Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0221002 (primary hyperparathyroidism)
4,921 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

The diangosis, clinical manifestations and management of 11 children with nephrocalcinosis encountered in a 20-year period are presented. Renal tubular acidosis, primary hyperoxaluria, primary hyperparathyroidism, exogenous hyperadrenocorticism and idiopathic hypercalcemia of infancy were the principal causes of nephrocalcinosis in this series. In the presence of normal or near-normal renal function, a 55 per cent or better cure rate can be expected. Children with significantly diminished renal function have a poor prognosis and should be considered for renal transplantation.
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PMID:Nephrocalcinosis in infancy and childhood. 109 88

We measured the rate of oxalate flux across the red-cell membrane in the steady state in 114 patients with a history of calcium oxalate kidney stones and in 25 controls. Of the patients, 98 had recurrent, "idiopathic" kidney stones, 8 had primary hyperparathyroidism, 7 had renal or urinary tract malformations, and 1 had primary hyperoxaluria. Oxalate exchange was significantly higher in the 98 patients with idiopathic stone formation than in the controls (-1.10 +/- 0.95 [SD] X 10(-2) min-1 vs. -0.31 +/- 0.12 X 10(-2); P less than 0.001); it was above the upper limits of normal in 78 of these patients. All 8 patients with hyperparathyroidism and the patient with primary hyperoxaluria had values in the normal range; 2 of the patients with renal or urinary tract malformation had values at the upper normal limit. A study of five families indicated that the abnormality is an autosomal monogenic dominant trait with complete penetrance and variable expressivity. Oxalate-tolerance tests were carried out in five pairs of brothers. One brother in each pair had the abnormality in oxalate flux, and had a significantly higher percentage of oxalate excretion at two hours after oxalate loading (18.09 +/- 3.07 [SD] vs. 10.37 +/- 3.08 percent; t = 3.97; P less than 0.005) and four hours (14.87 +/- 2.91 vs. 9.89 +/- 2.93 percent; t = 2.70; P less than 0.05). Treatment with oral hydrochlorothiazide (50 mg per day) or amiloride (5 mg per day) or both restored normal or nearly normal red-cell oxalate exchange in all of 33 patients who initially had increased rates. We conclude that an inherited cellular defect in oxalate transport may be a factor in "primary" calcium oxalate stone formation and that this defect may be corrected with diuretics.
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PMID:An inheritable anomaly of red-cell oxalate transport in "primary" calcium nephrolithiasis correctable with diuretics. 394 45

The mechanism of kidney stone formation is not well understood. In order to better understand the pathophysiology for specific kidney stone compositions and systemic diseases associated with kidney stones, endoscopic papillary mapping studies with concurrent biopsies have been conducted. This review will summarize the findings of these studies and proposed mechanisms for thirteen disease processes associated with kidney stones. A review of the literature was performed identifying thirteen studies that endoscopically mapped and biopsied renal papillae of different stone formers. These studies characterized renal papillae based on amount of Randall's plaque, Bellini's duct pathology, papillary contour changes, presence of attached stones, pitting, and frequently papillary and cortical biopsies. The groups studied and reviewed here are kidney stone formers who have a history of idiopathic calcium oxalate stone formation, cystinuria, brushite stones, gastric bypass, ileostomy, small bowel resection, primary hyperparathyroidism, distal renal tubular acidosis (dRTA), primary hyperoxaluria, idiopathic calcium phosphate stone formation, medullary sponge kidney (MSK), uric acid stones, and struvite stones. A proposed standardized scoring system for papillary pathology was also reviewed. The series showed various degrees and types of changes to the renal papillae and corresponding histopathologic changes for each type of stone former reviewed. Those with predominantly alone Randall's plaque pathology had less tissue damage versus those with extensive Bellini's duct lesions who had more interstitial fibrosis and cortical pathology. Randall's plaques are associated with stone formers who have low urinary volume, high urinary calcium, and acidic urine and thus are frequently seen in those with brushite stones, primary hyperparathyroidism, small bowel resection, and idiopathic calcium phosphate stone formers. Bellini's duct plugging and pathology is theorized to occur via free solution crystallization, ductal obstruction, inflammation, cellular injury, fibrosis, and acidification defects. Ureteroscopic manifestations of stone disease can vary from normal appearing papillae to significantly diseased appearing papillae. Some diseases have very characteristic papillary changes. Further studies are necessary to fully elucidate the mechanisms of stone formation in patients with nephrolithiasis.
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PMID:Characteristics of renal papillae in kidney stone formers. 2744 96