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1 nostics as well as further management of the urethral abnormalities.
2                      Accordingly, we studied urethral afferent neuronal somata in streptozotocin-indu
3       Thus, unlike bladder afferent neurons, urethral afferent neurons may be hyperexcitable well int
4 ations in electrophysiological properties of urethral afferent neurons may therefore contribute to vo
5  injected into the proximal urethra to label urethral afferent neurons.
6 otassium currents was a prominent feature of urethral afferent neuropathy in DM, acting to increase n
7 ults describe the properties and function of urethral afferents that are necessary to understand how
8                          In group 2 (n = 5), urethral and bladder protection was provided by insertin
9 , there was no difference among results from urethral and meatal swabs.
10 c US allowed visualization and monitoring of urethral and NVB blood flow during the ablation.
11           These findings challenge the fecal-urethral and prevalence hypotheses for FUTI pathogenesis
12 n males was 6.6%, with no difference between urethral and urine T. vaginalis detection (P = 0.53).
13 rtery, presumed circle area ratio, prostatic urethral angle, intraprostatic protrusion, and detrusor
14 have a lower risk of infection, erosion, and urethral atrophy.
15            We estimated associations between urethral bacteria and NGU in men who have sex with men (
16                                              Urethral biopsies showed that the engineered grafts had
17                                              Urethral brush cells express bitter and umami taste rece
18                       Injection therapy with urethral bulking agents or stem cell formulations have b
19                                   The use of urethral bulking and oral medicines for stress incontine
20 copic studies showed the maintenance of wide urethral calibres without strictures.
21 nd that they have a critical function during urethral canalization and fusion.
22 after which we collected urine by means of a urethral catheter for culture (catheter urine).
23 n scheme combining micro-arterial perfusion, urethral catheter perfusion and external diffusion enabl
24 t noninfectious complications resulting from urethral catheter use.
25 abetic patients, patients with an indwelling urethral catheter, patients with impaired voiding follow
26  3-50 mL were instilled in the bladder via a urethral catheter.
27                                     However, urethral catheterization and contrast instillation is st
28 ding those who suffered mucosal injuries via urethral catheterization, rarely showed evidence of neut
29 tants identified as defective in blockage of urethral catheters had disruptions in genes involved in
30 extensive crystalline biofilms on indwelling urethral catheters that block urine flow and lead to ser
31 ilis forms extensive crystalline biofilms on urethral catheters that occlude urine flow and frequentl
32                                    Moreover, urethral cells specifically release replication-competen
33 oeae at three sites (anorectum, pharynx, and urethral/cervix) every four months using self-collected
34 PEA transferase A (lptA) mutant in the human urethral-challenge and murine lower genital tract infect
35                    A minority (15%) also had urethral chlamydia coinfection.
36 ncy continues to be mainly identified by low urethral closure pressures or low abdominal leak point p
37 ncision or partial excision of the sling and urethral closure suffices.
38 naling are intrinsically required for normal urethral closure.
39 r urethroplasty and to address the posterior urethral complications of the treatment of prostate canc
40  fixed sling that achieves a broader area of urethral compression by combining a transobturator and s
41 rge collateral vein as well as prostatic and urethral congestion leading to intermittent urinary hesi
42 ateral vein and it may lead to prostatic and urethral congestion.
43 een used with increasing frequency to regain urethral continuity.
44 ered as a management option to restore early urethral continuity.
45 ge between groups with and the group without urethral cooling (P = .002), while intraarterial cooling
46   There was highly significant difference in urethral damage between groups with and the group withou
47 linization disorders such as cryptorchidism, urethral defects and hypospadias.
48                            Five boys who had urethral defects were included in the study.
49                           PURPOSE OF REVIEW: Urethral dilatation and direct visual internal urethroto
50 erature to identify contemporary practice of urethral dilatation and DVIU and the long-term outcome o
51 od January 2010 to December 2011 showed that urethral dilatation and DVIU remain frequently used trea
52                                              Urethral dilatation and DVIU remain widely used in ureth
53 lts of minimally invasive procedures such as urethral dilation and transurethral incision of the blad
54  bladder neck contractures are responsive to urethral dilation or cold knife direct visual internal u
55 sive method of measuring urine flow rate and urethral dilation.
