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A 6-year-old male Doberman Pinscher developed multiple organ infarctions secondary to vegetative endocarditis. Clinical signs included fever, nystagmus, head-tilt, inappetence, dehydration, hematuria, and dysuria. The dog was azotemic and anemic and had a high WBC count and high liver enzyme
OBJECTIVE
Although progression of small deep subcortical infarct (PSDI) comprises 12% to 36% of all small deep subcortical infarcts, the therapy for progression is not clear. This study investigated whether induced-hypertension therapy using phenylephrine is a useful therapy for PSDI.
METHODS
A
BACKGROUND
Although an early neurological deterioration after lacunar infarction is not rare, its therapeutic options are still undetermined. We investigated the effect of induced-hypertension in lacunar infarction with motor progression.
METHODS
We reviewed 82 lacunar infarction patients who
Isolated renal infections with fungal organisms of the class Zygomycetes are rare, but these infections are most frequently seen in patients who are immunocompromised. We report the case of a 45-year-old African American man who presented with symptoms of right-sided pyelonephritis, including fever,
Patients with fever, flank pain, and dysuria frequently are encountered in the emergency department. Acute pyelonephritis is the most likely diagnosis; however, its clinical and radiologic presentation consistently overlap with that of acute renal infarction. Ultrasound is unable to distinguish
The hot water spray on perineum restored voiding function in a 77-year-old male patient with the poorly contractile bladder. He noticed the gradual decrease of bladder sensation and voiding stream, and needed clean intermittent catheterization to empty bladder even after TUR-P. Neurological
A 66-year-old man had been receiving anticoagulant therapy for myocardial infarction with warfarin potassium (abbreviated as warfarin) 2 mg/day. Though he had been treated with tamsulosin hydrochloride 0.2 mg/day as diagnosis of benign prostatic hyperplasia, he experienced severe dysuria and wanted
Ten cases of hematuria in Grant's gazelle (Gazella granti) (two male and eight female) from five institutions were examined and the clinicopathologic data summarized. Five gazelles died spontaneously and five were euthanized. All gazelles had marked hematuria without pyuria. Mean age at the onset of
A 57-year-old woman with known moderate-to-severe mitral stenosis and atrial fibrillation (AF) presented to the emergency department with acute onset right loin pain after having a coronary angiogram and left and right heart catheterisation through the right femoral route about 28 h ago. The cardiac
METHODS
A 45-year-old man came to our hospital with a chief complaint of occipital pain followed by gait disturbance and developing hypohidrosis on the right side 6 days after the onset. Brain MRI revealed an acute infarction in the dorsolateral part of right medulla. Bladder catheter was inserted
A 67-year-old man was admitted with a saccular aneurysm of the abdominal aorta. Preoperative CT revealed cylindrical calcification of the abdominal aorta and the patent internal iliac arteries (IIAs). At the elective surgery, a cylinder-shaped and severely calcified intimal layer was found, and the
An 11 yr old male Drahthaar dog was presented for dysuria, pollakiuria, and history of uroliths. Abdominal ultrasound revealed a subcapsular fluid-filled lesion of the left kidney, suspected cholecystitis, and a splenic infarct. The renal lesion was fully drained and cytology of the renal
A 77-year-old man, with a lengthy medical history of chronic dysuria, constipation, hypertension, myocardial infarction, and a submandibular lymphadenopathy that was excised 3 years ago, was hospitalized due to elevated liver enzyme levels. He demonstrated hypergammaglobulinemia, hyperproteinemia,
The pathogenesis of benign prostatic hyperplasia (BPH) remains largely unresolved. The natural history of the disease involves two distinct phases, a pathological and a clinical one, whose pathogenesis is different. The pathologic phase is composed of two stages microscopic and macroscopic neither
The natural history of benign prostatic hyperplasia (BPH) involves two phases. The first, or pathologic phase, is composed of two stages, microscopic and macroscopic, neither of which produces symptomatic clinical dysuria. Nearly all men throughout the world eventually develop microscopic BPH if