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Query: UMLS:C0451641 (
urolithiasis
)
3,973
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
A study of
ammonium
and sodium urate precipitation in vitro and the fine structure of several urate renal calculi was carried out to contribute to an understanding of the participation of
ammonium
and sodium urates in
urolithiasis
. Ammonium urate precipitated in vitro in two different morphologies: a typical spherulite morphology formed at high supersaturation and disorganized needle-like crystals formed at low supersaturation. In all cases sodium urate precipitated in vitro as bundles of curved fibrils, its crystallization being inhibited by calcium in concentrations between 20 and 60 mg/l depending on the sodium urate supersaturation. From a collection of 1300 renal calculi, only three had
ammonium
urate as their main component (0.2%), three were mixed calculi (0.2%) consisting of
ammonium
urate and calcium oxalate (two) or uric acid (one), and in one calculus
ammonium
urate was present as a minor component. Only in a mixed calculus of uric acid and calcium oxalate was sodium urate detected in a very low quantity. The study of the fine structure of the renal calculi constituted mainly by
ammonium
urate demonstrated similar patterns in which spherulites, needle-like individual crystals and an amorphous mass of
ammonium
urate with abundant organic matter in non-organized structures coexist. As minor components, struvite or calcium oxalate crystals were found. A general mechanism of the formation of such calculi is proposed.
...
PMID:Ammonium and sodium urates precipitating from synthetic urine and fine structure of urate renal calculi. 1042 96
The composition of urinary stones in children depends on socioeconomic conditions and hygiene, geographical area, and dietary habits. We analyzed urinary stones from 120 consecutive Tunisian children (81 males, 39 females) aged 5 months to 15 years. The stone was located in the upper urinary tract in 91 cases (76%). Stone analysis included both a morphological examination and an infrared analysis of the nucleus and the inner and peripheral layers. The main components of bladder calculi were whewellite (69%) and struvite (22%), whereas the main component of upper urinary tract calculi was whewellite (67%). The nucleus of bladder stones was composed of
ammonium
urate (45%), struvite (28%), cystine (10%), and carbapatite (7%). The nucleus of kidney and ureteral calculi was mainly composed of
ammonium
urate (38%), whewellite (24%), carbapatite (13%), or struvite (11%). Based on stone composition, urinary tract infection was involved in the nucleation or growth of a third of calculi. Endemic
urolithiasis
involving simultaneous nutritional, metabolic, and infectious factors, and defined by its nucleus composed of
ammonium
urate without struvite, represented 40% of cases. Exclusive metabolic factors - including genetic diseases such as primary hyperoxaluria, cystinuria, and hypercalciuria - were responsible for less than 25% of cases.
...
PMID:Urolithiasis in Tunisian children: a study of 120 cases based on stone composition. 1060 49
To study prospectively the risk factors and etiology of
urolithiasis
in all stone patients aged <15 years admitted from 1991 to 1999 to the Arabkir hospital in Yerevan. Stones were obtained by surgery (64%), extracorporeal shockwave lithotripsy (ESWL) (7%) or cystoscopic extraction (4%); 25% passed spontaneously. All were examined by infrared spectroscopy, and spot urines were analyzed chemically. 198 patients, 180 (68% males) with renal stones and 18 (83% males) with primary bladder stones, were studied. Calcium oxalate (CaOx) was the predominant constituent in 62% of the kidney stones, followed by struvite (17%), calcium phosphate (7%), uric acid (7%),
ammonium
acid urate (5%), and cystine (2%). Bladder stones contained CaOx in 72%, uric acid in 22% and
ammonium
acid urate in 6% of patients. Etiology was obviously metabolic in 5% and possibly metabolic in 26%. Twenty percent of stones were infectious, and 19% were endemic (9% bladder and 10% kidney stones); 4% were secondary to urinary stasis with malformation but no infection. Etiology in 26% remained unknown. Stone composition and metabolic etiology are similar to that in central Europe and North America. In contrast, infectious calculi and particularly endemic stones are still common, although becoming less so now.
Urolithiasis
in Armenia thus reflects the transition from a rural to an urban society.
...