56                                     Most had urethral discharge (91%), reported oral sex with a femal
57 eriod 2007-2009 with NGU (defined as visible urethral discharge and/or >/=5 polymorphonuclear neutrop
58 ic in Seattle, Washington, with NGU (visible urethral discharge or >/=5 polymorphonuclear leukocytes
59 d on urethral Gram stain plus either visible urethral discharge or urethral symptoms.
60  have been recommended for the collection of urethral discharge to diagnose N. gonorrhoeae and Chlamy
61 nfection characterized by a painful purulent urethral discharge, while in women, the infection is oft
62 ted cases of complete anterior and posterior urethral disruption primary realignment by a combined an
63 sonance imaging are now widely available and urethral diverticula that previously were unrecognized,
64 tion, investigation and management of female urethral diverticulum, a condition often overlooked and
65 bed; both separately and in association with urethral diverticulum.
66 ogenic bladder, radiation injury, and marked urethral dysfunction) or to facilitate catheterization.
67 maturation and cell cycle progression in the urethral endoderm and in the surface ectoderm.
68 oothened in the genital ectoderm and cloacal/urethral endoderm shows that the ectoderm is a direct ta
69 vical epithelial cells (End/E6E7) but not in urethral epithelial cells (THUECs).
70 oeae strain 1291 formed a biofilm on primary urethral epithelial cells and cervical cells in culture
71  in order for organisms to bind to and enter urethral epithelial cells during infection in men.
72  and reduced adherence to human cervical and urethral epithelial cells, relative to the wild-type str
73 aintenance of the GT signaling center distal urethral epithelium (dUE).
74 helial populations: the endodermally derived urethral epithelium and the ectodermally derived surface
75 ound that Sprouty genes are expressed by the urethral epithelium during embryogenesis, and that they
76 e genital tubercle, the endodermally derived urethral epithelium functions as an organizer and expres
77 on arrests prematurely and maturation of the urethral epithelium is disrupted.
78 s suggested that Fkbp52 mutants had a normal urethral epithelium signaling center and epithelial diff
79 of the genital tubercle is maintained by the urethral epithelium, and it has been reported that Fgf8
80 spadias and inhibits maturation of a complex urethral epithelium, whereas loss of ectodermal Fgfr2 re
81  we found no redundant Fgf expression in the urethral epithelium, which contrasts with the situation
82 eveloping penis that undergoes fusion of the urethral epithelium.
83  conditionally removed Fgf8 from the cloacal/urethral epithelium.
84                Serious complications such as urethral erosion occur rarely.
85 e reporting receptive oral sex as their only urethral exposure (P = 0.04), by number of sex partners
86 tA, lgtC, and lgtD from diagnostic slides of urethral exudates and sequenced their polyG tracts.
87                             On Gram stain of urethral exudates, Nm can be misidentified as the more c
88 -site testing (using pharyngeal, rectal, and urethral/first-void urine samples) for Neisseria gonorrh
89                                  Conversely, urethral flow at high bladder volumes, excites the bladd
90                         Below this threshold urethral flow evoked tonic EUS activity, indicative of t
91 uarding reflex, that was proportional to the urethral flow rate.
92 chanical stimuli such as bladder stretch and urethral flow(4).
93 the pudendal sensory activity in response to urethral flow.
94 ependently by controlling bladder volume and urethral flow.
95 ctivity in response to arbitrary profiles of urethral flows.
96 tion resulting from the disruption of normal urethral formation with varying global prevalence.
97 y, including prior antiincontinence surgery, urethral function or obstruction or both, and the presen
98 ometry, pressure-flow studies, uroflowmetry, urethral function tests and electromyography.
