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Query: UMLS:C0020438 (
hypercalciuria
)
2,502
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The causes of, and physiopathological factors underlying the most common metabolic disorders implicated in the formation of renal stones are reviewed. These include
hypercalciuria
, hyperoxaluria, renal tubular acidosis,
cystinuria
and disturbances of purine metabolism. Apart from metabolic disorders the risk of stone formation is also influenced by a low inhibitor activity in urine. Though some aspects in the pathogenesis of urolithiasis remain uncertain, the exact knowlege of important aetiological factors of stone formation is the basis of correct treatment and the prevention of recurrence of urinary calculi.
...
PMID:[The evaluation of patients with urinary calculi discloses disturbances of metabolism in 75% of all cases (author's transl)]. 47 69
We report a retrospective study of 51 children who presented urolithiasis between 1980 and 1989 in our Hospital. Mean age was 7 years and the male:female ratio was 2. 1:1. A positive family history was found in 60% of cases. It was done metabolic evaluation in every case:
hypercalciuria
was found in 34% of cases. In 6% of cases there were hyperuricosuria. None of our patients presented hyperoxaluria,
cystinuria
or hypocitraturia. Abdominal echography was the most sensible an specific imaging technique of diagnosis. In 16 cases it was necessary a surgical procedure although most cases received only medical management. Four patients were treated with extracorporeal shock-wave lithotripsy. We emphasize the importance of metabolic evaluation. We report our own protocol of study and results.
...
PMID:[Urolithiasis in childhood]. 177 65
Nephrolithiasis is a heterogeneous disorder, with varying chemical composition and pathophysiologic background. Although kidney stones are generally composed of calcium oxalate or calcium phosphate, they may also consist of uric acid, magnesium-ammonium phosphate, or cystine. Stones develop from a wide variety of metabolic or environmental disturbances, including varying forms of
hypercalciuria
, hypocitraturia, undue urinary acidity, hyperuricosuria, hyperoxaluria, infection with urease-producing organisms, and
cystinuria
. The cause of stone formation may be ascertained in most patients using the reliable diagnostic protocols that are available for the identification of these disturbances. Effective medical treatments, capable of correcting underlying derangements, have been formulated. They include sodium cellulose phosphate, thiazide, and orthophosphate for hypercalciuric nephrolithiasis; potassium citrate for hypocitraturic calcium nephrolithiasis; acetohydroxamic acid for infection stones; and D-penicillamine and alpha-mercaptopropionylglycine for
cystinuria
. Using these treatments, new stone formation can now be prevented in most patients.
...
PMID:Etiology and treatment of urolithiasis. 196 46
The mechanism of stone formation in the urinary tract is reviewed. Diet, urinary tract infection and metabolic disorders account for the different epidemiological patterns of stone formation. The diagnosis and management of renal tract calculi are discussed. Calcium stones are associated with
hypercalciuria
, urine acidification defects, the use of furosemide in premature babies, hypercalcaemia, hyperoxaluria, hyperuricosuria, an alkaline urine and hypocitraturia. Uric acid stones occur in acid urine, from increased purine synthesis with lympho- or myeloproliferative disorders or from several inborn errors of purine metabolism which can also cause xanthine or dihydroxyadenine stones.
Cystinuria
, inherited as an autosomal recessive disorder is best treated with a low sodium diet, a fluid intake exceeding 40 ml/kg per day maintaining urine pH between 7.5 and 8 and, if necessary, with oral penicillamine. Oxalate stones occur in relation to diet, bowel disease and primary inherited defects in oxalate metabolism. Urinary tract infection causing struvite and carbonate apatite formation is the commonest cause of stones in Europe.
...
PMID:Urolithiasis in children: current medical management. 270 15
Thirty-three children with urinary calculi were studied. In 12, a metabolic cause of calculi was identified (4 hyperoxaluria, 6
hypercalciuria
, 2
cystinuria
). In 14 children, lithiasis was associated with a urinary tract infection. No identifiable cause could be found in 7 children. A protocol for metabolic evaluation is proposed.
...
PMID:[Urinary calculi in children. Etiologic survey]. 276 80
To investigate whether overall tubular dysfunction is encountered in a particular subgroup of patients with urolithiasis, the following parameters of renal tubular function have been measured in fasting morning urine in 124 male stone formers: excretion of lysozyme and gamma-glutamyl transpeptidase (gamma-GT), fractional excretion (FE) or glucose, insulin, bicarbonate after an alkali load, and theoretical phosphate threshold (TmP/GFR). The following have been diagnosed: primary hyperparathyroidism (n = 3), medullary sponge kidneys (n = 5), hyperuricemia (n = 8),
cystinuria
(n = 1), struvite nephrolithiasis (n = 2), idiopathic
hypercalciuria
of the absorptive (n = 16), dietary (n = 46) or renal (n = 5) type, and normocalciuric idiopathic urolithiasis (n = 38). Urinary excretion of lysozyme and of gamma-GT were elevated in 14% and 21% of patients respectively; FE glucose and FE insulin were elevated in 6% and 8% of patients respectively. In 62% of the patients TmP/GFR was below 0.95 mmol/l and in 52% of the patients FE HCO3 after alkali load was above normal. The findings show that a large number of stone formers have signs of renal tubular dysfunction; apparent renal leaks of phosphate and of bicarbonate are the most frequently encountered defects; while they are not specific for a given etiologic group of patients, they have been found in each group. The latter observation suggests that nephrolithiasis itself can damage renal tubular function.
