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Dive into the research topics where K.V. Kuhlemeier is active.

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Featured researches published by K.V. Kuhlemeier.


The Journal of Urology | 1985

Prophylactic Antibacterial Therapy for Preventing Urinary Tract Infections in Spinal Cord Injury Patients

K.V. Kuhlemeier; Samuel L. Stover; L.K. Lloyd

We conducted 202 trials in 161 male hospital patients to determine if prophylactic administration of ascorbic acid or antibacterials (trimethoprim-sulfamethoxazole, nalidixic acid, methenamine hippurate or nitrofurantoin macrocrystals) would prevent bacteriuria infections in spinal cord injury patients who had had at least 1 bout of bacteriuria. None of the drugs tested appeared to be statistically effective in the doses used in preventing bacteriuria in these patients. Moreover, sensitivities were lost to several drugs other than those used prophylactically. We conclude that use of prophylactic doses of ascorbic acid or antibacterials has not proved to be beneficial in spinal cord injury patients free of indwelling catheters.


The Journal of Urology | 1984

Renal Function after Acute and Chronic Spinal Cord Injury

K.V. Kuhlemeier; A.B. Mceachran; L.K. Lloyd; Samuel L. Stover; W.N. Tauxe; Eva V. Dubovsky; Philip R. Fine

Computer-assisted renal scintigraphy was performed on 160 acute and 240 chronic spinal cord injury patients, and 287 noninjured controls. Concurrently, measurements of global and individual kidney effective renal plasma flow, time of maximum activity in each kidney, ratio of maximum counts to the counts at 27 minutes after injection over each kidney and number of counts in each kidney at 1 to 2 minutes after injection were made. The time of peak activity over the kidney and differential function at 1 to 2 minutes after injection were not affected significantly by age, sex or spinal cord status. Global and individual effective renal plasma flows were significantly affected by all of these factors. Both plasma flow measures generally were higher for male than for female patients. Effective renal plasma flow decreased steadily after early adulthood and, except for the youngest and oldest patients, values were lower for spinal cord injury patients than for normal controls. The ratio of peak to 27-minute counts was affected significantly by age and spinal cord injury but not by sex. In patients without obvious pathological conditions followup scintigrams 1 to 3 years after injury showed no significant changes owing to interval since injury on any parameter studied. Lower limits of basal scintigraphic parameters are given for evaluation of renal status in neurologically intact or spinal cord injury persons.


The Journal of Urology | 1985

Long-Term Followup of Renal Function After Spinal Cord Injury

K.V. Kuhlemeier; L.K. Lloyd; Samuel L. Stover

Effective renal plasma flow was measured in acute spinal cord injury patients for up to 10 years after injury to determine the extent of renal deterioration in these patients and to identify the factors associated with a loss of renal function. The over-all mean decrease in effective renal plasma flow for all patients as a whole was 4.5 ml. per year. Factors associated with a statistically significant reduction in effective renal plasma flow included age, gender, renal calculi, quadriplegia, and a history of chills and fever. Other factors examined but not found to be statistically significant included years since injury, presence of severe decubiti, bladder calculi, bacteriuria and extent of injury. This study suggests that renal function usually can be preserved in spinal cord injury patients if the treatable risk factors are managed properly.


The Journal of Urology | 1986

Initial bladder management in spinal cord injury: does it make a difference?

Keith Lloyd; K.V. Kuhlemeier; Philip R. Fine; Samuel L. Stover

We classified 204 patients with acute spinal cord injury into 1 of 5 groups according to the initial form of urological management. Group A patients were placed on an intermittent catheterization program within 36 hours of injury, group B received a suprapubic trocar within 36 hours of injury, group C had urethral catheters in place for more than 36 hours before intermittent catheterization was begun, group D was on indwelling urethral catheter drainage throughout the hospitalization and discharged from the hospital with indwelling catheters, and group E was placed on intermittent catheterization in a community hospital. There were no statistically significant differences among the groups in the incidence of chills and fever, rate of urinary infections (excluding group D), incidence of upper tract changes, genitourinary complications or frequency of urological procedures at 1 year after injury. We conclude that the method of initial bladder management is relatively unimportant in determining the urological prognosis after spinal cord injury.


The Journal of Urology | 1985

Effective Renal Plasma Flow: Clinical Significance after Spinal Cord Injury

K.V. Kuhlemeier; Chi-Tsou Huang; L.K. Lloyd; Philip R. Fine; Samuel L. Stover

We conducted a study to determine if effective renal plasma flow routinely measured by hippurate clearance during a comprehensive renal scintillation procedure is a relevant measure for assessing renal function in spinal cord injury patients. All subjects had spinal cord injury and had had contemporaneous comprehensive renal scintillation procedures and excretory urograms on 2 occasions 24 months or less apart. Each of the 469 kidneys was placed into 1 of 5 quintiles on the basis of its effective renal plasma flow at the first examination. The percentage of the kidneys that had clinically significant pyelocaliectasis or in which the pyelocaliectasis significantly worsened was 20.4 per cent in the lowest (first) quintile and 9.3, 2.2, 5.4 and 3.2 per cent in the second, third, fourth and fifth quintiles, respectively. Analogous data for ureterectasis were 16.1, 8.2, 2.2, 3.3 and 3.2 per cent. There was a significant (p less than 0.01) correlation between effective renal plasma flow and renal parenchymal thickness. Kidneys with renal calculi averaged effective renal plasma flows about 25 per cent lower than those of kidneys free of calculi. We conclude that effective renal plasma flow is a relevant measure for assessing renal function in spinal cord injury patients.