99 clinic location in a ZIP code area with male urethral GC infection rates in the top quartile of Washi
100 ation of progesterone-Receptor mRNA in bulbo-urethral gland samples, was performed: analyses were mad
101                                              Urethral, glans penis/coronal sulcus, penile shaft/prepu
102 ic sequencing of urine samples from men with urethral gonorrhea can recover near-complete N. gonorrho
103 n 10 urine samples from men with symptomatic urethral gonorrhea, >=92.8% coverage of an N. gonorrhoea
104 re sequencing of urine samples from men with urethral gonorrhea, sufficient data can be obtained to r
105 honuclear leukocytes per high-power field on urethral Gram stain plus either visible urethral dischar
106 ymorphonuclear cells per high-power field on urethral Gram stain.
107 he outcome of these procedures in women with urethral hypermobility and genuine stress incontinence s
108 n between intrinsic sphincter deficiency and urethral hypermobility, assessing symptom severity and p
109 h the condition, a positive stress test, and urethral hypermobility.
110  We show that propagation of Ca(2+) waves in urethral ICC is critically dependent upon Ca(2+) influx
111 ocalised Ca(2+) events for the first time in urethral ICC; these were due to Ca(2+) release from the
112 doxycycline for the treatment of symptomatic urethral infection in men.
113 he pathological and immunologic responses to urethral infection of the male guinea pig with Chlamydia
114  found that the 50% infectious dose for male urethral infection was 78 inclusion-forming units.
115 thritis should undergo evaluation to confirm urethral inflammation and etiologic cause.
116  of clinical findings (age, endocervical and urethral inflammation, menses, and gonococcal coinfectio
117                Of these 48, 71% responded to urethral infusion, 81% responded to colon distension, 10
118 minimize short and long-term sequelae of all urethral injuries will ensure optimal results.
119 y or contusion, and epididymal, scrotal, and urethral injuries.
120 mal management of each of the vast arrays of urethral injuries.
121 ing has facilitated the earlier diagnosis of urethral injury and ensured that serious long-term seque
122 or outcomes such as urinary tract infection, urethral injury and quality of life.
123 provide a concise account of the patterns of urethral injury and the current trends of its immediate
124 ct trauma needs to recognize the patterns of urethral injury, especially those associated with certai
125 c fractures associated with a higher risk of urethral injury.
126 es and could potentially decrease iatrogenic urethral injury.
127  are overrepresented in cervical relative to urethral isolates.
128 oing RTS has shown an increase in membranous urethral length and elevation of the external urethral s
129 k preservation, bladder neck reconstruction, urethral length preservation, periurethral suspension st
130 ical rejection scale based on graft skin and urethral lining as the main targets of rejection.
131                               Graft skin and urethral lining tissue are first rejection targets follo
132 l monitoring the chemical composition of the urethral luminal microenvironment for potential hazardou
133 ive combination antiretroviral therapy, that urethral macrophages contain integrated HIV-1 DNA, RNA,
134 sessment of the risk of cancer at the apical urethral margin and the risk of a second primary tumor o
135   Considering the anatomical location of the urethral meatus, it is surprising that urine is normally
136 ic shape of the urine stream as it exits the urethral meatus.
137 er (EUS) EMG and expulsion of urine from the urethral meatus.
138 e EUS to perineal skin, genital, rectal, and urethral mechanical stimulation, as well as to determine
139  urethra comprised of smooth muscle and peri-urethral mesenchyme.
140                                          The urethral microbiota was characterized using 16S rRNA gen
141 or low-threshold bladder-stretch sensing and urethral micturition reflexes.
142 pared to mLPP after SCI+PNT, suggesting that urethral mucosal seal coaptation and tissue elasticity a
143 x (latency=8.9+/-1.1 ms) contractions of the urethral muscle, whereas stimulation of the perineal pat
144 ienced cefixime treatment failure, involving urethral (n = 4), pharyngeal (n = 2), and rectal (n = 3)
145  - the use of grafts or flaps to correct the urethral narrowing - remains one of the most challenging
146                              We analyzed 265 urethral Neisseria gonorrhoeae specimens collected from
147                                          All urethral Nm isolates were nongroupable, ST-11 clonal com
148                                              Urethral Nm isolates were similar by fine typing (PorA P
149 d interstitial fibrosis following unilateral urethral obstruction (UUO).