...
PMID:[Tubular dysfunction in renal lithiasis: cause or consequence?]. 285 24
To address whether a renal tubular dysfunction is encountered in a particular patient subgroup with urolithiasis, the following parameters of tubular function were measured in urine taken in the morning from 214 stone formers after fasting: pH, excretion of lysozyme and gamma-glutamyl transferase (gamma-GT); fractional excretion (FE) of glucose, insulin, Mg, K, and HCO3 after an alkali loading; and the renal threshold for phosphate (TmP/GFR). The following diagnoses were made in the patient group: primary hyperparathyroidism (N = 8), medullary sponge kidneys (N = 21), hyperuricemia (N = 10),
cystinuria
(N = 2), struvite stone disease (N = 6), idiopathic
hypercalciuria
of the absorptive (N = 25), dietary (N = 69) or renal (N = 7) type, and normocalciuric idiopathic urolithiasis (N = 66). In 31% of the patients TmP/GFR was below 0.80 mmole/liter and in 13% of the patients, FE HCO3 after alkali loading was above normal. Urinary excretion of lysozyme and that of gamma-GT both were elevated in 17% of the patients. FE glucose, FE insulin, FE Mg, and FE K were elevated in 8, 9, 3, and 7% of the patients, respectively. This study demonstrates that a significant number of stone formers present with signs of renal tubular dysfunction, primarily involving the proximal tubule since apparent leaks of phosphate and of bicarbonate were most frequently encountered. The defects were not specific for a given etiologic group of patients; on the other hand, occurrence was related to the presence of large stones in the pyelocaliceal system at the time data were gathered. Taken together these data suggest that the tubulopathy in nephrolithiasis is the consequence rather than the cause of the stone.
...
PMID:Tubulopathy in nephrolithiasis: consequence rather than cause. 287 Dec 16
To elucidate the pathophysiology of mixed stone formation in
cystinuria
, 27 patients with documented cystine nephrolithiasis underwent an inpatient evaluation under a constant dietary regimen. All patients had homozygous
cystinuria
, since the daily urinary cystine excretion exceeded 250 mg. per gm. creatinine.
Hypercalciuria
was noted in 5 patients (18.5 per cent), 4 of whom had fasting
hypercalciuria
. Hyperuricosuria was found in 6 patients (22.2 per cent) and it was not caused by a consumption of a diet rich in animal proteins, since urinary pH was higher and urinary sulfate lower than in control subjects. Serum uric acid was slightly lower and uric acid clearance was higher in hyperuricosuric patients than in control subjects. Hypocitraturia was found in 12 patients (44.4 per cent) and it was associated with defective renal acidification in 4 of 5 patients in whom it was tested. Thus,
hypercalciuria
, hyperuricosuria and hypocitraturia frequently accompany
cystinuria
in patients with cystine nephrolithiasis. These conditions might be renal in origin, rather than a result of dietary or environmental aberrations. They may contribute to the formation of calcium and uric acid stones, which sometimes complicate cystine nephrolithiasis.
...
PMID:The spectrum of metabolic abnormalities in patients with cystine nephrolithiasis. 292 71
The increasing incidence of urolithiasis makes it important to report about 34 children with urolithiasis seen between 1976 and 1986 at the Department of Pediatrics, University Medical School Vienna. At the time of the first diagnosis 59 percent of the patients were less than 7 years of age; 62 percent of our patients were males. Recurrent chronic urinary tract infection in 32 percent, metabolic disorder (secondary hyperoxaluria 5, idiopathic
hypercalciuria
3,
cystinuria
2, hyperuricuria 2) in 27 percent were evaluated; in 13 patients the origin of calculi was idiopathic. Most infectious stones contained magnesium ammonium phosphate, most idiopathic stones calcium oxalate. In 21 patients (62%) surgical treatment, in one patient extracorporal shock wave lithotripsie was realized. Adequate metaphylaxis (general, dietetic, medicementous) can lower the rate of occurrence of stone formation.
...
PMID:[Urolithiasis in pediatrics: analysis of 34 patients]. 368 52
The pathogenesis of renal calculi is reviewed in general terms followed by the results of investigation of 439 patients with renal calculi studied by the author at Toronto General Hospital over a 13-year period. Abnormalities of probable pathogenetic significance were encountered in 76% of patients. Idiopathic hypercalciuria was encountered in 42% of patients, primary hyperparathyroidism in 11%, urinary infection in 8% and miscellaneous disorders in 8%. The incidence of uric acid stones and
cystinuria
was 5% and 2% respectively. In the remaining 24% of patients in whom no definite abnormalities were encountered the mean urinary magnesium excretion was less than normal. Of 180 patients with idiopathic
hypercalciuria
, only 24 were females. In the diagnosis of hyperparathyroidism, the importance of detecting minimal degrees of hypercalcemia is stressed; attention is also drawn to the new observation that the upper limit of normal for serum calcium is slightly lower in females than in males. The efficacy of various measures advocated for the prevention of renal calculi is also reviewed. In the author's experience the administration of thiazides has been particularly effective in the prevention of calcium stones. Thiazides cause a sustained reduction in urinary calcium excretion and increase in urinary magnesium excretion. These agents also appear to affect the skeleton by diminishing bone resorption and slowing down bone turnover.
...
PMID:Renal calculi. 543 66
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