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Query: UMLS:C0451641 (
urolithiasis
)
3,973
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
A 2 1/4 year-old boy was treated for cystinuria and
urolithiasis
with high fluid intake, sodium bicarbonate, and D-penicillamine, over a period of 5 3/4 years, unauthorized interruptions and prescribed pauses included. Therapy was partially sucessful but regrowth of calculi coincided with interruptions of D-penicillamine administration and also with the institution of a low-dose D-penicillamine regime. Flat feet, scoliosis, pectus carinatum, hypermobility of joints, molluscoid pseudotumors and atrophic scars were alarming side effects of D-penicillamine. However, the possibility was not excluded that a forme fruste of an Ehlers-Danlos syndrome preexisted in this boy and was effected by D-penicillamine. Only the molluscoid pseudotumors regressed when D-penicillamine was reduced or omitted temporarily. Osteolathyrism caused by D-penicillamine has hitherto not been reported in man.
...
PMID:Skin and bone lesions (dermato-osteolathyrism), possible side effects of D-penicillamine treatment, in a boy with cystinuria. 15 71
A total of 150 patients with renal pathology (chronic glomerulonephritis, pyelonephritis,
urolithiasis
, etc.) accompanied by the development of psychoneurological disturbances were examined. In the initial stage of the renal insufficiency the authors observed neurasthenic, radicular, polyneuritic, renovisceral syndromes, in a more remote stage--encephalopathies and disturbances of the brain circulation. The important part in the above-mentioned disturbances is played by azotemia, metabolic acidosis, disturbances of fluid-electrolyte and albumine balance, as well as arterial hypertension.
...
PMID:[Changes in the nervous system in kidney diseases]. 20 20
In three groups (n = 12 each) of male controls (22--43 years), patients with recurring calcium
urolithiasis
(21--36 years) and hyperparathyroidism (HPT; 17--71 years) proven by surgery renal cyclic adenosine monophosphate (RcAMP), fractional tubular phosphate reabsorption and serum parathyroid hormone (PTH) were measured during endogenous creatinine clearance. RcAMP (muMol/g creatinine) was: controls 1.48 +/- SEM 0.27; stone formers 2.037 +/- 0.343 (not significantly different); HPT 6.234 +/- 0.454 (p less than 0.001). There is no overlap between HPT and controls. Phosphate reabsorption is least in HPT (0.84 +/- 0.015), higher in controls (0.924 +/- 0.004) and stone formers (0.941 +/- 0.007). All differences are statistically significant. Under the conditions selected (moderate hydration of individuals) Serum PHT (pg-equiv/ml) is lowest in stome formers (less than 100--339), higher in controls (less than 100--933) and HPT (400--1150). there is no overlap in PHT between the former and the latter group but a marked one between controls and HPT. For clinical purposes the resulting diagnostic uncertainty in a given patient can be overcome by additional determinations of RcAMP and ionised serum calcium: when referring to serum PTH HPT patients fall outside, RCU patients within 2 standard deviations of either parameter in control subjects. This procedure presently appears superior to those proposed in the past (urinary cAMP etc.) but requires confirmation in larger patient populations. Moreover, since HPT prevails in middle and upper age decades, their RcAMP values and those of RCU patients should be related to a range seen in closely age- and sex-matched controls.
...
PMID:[Evaluation of renal cyclic adenosine monophosphate, serum parathyroid hormone and phosphate reabsorption in recurrent calcium urolithiasis, healthy controls and hyperparathyroidism (author's transl)]. 21 Mar 11
Oral calcium tolerance and urinary cyclic AMP testing was used in the evaluation of 61 unselected patients with stones. The oral calcium tolerance test was easy to perform and was useful in defining several distinct metabolic abnormalities contributing to calculous formation. Oral calcium tolerance testing is more precise than twenty-four-hour urinary calcium determination and should provide a means of determining proper medical treatment of
urolithiasis
. Urinary cyclic AMP was disappointing as a measure of parathormone activity.
...
