[ In Reply To ..]
Nephroureterectomy--excision of kidney and part of the ureter. Could be saying cornua of the bladder. Cornua--a part that resembles a horn.
I vote for "dome" of the bladder and "nephroureterectomy". - NM anon
The patient was referred for left-sided hydronephrosis and a CT scan was dictated as consistent with a UPJ obstruction. Upon my review of the films, the picture did not appear to be consistent with a classic UPJ obstruction (it was not a box kidney).
TIA!!! :) ...
The sentece reads:
A 6-French x 24 cm double-J stent ws then placed. One curl noted in the upper pole under fluoroscopy, another curl noted in the bladder under cystoscopy, a s/l "dang-litter" was left in place.
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I have tried google, etc, but I am still not positive. For prophylaxis for a cystoscopy, is it usually 5 mg or 500 mg. Dr. is really speeding through and I think I hear 5 mg, but always thought it was 500 mg. Now I am totally unsure.
On top of it all, by internet went down all night, so now I am really under pressure to get this out. Appreciate your help.
Thanks, ...
Cystourethroscopy was performed, and the patient was noted to have a normal (___) urethra. However, at the junction of the pendulous and bulbous urethra there were several wide aperture strictures. The bulbous urethra and the membranous urethra were completely free of stricture.
I can't figure out what type of urethra he is saying. It seems slurred to me, and I can't make out what it starts with or ends with. Maybe ending in a- u sound. It has an s in it ...
Does anyone know what this word is? It s/l cath-i-nod
This resulted in a very dry prostatic urethra, and then I placed a Foley catheter to cathenod this area.
Thank you very much. ...
On cystoscopy, it sounds clearly like:
...rigid cystoscope was advanced per urethra into the bladder, and the bladder was investigated in the usual *s/l meridian* fashion.
I don't remember having this before. Have I just lost my mind? I've done thousands of cystoscopy notes. ...
Thank you in advance for any help. :)
I have an Indian urologist who is describing the bladder examination on cystoscopy and says,
"Occasional petechia are present. No hornicles are seen." Sounds like hornusuls, etc. Uuuugh. I've been transcribing for this doctor for a year and have never heard this although it sounds familiar from my medical background. I know I'm going to slap my forehead when I get this. :/
&n ...
This is a kidney transplant report, and the doc says: "A 6 x 12 double-J stent was placed within the ureter up into the (s/)l house of the kidney."
I looked up this term, but I can't find it with Google. Any suggestions?
Thanks! :) ...
The patient has known kidney stones.
The doc says . . . . "He compalined of s/l thick-a-ties pressure and pain running down to his left testicle and left flank . . ." ...
The doc is saying: The patient experienced a rejection, and we are very pleased that we were able to reverse this with the s/l phoresis/IKIG regimen. TIA.... ...
My husband was having rust colored urine and suprapubic and abdominal pain. He went to doc who said he had infected prostatitis. Issue 1 is that he did have an affair some years back and I've read that his kind of prostatitis is kind of rare (about 20%) and this truly could be the case but it also said it could be caused by an STD. Anyone know anything about this? I hope it's not syphylis (I can never spell that word right) because symptoms ...
Doc dictates "The patient has a history of chronic kidney disease (stage 4 to stage 5) ?!?! is that how it is transcribed per the BOS II ... I just moved and cannot locate my book for verification. ...
Doctor is giving list of diagnoses and says "s/l dough polycystic kidney disease." Does anyone anyone know if there is a distinction among the types of polycystic kidney disease that might sound like dough/doh? I know there is a genetic type, but not sure about anything else. This doc is notorious for adding nonsensical syllables here and there (why can' he say "um" like everybody else??). Any help would be greatly appreciated.
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I've seen kidney disease classifications both Arabic and Roman. Which is correct? I've been using Arabic, but I just had an editor change a report to Roman. I'm confused and can't find it in BOS2. Thanks! ...
A 57-year-old woman with chronic kidney disease. In the Plan, dr (soft spoken with heavy accent) says "We will do a (s/l) P-urea or (s/l) Fe-urea.'' ?
Thanks very much for any help. ...
One patient was being kept alive until the organs could be harvested.
The other patient was being prepped for a combined simultaneous kidney-liver transplant. Both reports were very detailed with tons and tons and tons of minutia that I had to ensure made sense. This was dictated by an East Indian man who speaks so fast he makes my head spin.
I can guarantee the patient got a very good operative report placed into the chart.
I made just over $10 per hour this pay period we signed off on ...
Nothing in BOS, at least that I could find. Couldn't find anything on Loma Linda University site. Don't recognize the Google hits for arabic. Anyone know? Thanks. ...