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Query: UMLS:C0020500 (
hyperoxaluria
)
912
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Seventy-seven patients with
nephrocalcinosis
as revealed by X-ray studies over a 10-year period are reviewed. A programmed clinical and metabolic study was performed on each case; the author's criteria included the different pathogenic factors considered in the etiologic definition of the disease. There were 22 cases with primary hyperparathyroidism, 19 with spongy kidney, nine with tubulointerstitial nephropathy, five with
hyperoxaluria
, five with distal renal tubular acidosis, four with esential hypomagnesemia, and three cases of miscellaneous etiology (vitamin D intoxication, Fanconi's syndrome, Bartter's disease). Ten other cases were classified as idiopathic
nephrocalcinosis
since no definite cause could be found. The clinical characteristics (symptoms, associated diseases, diet and medication intake, family history) and the biochemical findings are analysed for each group. The physiopathologic mechanisms, comparisons between each etiologic group, treatment, clinical course, and prognosis are commented on. The conclusion drawn is that
nephrocalcinosis
is a clinical syndrome of various etiologies which in most cases arises from an underlying metabolic disease.
...
PMID:[Nephrocalcinosis as a clinical syndrome. Study of 77 cases (author's transl)]. 52 25
4 patients with
nephrocalcinosis
were treated with disodium ethane 1-hydroxy-1, 1-diphosphonate (EHDP) for a period of 13 months. No clinical side-effects were observed and growth proceeded normally. Radiographic changes of osteitis fibrosa cystica developed in 1 child and bone biopsy in 2 children showed defective osteoid mineralisation. It is suggested that EHDP prevented further crystal deposition in 3 children but did not prevent non-calcium stone formation in the 4th child. In view of this and the development of histological and radiographic evidence of osteomalacia and/or secondary hyperparathyroidism in these patients the value of EHDP remains dubious. On the other hand its use may be justified when rapidly increasing calcification is expected, as for example in
hyperoxaluria
.
...
PMID:Diphosphonate therapy in nephrocalcinosis. 82 72
In a group of 57 children with urolithiasis hypomagnesaemia was found in 15 cases (26.3%). All children but one with abnormally low serum magnesium levels had recurrent or bilateral nephrolithiasis or
nephrocalcinosis
. Prevalence of
hyperoxaluria
and hypercalciuria, marked severity of the clinical features, abnormality of Ca metabolism and its responsiveness to MgO treatment were demonstrable in Mg deficiency.
...
PMID:Magnesium deficiency in children with urolithiasis. 100 96
Hyperoxaluria
is frequently seen in patients with inflammatory bowel disease, or after resection of the ileum. It is assumed to be responsible for the development of nephrolithiasis,
nephrocalcinosis
(oxalate nephrosis) and progressive renal impairment in these patients. Steatorrhea may aggravate the severity of
hyperoxaluria
. A 60-year-old male underwent massive resection of the jejunum and ileum 10 years prior to admission, due to strangulation of the small bowel, with occlusion of the superior mesenteric artery. He remained well except for steatorrhea which developed two-and-a-half years prior to admission, when microhematuria, proteinuria and
oxaluria
developed progressively. Since that time, the nephrolithiasis,
nephrocalcinosis
and renal failure have continued to worsen despite therapy with oxalate restriction and oxalate-binding agents. A renal biopsy, performed late in the clinical course, showed severe changes in the renal parenchyma. The decline in renal function proved irreversible. The unusual metabolic consequences of massive resection of the small intestine and their mechanisms are discussed.
...
PMID:Hyperoxaluria, nephrolithiasis, nephrocalcinosis and renal failure after massive resection of the small intestine: report of a case. 136 95
Two children with extensive ileal resection are reported. They developed gross haematuria of "non-glomerular origin", without stones or
nephrocalcinosis
. Previous reports indicate that acquired
hyperoxaluria
is common in children with a variety of intestinal disorders. Our patients had
hyperoxaluria
. We think that
hyperoxaluria
may be the cause of haematuria through a pathogenetic mechanism similar to the one ascribed to haematuria secondary to hypercalciuria and hyperuricosuria.
...