150 is, and inflammation in mice with unilateral urethral obstruction (UUO).
151                             The incidence of urethral obstruction and histologic evidence of chronic
152 es also identified that the complications of urethral obstruction are associated with mortality in ma
153 t of complications, such as the treatment of urethral obstruction with transvaginal sling incision.
154 oaded bladder in a rat model of experimental urethral obstruction.
155 pospadias is a common birth defect where the urethral opening forms on the ventral side of the penis.
156               For approach 3, duplicate male urethral or cervical swabs were tested by SDA or by both
157                                Activation of urethral or genital afferents of the pudendal nerve can
158      We enrolled 66 men who underwent either urethral or meatal swabbing and compared the cellular co
159 514 men) received a TV NAAT on endocervical, urethral, or urine specimens.
160 spadias - ectopic ventral positioning of the urethral orifice; and hypoplastic genitalia.
161                                     A higher urethral outlet resistance is suggested in the male subj
162 ved with UP, which suggests that it is not a urethral pathogen.
163 nd Chlamydia trachomatis are well-documented urethral pathogens, and the literature supporting Mycopl
164  the urethral tube involves septation of the urethral plate by continued growth of the urorectal sept
165                                     Instead, urethral plate cells persist to the ventral margin of th
166                                              Urethral plate elevation from the corpora has previously
167 ere hypospadias in mice, in which the entire urethral plate is open along the ventral side of the pen
168 tion of androgen signaling revealed that the urethral plate of flutamide-treated males does not under
169 d on either abdominal leak point pressure or urethral pressure profilometry will influence the choice
170 (focusing on leak point pressure testing and urethral pressure profilometry) prior to surgical treatm
171                                      Complex urethral problems can occur as a result of injury, disea
172                      Patients then underwent urethral reconstruction with the tissue-engineered tubul
173 ras can be used in patients who need complex urethral reconstruction.
174 g patients' own cells in patients who needed urethral reconstruction.
175                                  The risk of urethral recurrence may in fact be lower after orthotopi
176                                              Urethral recurrence, although uncommon, continues to hav
177           Advances in tissue engineering for urethral replacement have resulted in several clinical a
178                               A single trans-urethral resection of the prostate specimen examined har
179                                        HIV-1 urethral reservoirs localize preferentially in a subset
180 uantify the contribution of these factors to urethral resistance, a measure of continence.
181                                          The urethral rhabdosphincter (URS), commonly known as the ex
182                Striated muscle fibres in the urethral rhabdosphincter are innervated by Onuf's nuclei
183   The NA-induced increase in excitability of urethral rhabdosphincter motoneurons could be a key mech
184 d likely would have remained untreated, with urethral screening alone.
185  visit and would not have been detected with urethral screening alone.
186 ons that would have remained undetected with urethral screening alone.
187 oHD5 by neutrophil proteases and analysis of urethral secretions by surface-enhanced laser desorption
188 roduction of IgG and IgA antibodies in local urethral secretions developed following infection, and l
189     Here, we determined defensin profiles in urethral secretions of healthy men and men with Chlamydi
190 are integrated to switch reflex responses to urethral sensory feedback from maintaining continence to
191                         Despite the key role urethral sensory feedback plays in regulation of the low
192                         Despite the key role urethral sensory information plays in the lower urinary
193 tle information about the characteristics of urethral sensory responses to physiological stimuli, and
194                                              Urethral signaling regions, as indicated by Shh and Fgf8
195 ry retention in a future pregnancy after mid-urethral sling (MUS) is small.
196 nence procedures of both traditional and mid-urethral slings and retropubic urethropexies, and for ma
197                                          Mid-urethral slings appear to be as efficacious as more esta
198                                         FCU, urethral smears, and swabs were collected from men seen
199 ng activity and contractility in bladder and urethral smooth muscle cells (SMCs).
