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Query: UMLS:C0020500 (hyperoxaluria)
912 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

We prospectively studied 15 infants who, before 3 months of age, underwent resection of the small intestine-proximal in 3 infants, mid in 6, and distal in 6. Two died before one year of age. Many required prolonged parenteral nutrition, but by one year, 12 of the 13 survivors were on oral feedings only, and seven were above the third percentile for height and weight. Developmental delay occurred in the early postoperative period but diminished with time. There was compensatory adaptation of the remaining gut, shown by improving fat and B12 absorption and duodenal bile-salt concentrations. Bacterial contamination complicating end-to-side anastomoses occurred in two cases (P), gastric hyperacidity in four of 12 (1P, 3M), and hyperoxaluria in eight of 14 (1P, 5M, 2D). Studies of immune competence revealed normal cellular immune function (11/11), transient hypogammaglobulinemia (3/14), hypocomplementemia (1/12), and serum autoantibodies (3/10). Thus, massive resection of the small intestine did not preclude spontaneous improvement in absorptive function, growth, and development.
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PMID:A clinical study of young infants after small intestinal resection. 10 3

Urinary oxalate excretion was studied in healthy subjects and before and after surgery in patients with Crohn's disease. Urinary oxalate excretion in relation to the length of diseased or resected ileal segment in patients subjected to restorative and colectomy procedures, as well as in relation to faecal excretion of fat and bile salts and to urinary excretion of vitamin B12 and calcium, was also studied. The studies were performed in patients on a free diet or standard hospital diet and on a high-oxalate and/or high-fat diet. When patients subjected to ileal resection in conjunction with minor colonic resection were studied on a high-oxalate diet, urinary oxalate excretion increased with length of ileum resected and correlated with faecal fat excretion and urinary excretion of vitamin B12 but not with faecal excretion of bile salts. Increasing the dietary fat intake in these patients further increased urinary oxalate excretion. Although urinary oxalate excretion increased somewhat in colectomized patients on a high-oxalate diet, indicating an increased absorption of dietary oxalate, this increase showed no correlation either to faecal fat or bile salt excretion, or to urinary excretion of vitamin B12. The result are consistent with the "solubility theory". A diet low in fat and oxalate and high in calcium is recommended in patients with hyperoxaluria.
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PMID:Urinary oxalate excretion related to ileocolic surgery in patients with Crohn's disease. 67 58

Excretion of oxalic acid in urine was measured in 28 healthy and 97 patients with gastrointestinal diseases. We found significantly higher values in the following groups: patients after resection of parts of the small intestine, patients with sprue and other diseases with malabsorption, patients with M. Crohn of the small intestine, colitis ulcerosa and granulomatosa, patients with chronical diseases of the pancreas gland and patients with cirrhosis of the liver. In 4 patients after resection of parts of the small intestine or pancreas urolithiasis could be verified. Reduction of fat and food without ballast reduced the excretion of oxalic acid in urine. Hyperoxaluria correlied significantly with the following parameters: excretion of fat in feces, exhalation of 14CO2 in the glykocholate breath test, resorption of vit. B12 and the length of resected small intestine. This form of hyperoxaluria is caused by hyperresorption of oxalic acid from food. The mechanism of this hyperresorption is not clarified yet, an important factor seems to be ill resorption of fat.
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PMID:[Hyperoxaluria in intestinal and liver diseases]. 83 13

During the past several years there has been increasing interest in refunctionalizing patients who have undergone radical extirpative surgery for pelvic malignancies and patients with dysfunctional bladders. To accomplish this, intestinal segments have been successfully employed in a variety of configurations. Independent of their optimal urosurgical implementation these procedures are not without potential complications, a significant portion of which involve metabolic derangements. Besides first follow-up results of patients with bladder substitution or continent urinary diversion, analysis of experimental investigations and functionally comparable clinical conditions enables an insight into potential following physiopathological interrelationships. These concern, besides the problem of chronic metabolic acidosis, disorders of bile acid and vitamin B12 metabolism as well as the potential induction of a secondary hyperoxaluria with subsequent oxalate concrement diathesis. Furthermore, there may be a malabsorption of calcium and vitamin D with development of intestinal osteopathy due to the reduction of absorptive surface. Apart from these problems of enteral loss and deficiency manifestations, several case reports and investigations suggest that bone demineralization can occur as a consequence of chronic metabolic acidosis and patients are at risk of skeletal demineralization. The pathogenesis of this association has yet to be clarified. These physiopathological interrelationships must be considered in medical attendance of patients with intestinal substitute bladders and continent supravesical pouch systems over many years. As these procedures become more popular, it becomes important to identify any metabolic changes that may occur as their consequence.
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PMID:[Bladder replacement and continent diversion: what about metabolic complications?]. 184 45

The formation of a neobladder by the transformation of sections of the terminal ileum has become an important alternative to supravesical urinary diversion. The discussion about the optimal urosurgical technique however has, so far ignored the problems of consecutive enteric defunctionalization and deficiency symptoms resulting from the anatomical shortening of the ileum. The analysis of experimental investigations and functionally comparable syndromes, such as Crohn's disease, permits an insight into the pathophysiological consequences. These relate to disorders in the bile acid and vitamin B12 metabolism and to the potential induction of a secondary hyperoxaluria, with a subsequent oxalate calculus diathesis. Further more, the reduction of the absorption area in the ileum can lead to calcium and vitamin D malabsorption with the development of intestinal osteopathy. These pathophysiological relationships must be taken into account in the long-term medical care of patients with ileal neobladder. The preventive and therapeutic measures are described.
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PMID:[Ileocystoplasty and enteropathies]. 276 94