological effects have been likened to those of the atropine group of drugs, and its psychic effects to those of alcohol. (druglibrary.org)
  • The study also investigates whether other clinical markers such as anxiety and depression are influences this phenomenon in some way. (medicaldaily.com)
  • A pharmacokinetics that permits quick disposal and diminished tissue intrigued, as it were permitting them to be utilized as urinary cleaning agents [5]. (extrica.com)
  • We also reach a better understanding of the biology and energy connection and the phenomena described as "energy medicine. (wellnessbalancer.com)
  • der the supervision of the Directorate is a global phenomenon reflecting the Malnutrition is common among of Social Security in Lattakia, which is increase in life expectancy that has residents of homes for the elderly and under the Ministry of Social Security. (who.int)
  • There was equivocal evidence of carcinogenic activity of butyl benzyl phthalate in female F344/N rats based on marginally increased incidences of pancreatic acinar cell adenoma and of transitional epithelial papilloma of the urinary bladder. (nih.gov)
  • Exposure of rats to butyl benzyl phthalate in feed for two years resulted in focal hyperplasia in the pancreas in male rats and in transitional epithelial hyperplasia in the urinary bladder of female rats. (nih.gov)
  • Prostate enlargement and altered urinary function are part of the aging process. (nih.gov)
  • Therapeutic targeting of endocrine and prostatic factors including smooth muscle function, prostate growth and fibrosis are likely to reestablish normal urinary function. (nih.gov)
  • In examining aged (24-month-old) mice, we observed changes within the lower urinary tract that is typically associated with lower urinary tract dysfunction (LUTD) similar to models of BPH. (nih.gov)
  • We also characterize the histological differences within the lower urinary tract between young (2-month-old) and aged mice including proliferation, stromal remodeling, and collagen deposition. (nih.gov)
  • Urinary fibrinolysis, usually a normal physiological phenomenon, may contribute to excessive urinary tract fibrinolytic bleeding associated with surgical hematuria (following prostatectomy and nephrectomy) or nonsurgical hematuria (accompanying polycystic or neoplastic diseases of the genitourinary system). (nih.gov)
  • Augmented excretion of urolithiasis inhibitors, such as citrate, magnesium, and glycosaminoglycans, neutralize these phenomena in pregnant patients, who are no more likely to form urinary calculi than nonpregnant patients. (medscape.com)
  • 11] Swanson and associates (1995) observed that hydroureteronephrosis was not routinely found below the pelvic brim and was altogether absent in patients who had undergone urinary diversion. (medscape.com)
  • An increased risk of postpartum disseminated intravascular coagulation has been described in patients whose labour has been induced by any physiological or pharmacological means. (who.int)