200                                              Urethral specimens were tested for MG and other bacteria
201 eflexes relax the bladder and evoke external urethral sphincter (EUS) contraction (guarding reflex) t
202 absence of bladder contractions and external urethral sphincter (EUS) electromyographic (EMG) activat
203                                     External urethral sphincter (EUS) electromyography (EMG) was typi
204 the changes in bladder pressure and external urethral sphincter (EUS) electroneurogram (ENG) evoked b
205 accompanied by rhythmic bursting of external urethral sphincter (EUS) EMG and expulsion of urine from
206                                 The external urethral sphincter (EUS) plays a crucial role in maintai
207 irmed electrophysiologically by the measured urethral sphincter activity evoked in response to select
208 s are thought to functionally regenerate the urethral sphincter in patients with suspected intrinsic
209  muscle precursor cells (MPCs) into striated urethral sphincter irreversibly damaged by electrocoagul
210 incter (URS), commonly known as the external urethral sphincter, facilitates urinary continence by co
211 rethral length and elevation of the external urethral sphincter, whereas a recent large series demons
212 ve) that inserted directly into the external urethral sphincter.
213  EMG high-frequency activity in the external urethral sphincter.
214  suturing around both the urethra and a para-urethral steel rod, then removing the rod.
215     Aggressive electrocautery resection with urethral stent placement and anastomotic urethroplasty a
216 ue in-growth or stricture is similar between urethral stent placement and anastomotic urethroplasty,
217                                              Urethral stenting is also an option; however, this is as
218                                              Urethral stents and anastomotic urethroplasty have been
219            Previous enthusiasm for permanent urethral stents has been dissipated by long-term results
220             In an attempt to avoid permanent urethral stents, new adjunctive agents are being used in
221 ract, the relationship between physiological urethral stimuli, such as fluid flow, and the neural sen
222 hould be considered in men with a history of urethral stone surgery and symptoms, including painless
223 ss scrotal swelling after cystolithotomy and urethral stone surgery.
224 sed significantly after PNT, indicating that urethral striated muscles contribute significantly to co
225                          Peyronie's disease, urethral stricture and penile (corpora cavernosa) fibros
226                                              Urethral stricture disease is poorly understood in prost
227 options exist for the management of anterior urethral stricture disease.
228 ound of the prostate also carry high risk of urethral stricture formation, particularly in the salvag
229 iation or ablative therapies are at risk for urethral stricture formation.
230 al dilatation and DVIU remain widely used in urethral stricture management but high-level comparative
231 g morbidities are often at increased risk of urethral stricture recurrence brought upon in-part by de
232 turia, accidental removal, urine leakage, or urethral stricture was then pooled using random-effects
233                                    Grade 3-4 urethral stricture within 2 years was reported in 6% of
234                 One grade III adverse event (urethral stricture) was recorded.
235 including rectal complications (3.3% vs 0%), urethral strictures (17.8% vs 9.5%), and total urinary i
236         We review the cause and incidence of urethral strictures (excluding bladder neck contracture)
237 in a small series as treatment for posterior urethral strictures and bladder neck contractures result
238 l imaging modality used in the evaluation of urethral strictures and fistulas in case of 'watering ca
239 ethrotomy or dilatation in the management of urethral strictures as first-line therapy in selected pa
240                       Surgical correction of urethral strictures by substitution urethroplasty - the
241 ous complications were also noted, including urethral strictures, which occurred in 3.4% (CI, 1.0% to
242  treatment is best for primary and recurrent urethral strictures.
243 inimally invasive options to manage men with urethral strictures.
244 atest evidence on the management of anterior urethral strictures.