PMID:Acquired hyperoxaluria and haematuria in children. 149 6
Urinary excretion of oxalate and phosphate was measured in twelve vitamin-D-treated, phosphate-supplemented patients with X-linked hypophosphataemia (XLH; four children, eight adolescents and adults) to investigate possible causative factors of
nephrocalcinosis
other than calcium. Oxalate excretion correlated highly with urinary phosphate excretion and with intake of phosphate supplements corrected for body surface area. Young children received the highest relative doses of phosphate (range 2.27-10.8 g/1.73 m2 daily) and their urinary oxalate excretion was very high (0.94-3.38 mmol/1.73 m2 daily). The urinary oxalate excretion of untreated adults with XLH was within normal limits. Six patients had evidence of
nephrocalcinosis
on ultrasound. The high urinary oxalate excretion in phosphate-supplemented XLH may be seen as a special type of enteric
hyperoxaluria
, in which the conditions of calcium-oxalate crystal precipitation could be reached even at normal levels of urinary calcium excretion. Urinary excretion of both calcium and oxalate should therefore be monitored during treatment in young XLH patients.
...
PMID:Evidence suggesting hyperoxaluria as a cause of nephrocalcinosis in phosphate-treated hypophosphataemic rickets. 197 59
A case of primary hyperoxaluria is presented. In a product of consanguinous marriage recurrent stone formation,
nephrocalcinosis
and increased urinary oxalate excretion revealed the diagnosis of
hyperoxaluria
. Diagnosis and treatment of primary hyperoxaluria are briefly reviewed and the importance of elevated urinary oxalate level in diagnosis is emphasized.
...
PMID:Early onset of stone diseases and primary hyperoxaluria. 221 Sep 75
Renal calcifications have been described in very low birth weight (VLBW) infants, and diuretic drug-associated hypercalciuria is believed to play a role in the pathogenesis of this lesion.
Hyperoxaluria
is an important cause of renal stone formation in children and adults. Because parenteral nutrition solutions contain the oxalate precursors ascorbate and glycine, the relationship between total parenteral nutrition administration and oxalate excretion in VLBW infants was examined. Administration of approximately 0.5 g of total parenteral nutrition protein per kilogram per day to VLBW infants was associated with an increased urinary oxalate concentration and an increased urinary oxalate to creatinine ratio, when compared with VLBW infants receiving a glucose and electrolyte solution. A further increase in urinary oxalate concentration and oxalate to creatinine ratio was noted when total parenteral nutrition protein was increased to approximately 1.5 g of protein per kilogram per day. In VLBW infants who receive total parenteral nutrition, elevated urinary oxalate concentrations may develop and may be a factor in the pathogenesis of
nephrocalcinosis
in these infants.
...
PMID:Urinary oxalate excretion by very low birth weight infants receiving parenteral nutrition. 250 54
A patient with primary hyperoxaluria type I in infancy is reported. He had renal insufficiency, but urolithiasis was absent. Demonstration of diffuse
nephrocalcinosis
by renal ultrasound contributed to early diagnosis. Prolonged survival leads to extensive extrarenal oxalate deposition. Repeated skeletal surveys showed the development and the progression of severe
hyperoxaluria
-related bone disease. Translucent metaphyseal bands with sclerotic margins, wide areas of rarefaction at the ends of the long bones, and translucent rims around the epiphyses and the tarsal bones were signs of disordered bone growth. Bone density generally increased with time indicating progressive sclerosis due to oxalate deposition in the previously normal bone structure.
...
PMID:Bone disease of primary hyperoxaluria in infancy. 268 79
Dental and periodontal findings associated with primary hyperoxaluria in a 29-year old male patient are described. This is a rare, inherited, metabolic disease which results in excessive calcium oxalate synthesis. The predominant and early manifestation of
hyperoxaluria
is
nephrocalcinosis
which results in chronic renal failure. Widespread extrarenal deposits of calcium oxalate crystals, however, is a consistent finding. Extensive infiltration of crystals was noted in the pulps of the teeth, in the marrow spaces of the alveolar bone, in the gingival corium, and in the periodontal ligament. Crystalline calcium oxalate deposits in the periodontal ligament provoked a granulomatous foreign-body reaction. This resulted in aggressive external root resorption leading to pulp exposure and tooth mobility.
...
PMID:Periodontal manifestations of hyperoxaluria and oxalosis. 273 33
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