PMID:Oral calcium tolerance and urinary cyclic AMP in urolithiasis. 21 23
Urinary calculi composed of calcium oxalate were produced in male hooded Wistar rats fed a vitamin B6 deficient diet over 16 weeks. This basic diet was modified by doubling the phosphate content or loading with vitamin C or D3 in three treatment groups. The number of rats developing oxalate stones was not altered by the addition of vitamin D3 or phosphate, but there was a significant increase in total weight of stone formed and histological evidence of extensive renal damage in rats on the high vitamin D3 diet. The addition of vitamin C to the vitamin B6 deficient rats resulted in a reduction in the number of rats with uroliths and a fall in urinary oxalate excretion, while similarly loaded vitamin B6 supplemented controls were free of oxalate calculi. It is concluded that the oxalate
urolithiasis
induced by vitamin B6 deficiency was exacerbated by added vitamin D3 and reduced by vitamin C.
...
PMID:Experimental oxalate urolith formation in rats. 23 24
Efforts have been made to endorse the thory of a viral aetiology for the feline
urolithiasis
syndrome (FUS) in the male cat. The presence of virus in the urine of three cases could not be confirned nor could the condition be transmitted by intra vesicular inoculation of urine from four affected cats into the bladders of normal cats. Following these negative findings work was done on SPF cats and a survey made of the incidence of urethral obstruction in six SPF cat units in England. No cases were reported from four of these units over a two-year period. Five cases occurred in the other two SPF units, three of which were associated with feeding an expanded dry cat food. There is, thus, no direct evidence that viral agents are involved in the aetiology of FUS.
...
PMID:The case against a viral aetiology in feline urolithiasis. 23 80
Ninety-six urine samples were collected by a sterile technique from 75 dogs affected with urinary tract disease (cystitis,
urolithiasis
, prostatitis, etc) involving bacteruria. The infecting organisms were isolated and tested against sensitivity discs (penicillin G, streptomycin, chloramphenicol, tetracycline, sulphamethoxazole/trimethaprin and Sulphatriad). The commonest isolate was Escherichia coli, which was generally sensitive to several agents, though in eight cases it was resistant to all drugs. Next in order were Streptococcus faecalis, Staphylococcus epidermidis and Proteus spp. A double infection was present in 11 cases. Further data give a breakdown for sex and the clinical diagnosis, neither of which was related to any particular organism.
...
PMID:Lower urinary tract pathogens in the dog and their sensitivity to chemotherapeutic agents. 33 57
In patients with
urolithiasis
"Nephrolith" has a favourable influence on many parameters which are responsible for the development of renal calculi. I could never observe a complete dissolution of the urinary calculi.
...
PMID:[Experiences with nephrolith in the treatment of patients with kidney calculi]. 33 15
Management of most patients with calculous disease has been less than ideal in the past. Too often therapeutic efforts were limited to symptomatic calculi. Stones were allowed to pass or were removed, metabolic studies were incomplete, victims were dismissed and forgotten, and prophylactic measures were negligible and usually confined to milk restriction and use of distilled water. More patients were crippled with and died of recurrent calculous disease, urinary infection and progressive renal insufficiency than from any other upper urinary tract abnormality. During the last decade the development of a renal stone clinic at this institution has allowed a nephrourologic approach to the management of
urolithiasis
. This account of classification, diagnosis and management of the various syndromes associated with
urolithiasis
is based on the experiences gained during the last decade with this common but ill-understood urologic problem.
...
PMID:Renal lithiasis: a practical approach. 33 14
The calciuric response to an oral glucose load (100 g) was determined in 16 patients with calcium oxalate
urolithiasis
(seven with renal hypercalciuria and nine with absorptive hypercalciuria) and seven normal subjects. The rates of renal calcium excretion increased significantly after glucose ingestion in all three groups. The calciuric response in patients with absorptive hypercalciuria and intestinal hyperabsorption of calcium was indistinguishable from that of normal subjects. However, the calcium excretions were significantly higher during 1 hr preceding and 3 hr after glucose ingestion in patients with renal hypercalciuria (with presumed "renal leak" of calcium) than in normal subjects. The increment in the calcium excretion rate was also higher in patients with renal hyperacalciuria, particularly during the 2nd hour of glucose ingestion. The results provide a further support for the concept of different etiologies of renal and absorptive hypercalciurias.
...
PMID:An exaggerated augmentation of renal calcium excretion after oral glucose ingestion in patients with renal hypercalciuria. 34 35
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