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Query: UMLS:C0451641 (
urolithiasis
)
3,973
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
In a selected material of 228 patients with chronic inflammatory bowel disease (CIBD) the incidence of
urolithiasis
was 15% (95% confidence limit 11-21). The tendency to
urolithiasis
is significantly correlated to small-bowel resection and its extent and to obstruction in the urinary tract. On the other hand, there is no definite correlation to the duration or extent of the
bowel disease
. The significant correlation between
urolithiasis
and ileal resection is in agreement with the hyperabsorption of oxalate as an important cause of stone formation demonstrated by others. That local factors too play an essential role in the formation of urinary calculi is apparent from the increased incidence of
urolithiasis
in obstruction of the urinary tract. The incidence of
urolithiasis
was particularly high (22-25%) among patients with ileostomies. The few and negligible symptoms of and sequelae to,
urolithiasis
in CIBD encourage a conservative attitude.
...
PMID:Urolithiasis in chronic inflammatory bowel disease. 67 52
Oxalate-
urolithiasis
and hyperoxalaria have been reported to be a frequent complication in patients with small
bowel disease
, especially in patients with ileal resection due to Crohn's disease. Hyperabsorption of oxalate seems to be the main patholgenetic factor for "enteric" hyperoxalaria. Intestinal absorption and urinary excretion of oxalate was measured in patients with various gastrointestinal diseases after oral or rectal administration of 14C-oxalate. Kinetic data suggest that 14C-oxalate is absorbed in the small, the large bowel and the rectum as well. Oxalate absorption was decreased in patients with a colectomy and in active ulcerative colitis, but increased in patients with ileal resection, chronic liver disease, and steatorrhea due to chronic pancratitis or sprue. There existed a positive correlation between 14C-oxalate absorption and the amount of fecal fat excretion. The data suggest that hyperoxaluria and hyperabsorption of oxalate are not a specific finding in patients with bile acid malabsorption, but may occur too, in steatorrhea without alteration of bile acid metabolism.
...
PMID:[Enteric hyperoxaluria. I. Intestinal oxalate absorption in gastrointestinal diseases (author's transl)]. 68 26
Young Aboriginal children in remote regions of tropical and desert Australia are at risk of developing urate stones in their upper urinary tract from an early age. These radiolucent calculi were only recognized with the availability of ultrasound diagnosis and are not associated with anatomic anomalies or abnormal uric acid production/metabolism. Although these stones appear to resolve spontaneously after the weaning period, some result in ureteric obstruction and infection which may lead to renal damage. This pattern of
urolithiasis
differs from the usual global
urolithiasis
pattern of either endemic bladder stones in young children in developing countries or predominantly calcium-based stones in upper tracts of older children and adults in affluent industrialized countries, where upper tract urate stones account for only a minority of childhood urinary tract stones. Risk factors for urate stones are low urine output and acidic urine. An association between
urolithiasis
and carbohydrate intolerance leading to chronic acidosis has been suggested for Aboriginal children, but existing limited evidence does not support this as a major aetiological factor. Although further studies on the epidemiology, natural history and management of these urate stones are needed, we believe the focus should be on improving the known social and environmental risk factors of remote Aboriginal children during the weaning period which contribute to the unacceptably high prevalence of failure to thrive, diarrhoeal disease, environmental
enteropathy
, iron deficiency and
urolithiasis
.
...
PMID:Unique pattern of urinary tract calculi in Australian Aboriginal children. 1288 59