(n.) Accumulation in the blood of the principles of the urine, producing dangerous disease.
Example Sentences:
(1) Urine tests in six patients with other kidney diseases and with uraemia and in seven healthy persons did not show this substance.
(2) By taking peritoneal diffusion curves of several substances characterizing the uraemia it is possible, taking into consideration a creatinine clearance of 0.1 ml X s-1, to calculate the quantity of dialysate necessary for this, regarding also the residual renal function at a differently long duration of the dialysis cycle.
(3) An upper respiratory tract infection in a 22-month-old boy was followed by rapid loss of consciousness, hypoglycaemia, uraemia, and death.
(4) These findings suggest that although in rats with normal renal function aluminium absorption appears to be partly vitamin D dependent, 1,25(OH)2D3 does not further augment the enhanced gastrointestinal absorption of aluminium in uraemia.
(5) While the role of vascular plasminogen activator in haemorrhagic conditions is apparently unknown, prostacyclin activity appears to be markedly enhanced both in experimental animals and in patients with uraemia and bleeding complications.
(6) In comparing the situation with uraemia, the relevance of phenols has to be considered.
(7) Our data suggest that reduced sodium transport by the Na-K pump plays a role in the pathogenesis of arterial hypertension in patients with chronic uraemia.
(8) In uraemia the maximal acid output was directly related to the duration of uraemia and inversely related to both haemoglobin level and age; it was not related to the height of the blood urea.
(9) Bleeding due to impaired primary haemostasis is common in uraemia.
(10) It is proposed that the fall in brush-border enzyme activities in the proximal small intestine of uraemic rats is a response to the increased water intake associated with this, and presumably other, rat models of uraemia.
(11) Much has been learnt over the past 80 years of the pathogenesis and management of hyperparathyroid bone disease in uraemia.
(12) Biopsies were taken from 20 patients with uraemia, all of whom were treated with chronic intermittent dialysis, and 11 control subjects; up to three vessels were examined per biopsy.
(13) The clinical syndrome of uraemia is due to the failure of not only the excretory but also the metabolic, regulatory and endocrine functions of the kidney.
(14) The final stage of the disease is characterized by severe fibrosing chronic interstitial nephritis leading to death of the animals due to uraemia.
(15) Logistic regression analysis showed that uraemia was a determinant of intermyocardiocytic fibrosis independent of hypertension, diabetes mellitus, anaemia, heart weight, and presence or absence of dialysis procedure.
(16) As pulses of luteinising hormone are thought to reflect episodic gonadotropin releasing hormone from the hypothalamus these data suggest that uraemia interferes with central mechanisms controlling synchronised release of gonadotropin releasing hormone.
(17) The nature of carbohydrate may affect the tolerance and progression of uraemia.
(18) Appreciable suppression of weight gain was accompanied by uraemia and significant increases in the concentration of all amino acids except phenylalanine, tyrosine, threonine, and glutamate.
(19) To examine whether insulin resistance in uraemia extends to amino acid metabolism, the effect of physiological hyperinsulinaemia on plasma amino acid concentrations was studied in 17 chronically uraemic and 28 healthy subjects by using the euglycaemic insulin clamp technique.
(20) Subcutaneous arteriovenous fistulae are constructed regularly for haemodialysis in uraemia.
Uraemic
Definition:
(a.) Of or pertaining to uraemia; as, uraemic convulsions.
Example Sentences:
(1) The high rate of H pylori ammonia production in uraemic patients should accentuate any ammonia induced effects.
(2) Insulin radioreceptor assays performed in the absence of uraemic plasma revealed no defects in the receptors of the uraemic erythrocytes.
(3) In sera of uraemic patients without chronic haemodialysis an inverse statistic correlation between pyridoxal 5'-phosphate-induced stimulation of aspartate aminotransferase activity and the concentrations of urea (r = -0.696) and creatinine (r = -0.715) was found.
(4) In conjunction with the haemolytic-uraemic syndrome in children in the CSSR E. coli producing verotoxin are found, incl.
(5) Haemodynamic changes during induction of anaesthesia were recorded in the uraemic and in 10 healthy control patients.
(6) In these a seasonal variation in the incidence of haemolytic uraemic syndrome was demonstrated, the 1-2 year age range was most often affected, and the peripheral blood neutrophil count correlated positively with an adverse outcome.
(7) The revealed alterations were suggestive of hypertropic, dilatative uraemic cardiomyopathy, associated with impaired diastolic compliance.
(8) Three control groups of patients without haemolytic uraemic syndrome were also examined.
(9) A multiplicity of factors present in the uraemic patient may be responsible for the continued frequency of post-transplant pancreatitis despite advances in surgical technique and immunosuppressive therapy.
(10) The former appears isolated in 14 to 34% of uraemics on haemodialysis and combined to the latter in 18 to 26%.
(11) We studied the platelet von Willebrand factor receptor, glycoprotein Ib (GPIb), and plasma von Willebrand factor (vWF) in uraemic patients undergoing chronic haemodialysis.
(12) The uraemic state in the rat also resulted in a depression of the neostriatum response to dopamine, yet an enhancement of the cortical response to noradrenaline.
(13) Iron was also shown in the duodenal biopsies of 34 of 48 uraemic patients on oral iron supplements, but was present in only 22 of 120 patients endoscoped for miscellaneous conditions (p less than 0.001).
(14) These results prove that there is a noteworthy difference between uraemic and alcoholic polyneuropathy.
(15) The clinical course and laboratory data consistent with haemolytic uraemic syndrome was observed in six patients, and acute tubular necrosis was the predominant renal lesion in the remainder.
(16) The maximum 24 hour urinary recovery of PEGs was decreased in the uraemic patients but relatively more of the larger than the smaller PEGs were found in these patients.
(17) Uraemic hypertriglyceridaemia is a clearly defined and well documented metabolic abnormality which is not corrected by dialysis.
(18) It is proposed that the fall in brush-border enzyme activities in the proximal small intestine of uraemic rats is a response to the increased water intake associated with this, and presumably other, rat models of uraemia.
(19) A prospective study of the clinical and epidemiological features of the haemolytic uraemic syndromes was conducted over a three year period in the British Isles.
(20) All the uraemic patients had normal levels of IgG, IgA and IgM in the serum, but elevated levels of IgG3 prior to immunisation.