Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
Pivot Concepts:   Target Concepts:
Query: UMLS:C0028754 (obesity)
124,988 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Kidney stones affect hypertensive patients disproportionately compared to normotensive individuals. On the other hand, some prospective data suggest that a history of nephrolithiasis was associated with a greater tendency to develop hypertension. Newer epidemiologic data also link obesity and diabetes, features of the metabolic syndrome, with nephrolithiasis. In this review, the association of hypertension, diabetes, and obesity with nephrolithiasis is reviewed, and possible pathogenic mechanisms are discussed. Patients with hypertension may have abnormalities of renal calcium metabolism, but data confirming this hypothesis are inconsistent. Higher body mass index and insulin resistance (i.e., the metabolic syndrome) may be etiologic in uric acid nephrolithiasis as increasing body weight is associated with decreasing urinary pH. The possibility that common pathophysiologic mechanisms underly these diseases is intriguing, and if better understood, could potentially lead to better therapies for stone prevention. Both hypertension and stones might be addressed through lifestyle modification to prevent weight gain. Adoption of a lower sodium diet with increased fruits and vegetables and low-fat dairy products, (for example, the dietary approaches to stop hypertension(DASH) diet), may be useful to prevent both stones and hypertension. In those patients in whom dietary modification and weight loss are ineffective, thiazide diuretics are likely to improve blood pressure control and decrease calciuria.
...
PMID:The association of nephrolithiasis with hypertension and obesity: a review. 1821

The metabolic syndrome describes a cluster of metabolic features that increases the risk for type 2 diabetes mellitus and cardiovascular disease. The prevalence of uric acid nephrolithiasis is higher among stone-forming patients with features of the metabolic syndrome such as obesity and/or type 2 diabetes mellitus. The major determinant in the development of idiopathic uric acid stones is an abnormally low urinary pH. The unduly urinary acidity in uric acid stone formers increasingly is recognized to be one of the features observed in the metabolic syndrome. Two major abnormalities have been implicated to explain this overly acidic urine: (1) increased net acid excretion, and (2) impaired buffering caused by defective urinary ammonium excretion, with the combination resulting in abnormally acidic urine. New information is emerging linking these defects to changes in insulin signaling in the kidney. This article reviews the epidemiologic and metabolic studies linking uric acid nephrolithiasis with the metabolic syndrome, and examines the potential mechanisms underlying the unduly acidic urine in these conditions.
...
PMID:Metabolic syndrome and uric acid nephrolithiasis. 1835 98

Surgical intervention has become an accepted therapeutic alternative for the patient with medically complicated obesity. Multiple investigators have reported significant and sustained weight loss after bariatric surgery that is associated with improvement of many weight-related medical comorbidities, and statistically significant decreased overall mortality for surgically treated as compared with medically treated subjects. Although the Roux-en-Y gastric bypass (RYGB) is considered an acceptably safe treatment, an increasing number of patients are being recognized with nephrolithiasis after this, the most common bariatric surgery currently performed. The main risk factor appears to be hyperoxaluria, although low urine volume and citrate concentrations may contribute. The incidence of these urinary risk factors among the total post-RYGB population is unknown, but may be more than previously suspected based on small pilot studies. The etiology of the hyperoxaluria is unknown, but may be related to subtle and seemingly subclinical fat malabsorption. Clearly, further study is needed, especially to define better treatment options than the standard advice for a low-fat, low-oxalate diet, and use of calcium as an oxalate binder.
...
PMID:Nephrolithiasis after bariatric surgery for obesity. 1835 97

Individuals with isolated medical abnormalities (IMAs) are undergoing living donor nephrectomy more frequently. Knowledge of health risks for these living donors is important for donor selection, informed consent and follow-up. We systematically reviewed studies with > or = 3 living kidney donors with preexisting IMAs, including older age, obesity, hypertension, reduced glomerular filtration rate (GFR), proteinuria, microscopic hematuria and nephrolithiasis. We abstracted data on study and donor characteristics, perioperative outcomes, longer term renal and blood pressure outcomes and mortality and compared them to those of non-IMA donors. We found 22 studies on older donors (n = 987), 10 on obese donors (n = 484), 6 on hypertensive donors (n = 125), 4 on donors with nephrolithiasis (n = 32), 2 on donors with microscopic hematuria and one study each on donors with proteinuria or reduced GFR. Perioperative outcomes for donors with and without IMAs were similar. Few studies reported longer term (> or = 1 year) rates of hypertension, proteinuria or renal function. Studies were frequently retrospective and without a comparison group. Given the variability among studies and their methodological limitations, uncertainties remain regarding long-term medical outcomes for IMA donors. As transplant centers continue to cautiously screen and counsel potential IMA donors, rigorously conducted, longer term prospective cohort studies are needed.
...
PMID:Health outcomes for living kidney donors with isolated medical abnormalities: a systematic review. 1867 76