PMID:Pediatric urolithiasis in Armenia: a study of 198 patients observed from 1991 to 1999. 1151 87
Commercial anti-uric acid diets for dogs may contain insufficient protein to sustain growth and lactation. In order to investigate the efficacy of an experimental purine-free diet moderately low in protein, its effect on urinary uric acid excretion was compared with that of a commercial dog food and a commercial low-protein anti-uric acid diet. The experimental diet, commercial dog food and commercial anti-uric acid diet contained 10.0, 12.8 and 5.0 g crude protein/MJ metabolizable energy, respectively. Twelve Dalmatian dogs were subjected to a 3 x 3 Latin square study. Although the plasma uric acid concentration was significantly lower when the dogs were fed either the commercial anti-uric diet (18.7 +/- 6.0 mumol/l, mean +/- SD, n = 12) or the experimental diet (19.2 +/- 8.3 mumol/l), when compared to the commercial dog food (29.2 +/- 11.1 mumol/l), no significant decrease of uric acid concentration in urine collected before the morning meal was seen. The average concentration of urinary uric acid was 60 mumol/l. There was a significant increase in the urea:creatinine ratio in urine when the dogs were fed the experimental diet compared to the commercial anti-uric acid diet, confirming that the experimental diet contained more protein. The experimental diet lowered plasma uric acid and was relatively high in protein and thus may be suitable for use in growing and lactating dogs to prevent
ammonium
urate
urolithiasis
.
...
PMID:Comparison of the efficacy of two anti-uric acid diets in dalmatian dogs. 1170 41
Urolithiasis
is a problem that is generally increasing in the tropics as it is in most Western countries. There are 2 main types of the disorder-bladder stones in children, a form of the disorder that disappeared from Europe in the late 19th and early 20th centuries, and upper urinary tract stones in adults. The former has been decreasing in most countries in the so-called endemic bladder stone belt with gradual improvements in levels of nutrition. However, as living standards increase, particularly in the urban areas of the more affluent developing countries, so the incidence of upper urinary tract stones in adults is increasing. The types of stones formed depend mainly on the composition of urine, which, in turn, reflects the type of diet consumed in the countries concerned. The main factor that leads to the formation of bladder stones in children is a nutritionally poor diet that is low in animal protein, calcium, and phosphate, but high in cereal and is acidogenic. This leads to the formation of urine with a relatively high content of
ammonium
and urate ions and consequently to the formation of
ammonium
acid urate crystals and stones. In countries where there is also a high intake of oxalate from local leaves and vegetables, urinary oxalate is increased and, as a result, the
ammonium
acid urate stones often contain calcium oxalate as well. The stone problem in the tropics is compounded by low urine volumes resulting in some areas from poor drinking water, which causes chronic diarrhea, and in others from the hot climate and fluid losses through the skin. As nutrition improves in these countries, the formation of bladder stones gives way to upper urinary tract stones consisting of calcium oxalate, often mixed with calcium phosphate or uric acid, such as are formed in most Western countries.
...
PMID:Renal stones in the tropics. 1256 3
Urease-producing bacteria have been shown to affect the formation of infection stones by splitting urea into ammonia, bicarbonate and carbonate. An increase in alkaline pH results in urinary supersaturation of the ions. The increase in ammonia also causes injury to the urothelial glycosaminoglycan layer. Non-urease-producing bacteria have been speculated to form urinary stones. Midstream voided bladder urine and fractured stone nidus samples from 72 patients undergoing surgery for
urolithiasis
were cultured on specific media for genital mycoplasmata and on conventional media. Urine samples were obtained from a control group of 40 healthy subjects. Genital mycoplasmata and other bacteria were evaluated with regard to the composition of urinary stones. Compared with other origins of stones, the relation between isolation of Ureaplasma urealyticum and infection stone disease was statistically proven. Isolation of genital mycoplasmata was significantly higher in women than in men in the study group. The urinary stones comprised 84.7% calcium stones, 8.3% uric acid stones and 6.9% infection (magnesium
ammonium
phosphate) stones. Coagulase-negative Staphylococci, Escherichia coli, Corynebacterium spp., Enterobacterium spp. and U. urealyticum were cultured from stone samples. The results suggests that non-urease-producing bacteria, as well as urease-producing bacteria, may influence the formation of urinary stones.
...
PMID:Role of genital mycoplasmata and other bacteria in urolithiasis. 1287 17
Proteus mirabilis commonly infects the complicated urinary tract and is associated with
urolithiasis
. Stone formation is caused by bacterial urease, which hydrolyzes urea to ammonia, causing local pH to rise, and leads to the subsequent precipitation of magnesium
ammonium
phosphate (struvite) and calcium phosphate (apatite) crystals. To prevent these infections, we vaccinated CBA mice with formalin-killed bacteria or purified mannose-resistant, Proteus-like (MR/P) fimbriae, a surface antigen expressed by P. mirabilis during experimental urinary tract infection, via four routes of immunization: subcutaneous, intranasal, transurethral, and oral. We assessed the efficacy of vaccination using the CBA mouse model of ascending urinary tract infection. Subcutaneous or intranasal immunization with formalin-killed bacteria and intranasal or transurethral immunization with purified MR/P fimbriae significantly protected CBA mice from ascending urinary tract infection by P. mirabilis (P < 0.05). To investigate the potential of MrpH, the MR/P fimbrial tip adhesin, as a vaccine, the mature MrpH peptide (residues 23 to 275, excluding the signal peptide), and the N-terminal receptor-binding domain of MrpH (residues 23 to 157) were overexpressed as C-terminal fusions to maltose-binding protein (MBP) and purified on amylose resins. Intranasal immunization of CBA mice with MBP-MrpH (residues 23 to 157) conferred effective protection against urinary tract infection by P. mirabilis (P < 0.002).
