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Query: UMLS:C0020500 (
hyperoxaluria
)
912
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Evidence is presented that many of the enteric and systemic manifestations after jejunoileal bypass can be related to an inflammatory process within the bypassed small bowel rather than to the surgically induced sequelae of a short bowel syndrome with malabsorption. Invasion of the excluded segment by fecal flora was associated with a histologically demonstrable inflammatory response of the mucosa. The disorder was of variable severity and duration and occurred in the majority of 28 bypass patients. Progression to a clinical syndrome resembling an acute abdomen occurred in about 15% of the patients. Small bowel
ileus
and, in some patients, obstruction of the colon were suggested by physical signs and x-ray findings. Surgical exploration in such instances demonstrated an inflammaotry process of the excluded small bowel loops with severe distention of this segment and of the colon, but not organic obstruction. Pneumatosis cystoides intestinalis was a sequal in two patients. Exudative protein loss was documented in the severe cases. Most of the systemic sequelae are comparable to those seen with inflammatory diseases of the bowel such as Crohn's disease. Fever, excessive weight and lean tissue loss, and the involvement of skin, blood vessels, joints and possibly, the liver suggest an immune response as a common factor in the pathogenesis. The clinical improvement with antibiotics such as metronidazole or with restitution of normal bowel continuity indicates that the bacterial flora in the excluded small bowel segment or its byproducts are causally related to the systemic complications.
Hyperoxaluria
may be primarily the sequela of steatorrhea and not of the inflammatory process.
...
PMID:Bypass enteropathy: an inflammatory process in the excluded segment with systemic complications. 83 42
The primary care physician has a responsibility not only to recognize and treat acute stone passage but to ensure that the patient with recurrent stones has metabolic evaluation and appropriate preventive care. Renal colic is typically severe, radiates to the groin, is associated with hematuria, and may cause
ileus
. About 90% of stones that cause renal colic pass spontaneously. The patient with acute renal colic should be treated with fluids and analgesics and should strain the urine to recover stone for analysis. Highgrade obstruction or failure of oral analgesics to relieve pain may require hospitalization; a urinary tract infection in the setting of an obstruction is a urologic emergency requiring immediate drainage, usually with a ureteral stent. Several approaches are available when stones do not pass spontaneously, including extracorporeal shock wave lithotripsy, percutaneous lithotripsy, and ureteroscopic laser lithotripsy. Calcium stone disease has a lifetime prevalence of 10% in men and causes significant morbidity. Renal failure is unusual. Stone types include calcium oxalate, uric acid, struvite, and cystine. Stone analysis is particularly important when a noncalcareous constituent is identified. The majority of patients with nephrolithiasis will have recurrence, so prevention is a high priority. High fluid intake is a mainstay of prevention. Metabolic evaluation will indicate other appropriate preventive measures, which may include dietary salt and protein restriction, and use of thiazide diuretics, neutral phosphate, potassium citrate, allopurinol, and magnesium salts. Dietary calcium restriction may worsen
oxaluria
and negative calcium balance (osteoporosis).
...
PMID:Nephrolithiasis: acute management and prevention. 965 69
We report a case of urolithiasis associated with short bowel syndrome. A 56-year-old woman was admitted to our hospital for asymptomatic bilateral renal stones. She had received extensive resection of small intestine due to strangulating obstructive
ileus
7 years ago (residual intestine, only 20 cm). Subsequently, she was in a state of short bowel syndrome. Plain film of kidney, uteter, bladder and computed tomography revealed bilateral renal stones (right 4 mm, left 10 mm). The left renal stone was successfully treated by extracorporeal shock wave lithotripsy. Since the right renal stone was small, no treatment was performed. The stone fragments were composed of calcium oxalate and calcium phosphate, and excessive urinary excretion of oxalate (103.8 mg/day) was observed. In this patient, urolithiasis was diagnosed to be due to enteric
hyperoxaluria
caused by short bowel syndrome. To prevent the recurrence of stone formation, she was treated with oral administration of calcium lactate, sodium/potassium citrate and magnesium oxide. We review the Japanese literatures on urolithiasis with short bowel syndrome.
...
PMID:[A case of urolithiasis associated with short bowel syndrome]. 1263 4