Increase in body size increases the risk of renal stone formation. The mechanism explaining this relationship remains unclear. Urine pH is one of the important factors for urinary stone formation. The purpose of this study was to determine whether there is an association between urine pH and body mass index (BMI) in patients with urolithiasis. Medical charts review that included 342 urinary stone formers (248 men and 94 women). Data obtained included patient sex, age, BMI, urine pH at diagnosis, and stone composition. The patients were classified as normal weight (18.5 <or= BMI < 24), overweight (24 <or= BMI < 27), or obese (BMI >or= 27). The mean urine pH of the normal body weight, overweight, and obese groups was 6.25, 6.14, and 6.00, respectively (P < 0.05). Urine pH is inversely related to BMI among patients with urolithiasis. Among patients with urolithiasis, higher BMI will have lower urine pH. This may explain why obesity is associated with an increased risk of nephrolithiasis. Weight loss should be explored as a potential treatment to prevent kidney stone formation. The prevention of urinary stone disease gives clinicians an additional reason to encourage weight reduction through diet.
...
PMID:Association of body mass index and urine pH in patients with urolithiasis. 1946 24

Medical treatment of obesity and lifestyle modification have limited effectiveness in treating it in morbidly obese individuals. Importantly, bariatric surgery is regarded as the only therapy that is effective in maintaining significant weight loss in morbidly obese individuals. Despite the fact that bariatric surgery-induced weight loss is associated with a significant decrease in morbidity and mortality and improvement in renal function, bariatric surgery has recently been shown to be associated with a significant risk of nephrolithiasis. The main risk factor for nephrolithiasis is increased excretion of urinary oxalate. In this review, we discuss the association between bariatric surgery, an increased risk of renal stone formation and oxalate nephropathy.
...
PMID:Bariatric surgery and renal function: a precarious balance between benefit and harm. 2092

Bariatric surgery is now recognized as a sure and effective way for weight reduction in morbid obesity. However some procedures induce intestinal malabsorption leading to enteric hyperoxaluria. So bariatric surgery could place these patients not only at risk for nephrolithiasis but also for oxalate induced nephropathy and chronic renal failure. Because of the growing incidence of obesity worldwide, physicians and patients should be aware of such potential complications. There is no mean to discuss this treatment because of its spectacular efficiency on obesity and its comorbidities. But it is necessary to choose the surgical technique according to the risk factors of the patients. Following surgery, preventive treatment strategies are indicated, such as modified dietary lifestyle and specific drugs as we suggested to limit or even avoid these complications. However observance could fail in the long term. In case of oxalate nephropathy, surgery may be proposed to restore the intestinal tract but with the risk of overweight relapse. To illustrate this matter, we report here significant observations of three patients, which, having successfully benefited from the same bariatric surgery, have presented lithiasic complications for two of them and oxalate nephropathy leading to chronic renal failure and hemodialysis for the third.
...
PMID:[Bariatric surgery, calcium oxalate urinary stones and oxalate nephropathy]. 2113 57

Uric acid stones are significantly more common among nephrolithiasis patients with type 2 diabetes, obesity, and/or the metabolic syndrome. The principal metabolic feature responsible for this association is an overly acidic urine, which leads to the precipitation of sparingly soluble uric acid crystals in urine and subsequent development of stones. The unduly acidic urine in uric acid stone formers is caused by a combination of excessive dietary intake of animal proteins and a defect in renal ammoniagenesis and/or excretion that leads to impaired buffering and amplifies the acidic urine caused by an increased acid excretion.
...
PMID:Metabolic syndrome and the genesis of uric acid stones. 2119 36

Recent epidemiological studies revealed an association of obesity, diabetes mellitus, hypertension and metabolic syndrome (MetS) with kidney stone disease. We examined how these disorders cause kidney stones. A clinical study on 467 patients with nephrolithiasis at our institution revealed that clustering of MetS traits increased the risk of uric acid stone formation by decreasing urinary pH. A subsequent study analyzing detailed data from 30,448 patients enrolled in the 6th Nationwide Survey on Urolithiasis in Japan showed that clustering of MetS traits were associated with an increased severity of the kidney stone disease and elevated urinary excretion of calcium, uric acid and oxalate. Finally, the OLETF rats, an animal model of MetS, showed lower urinary pH, decreased citrate excretion, and increased uric acid and calcium excretion. In addition, the administration of pioglitazone, an agent that improves insulin resistance, significantly increased the urinary pH. These results indicate that MetS causes changes in urinary constituents, leading to an increased risk of both uric acid and calcium oxalate stone formation. We suggest that kidney stone disease should be considered as a component of MetS and that the improvement in insulin resistance by means of diet and lifestyle changes and medical therapy might help to prevent this disorder.
...
PMID:[Metabolic syndrome and nephrolithiasis]. 2130 61

Obesity causes a significant healthcare burden and has been shown to be an important risk factor in the development of cardiovascular disease, type 2 diabetes, and increasingly chronic kidney disease. Bariatric surgery is the most effective treatment for obesity and has been shown to drastically improve both blood pressure and diabetic control. However, the interaction of bariatric surgery and renal function is less clear. This review focuses on the effect of bariatric surgery on renal function both in the acute situation, with respect to acute kidney injury, and also on changes in renal function parameters post-bariatric surgery weight loss. The interaction of obesity, bariatric surgery, and nephrolithiasis as a precipitant of acute kidney injury will also be considered. The role of bariatric surgery in pre- and post-renal transplant recipients is discussed as well as possible mechanisms underlying the improvement in renal function.
...
PMID:Bariatric surgery and renal function. 2132 52


<< Previous 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 Next >>