The Journal of Urology | 1983

Failure of Antibody-coated Bacteria and Bladder Washout Tests to Localize Infection in Spinal Cord Injury Patients

K.V. Kuhlemeier; L.K. Lloyd; Samuel L. Stover

The validity of the antibody-coated bacteria test and Fairley washout procedure to determine whether urinary tract infections were of kidney or bladder origin in spinal cord injury patients was assessed by comparing test results with those obtained from culture of ureteral urine specimens. It was concluded that neither the presence of antibody-coated bacteria nor a positive bladder washout test can be considered as definitive evidence that bacteriuria is of renal origin in these patients.


Urology | 1986

Year-to-year changes in effective renal plasma flow in asymptomatic spinal cord injury patients☆

K.V. Kuhlemeier; Chi-Tsou Huang; Michael J. DeVivo; L.K. Lloyd

Year-to-year variations in effective renal plasma flow (ERPF) measurements were determined in 78 patients with spinal cord injury who had no urologic complications or surgery or bouts of chills and fever between consecutive annual follow-up examinations. The effects of age, gender, level and degree of lesion, and time since injury on the degree of variability were also determined. None of the factors considered had a statistically significant effect (P greater than 0.05) on year-to-year variations in ERPF. About 90 per cent of the individual kidney ERPF measurements were within 100 ml/min of the measurement made in the previous year, and 90 per cent of the total ERPF measurements were within 175 ml/min of the previous years measurement. Follow-up of patients whose year-to-year variability exceeded these limits showed that most subsequently regressed toward the mean spontaneously. These data suggest that kidney blood flow varies considerably from year to year in otherwise healthy patients with spinal cord injury and that changes of 100 ml/min or more for an individual kidney or 175 ml/min or more for both kidneys together are common, but probably of little clinical significance, provided the absolute levels of ERPF remain within normal limits.


The Journal of Urology | 1984

Effect of Skeletal Muscle Relaxants on Bladder Smooth Muscle

F.M. Ayyat; L.K. Lloyd; K.V. Kuhlemeier

The present study was conducted to determine the effects of skeletal muscle relaxants on contractions of bladder smooth muscle. Rat, rabbit and human bladder muscle strips were incubated in a 50 ml. organ bath filled with physiological salt solution, aerated with 95 per cent O2, 5 per cent CO2 and maintained at 37C. Contractions were induced both electrically and with acetylcholine. Contractile strength was measured before and after 30 to 70 minute incubations with diazepam (0.25 to 1.0 microgram./ml.), dantrolene sodium (4 micrograms./ml.) or baclofen (4 micrograms./ml.). Neither baclofen nor dantrolene sodium had any effect (p greater than 0.3) on electrically or acetylcholine-induced contractions in any of the 3 species tested but diazepam potentiated both electrically induced (115 per cent of predrug contractile strength, p less than 0.05) and acetylcholine-induced (122 per cent of predrug contractile strength, p less than 0.01) contractions of rat, but not rabbit or human, bladder muscle. In rabbits diazepam significantly reduced maximal bladder pressures in vivo (p less than 0.05) but had no effect on bladder capacity. Dantrolene sodium had no effect on rabbit bladder pressure or capacity in vivo. While diazepam is thought to exert its effects on skeletal muscle through CNS inhibition, these results suggest that diazepam may affect rat but not rabbit or human bladder smooth muscle directly.


The Journal of Urology | 1986

Iatrogenic Dilatation of the Upper Urinary Tract During Radiographic Evaluation of Patients with Spinal Cord Injury

Samuel L. Stover; David M. Witten; K.V. Kuhlemeier; L. Keith Lloyd; Philip R. Fine

Patients with upper and lower motor neuron spinal cord injuries were observed to determine whether cystography immediately before excretory urography induced iatrogenic dilatation of the upper urinary tract that was indistinguishable from true pathological dilatation. Evidence is given that such dilatation occurs. This iatrogenic dilatation is not seen in patients with normally innervated urinary tracts and appears to be caused by exaggerated bladder reflexes in patients with upper motor neuron lesions. Bladder spasms precipitated by cystographic contrast material also may create vesicoureteral obstruction and lead to dilatation of the upper urinary tract. Consequently, it is suggested that cystography should not immediately precede excretory urography. When such a sequence is necessary, room or body temperature contrast medium should be used for the cystogram, the bladder should be emptied before the excretory urogram is started and a 1-hour interval should be allowed between the 2 procedures. The findings also suggest that any factors that induce repeated or continuing bladder spasms may contribute to progressive dilatation of the upper urinary tract.


Journal of Medical Engineering & Technology | 1981

A uroflowmeter for monitoring frequency and volume of urination

K.V. Kuhlemeier; L.K. Lloyd; S. L. Stover

A uroflowmeter was designed to automatically measure how often patients without bladder sensation urinate and the volume of each urination. The device, based on an optical sensor which monitors and records each 10-ml increment in voided volume, can be operated by non-technical personnel and is accurate, safe, reliable and relatively inexpensive.

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L.K. Lloyd

University of Alabama at Birmingham

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Samuel L. Stover

University of Alabama at Birmingham

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Philip R. Fine

University of Alabama at Birmingham

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Chi-Tsou Huang

University of Alabama at Birmingham

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A.B. Mceachran

University of Alabama at Birmingham

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David M. Witten

University of Alabama at Birmingham

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Eva V. Dubovsky

University of Alabama at Birmingham

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F.M. Ayyat

University of Alabama at Birmingham

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Keith Lloyd

University of Alabama at Birmingham

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L. Keith Lloyd

University of Alabama at Birmingham

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