245 iteria included prostate or bladder surgery, urethral surgery or stricture, or medical or other neuro
246 scription-mediated amplification (TMA)-based urethral swab and first-void urine screening for T. vagi
247                                              Urethral swab cultures from men with urethritis were mor
248 onorrhea Isolate Surveillance Project (GISP) urethral swab samples and compared the results with matc
249                        RNA was isolated from urethral swab specimens and used as a template to amplif
250                     One hundred cervical and urethral swab specimens containing C. trachomatis DNA fr
251 ted vaginal swab or clinician-collected male urethral swab specimens with a composite reference metho
252 f 926 cervical swab, 45 female urine, 6 male urethral swab, and 407 male urine specimens from 1,384 p
253 ng for STIs by blood sample, urine sample or urethral swab, rectal swab, or pharyngeal swab, respecti
254 lure rate significantly higher than that for urethral swabs (45% versus 3%, respectively; P < 0.0001)
255            For the third approach, duplicate urethral swabs and first-catch urine (FCU) samples from
256 rom urine in cobas PCR medium tubes and from urethral swabs and in the presence of simulated Chlamydi
257 was highest for rectal swabs and similar for urethral swabs and urine specimens.
258                                              Urethral swabs are the samples of choice for point-of-ca
259 r female urine, and 98.2% and 99.6% for male urethral swabs, 88.4% and 97.8% for self-collected penil
260 included male and female urine samples, male urethral swabs, female endocervical swabs, and self-coll
261                         As an alternative to urethral swabs, meatal swabs have been recommended for t
262 fewer collected epithelial cells compared to urethral swabs, the adequacy of meatal swab specimens to
263 and PCR-enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay in urethral swabs, urine, and semen for T. vaginalis detect
264 etected in the genital tract, seminal fluid, urethral swabs, urine, and vaginal wash samples of HIV-n
265 as the preferred specimen source compared to urethral swabs.
266   Clinical cure (<5 PMNs/HPF with or without urethral symptoms and absence of discharge) and microbio
267 in plus either visible urethral discharge or urethral symptoms.
268                          Loosely applied mid-urethral synthetic slings are becoming the treatment of
269 reas viral components remain undetectable in urethral T cells.
270                                              Urethral T. pallidum shedding can occur before seroconve
271  CT infections were associated with negative urethral tests at the same visit and would not have been
272  macrophage and neutrophil density following urethral tissue analyses.
273 tion of nanotechnology and 3D bioprinting to urethral tissue engineering might present solutions to t
274 se results are the first evidence that human urethral tissue macrophages constitute a principal HIV-1
275                            The management of urethral trauma remains controversial.
276                                              Urethral trauma secondary to penetrating gunshot wounds
277                                We documented urethral Treponema pallidum infection in a man with nong
278 s a direct target of Shh and is required for urethral tube closure, highlighting a novel role for gen
279 al genital phase, during which Shh regulates urethral tube closure.
280 ernal genitalia that results from failure of urethral tube closure.
281                             Hypospadias is a urethral tube defect defined by mislocalized, oversized,
282                   In males, formation of the urethral tube involves septation of the urethral plate b
283 tion is required for maintenance of a closed urethral tube.
284               These results demonstrate that urethral tubulogenesis, prepuce morphogenesis, and sexua
285                                     Anterior urethral valve (AUV) is a rare but a well-known congenit
286 cal congenital anomalies, with the posterior urethral valve (PUV) being the most prevalent one.
287                          Congenital anterior urethral valve is an uncommon but important cause of inf
288           On cysto-urethroscopy the anterior urethral valve was confirmed and fulguration was done.
289 his study, patients suffering from posterior urethral valves (n = 49), spina bifida (n = 21), central
290                                    Posterior urethral valves are associated with considerable mortali
291                                              Urethral valves are infravesical congenital anomalies, w
292 om benign prostatic hyperplasia or posterior urethral valves) focuses on symptoms.
293 uted to various conditions such as posterior urethral valves, neurogenic bladder, ureteral ectopy, or
294  bladder dysfunction as well as on posterior urethral valves.
295 ses to quantify changes in prostatic volume, urethral volume, and genitourinary vascularization over
296 imaging to quantify changes in prostatic and urethral volumes over time.
297 s associated with a dyssynergia in which the urethral walls contract at the same time as the detrusor
298                          In one patient, the urethral warmer could not be inserted and the procedure
299                                            A urethral warmer was inserted.
300 onally, there is a need for basic studies of urethral wound healing to provide a better understanding

 
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