...
PMID:Development of an intranasal vaccine to prevent urinary tract infection by Proteus mirabilis. 1468 82
We report two cases of
urolithiasis
related to anorexia nervosa and laxative abuse. Case 1: A 21-year-old woman was referred to our hospital because of left flank pain. A left ureteral stone, 10 x 6 mm in size, was successfully fragmented by extracorporeal shock-wave lithotripsy (ESWL), but she experienced repetitive formation of bilateral urinary stones and double J stent encrustation which required 13 sessions of ESWL, one session of transurethral ureterolithotripsy and one session of cystolithotripsy over a period of 5 years. All stones were comprised of pure
ammonium
acid urate. It was later revealed that she was diagnosed with anorexia nervosa at 15 years old and had suffered from laxative abuse (bisacodyl, 300-500 mg/day) ever since. Case 2: A 18-year-old woman was referred to our hospital because of left lower abdominal pain. A left renal stone, 15 x 10 mm in size, was successfully fragmented by ESWL, but she had double J stent encrustation which was managed by cystolithotripsy. All stones were comprised of pure
ammonium
acid urate. She was later diagnosed with anorexia nervosa and it turned out that she had suffered from an eating disorder and laxative abuse (bisacodyl, 200 mg/day) since the age of 15 years. Both patients had marked decrease in urine volume, hyponatremia and hypokalemia. Anorexia nervosa and laxative abuse should be suspected whenever a woman has an
ammonium
acid urate stone in sterile urine because the treatment of these disorders is crucial to the prevention of repetitive formation of urinary stones.
...
PMID:[Two cases of ammonium acid urate urinary stones related to anorexia nervosa and laxative abuse]. 1514 70
Massive
urolithiasis
of the penile urethra was observed in an adult pygmy sperm whale (Kogia breviceps) stranded on Topsail Island, North Carolina, USA. Calculi occupied the urethra from just distal to the sigmoid flexure to the tip of the penis for a length of 43 cm. A urethral diverticulum was present proximal to the calculi. The major portion of the multinodular urolith weighed 208 g and was 16 cm long x 3.7 cm diameter at the widest point. The urolith was composed of 100% struvite (magnesium
ammonium
phosphate) and on culture yielded Klebsiella oxytoca, a urease-positive bacterium occasionally associated with struvite urolith formation in domestic animals. Reaction to the calculi was characterized histologically by moderate multifocal to coalescing plasmacytic balanitis and penile urethritis. Role of the urethrolithiasis in the whale's stranding is speculative but could have involved pain or metabolic perturbations such as uremia or hyperammonemia.
...
PMID:Struvite penile urethrolithiasis in a pygmy sperm whale (Kogia breviceps). 1546 32
Identification of chemical constituents of calculus is important in the diagnosis and management of
urolithiasis
. The compositional variability of uroliths has different etiologies and requires various modes of treatment and prophylaxis. In the present study, we report the chemical compositional analyses of calculi recovered from buck and bullock by X-ray diffraction (XRD) and energy dispersive X-ray (EDX) techniques and ultra-structure examination by scanning electron microscopy (SEM). XRD and EDX investigations conclusively established the chemical compositions of urinary calculi under investigation. The calculus from buck (sample I) had calcium oxalate monohydrate, a dominant salt phase and magnesium compound in significant amount. The calculus from bullock (sample II) had magnesium
ammonium
phosphate phase, with significant amount of calcium in apatite form and K+ ions. SEM study at higher magnification (X 1000) showed bipyramidal crystals in external zones of urolith (sample I). The struvite apatite calculus showed that basic unit of structure was lamination and the laminitis appeared to be made up of fine granules and high porosity. The bio-mineralization process of calculus formation was also studied, with a view to take preventive and therapeutic measures for amelioration of urinary stone diseases in animals and humans.
...
PMID:Physical, X-ray diffraction and scanning electron microscopic studies of uroliths. 1713 66
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