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Query: UMLS:C0451641 (
urolithiasis
)
3,973
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
In idiopathic recurrent calcium
urolithiasis
(RCU) in men (n = 37) the metabolic effects of oral tripotassium citrate (PC) were investigated in a longitudinal field study. The patients were either normo- (n = 22) or hypocitraturic (n = 15). Laboratory examinations were performed before, and after 3, 6, and more than 12 months of medication. Acceptance of PC was poor, mainly because of the salty taste of the tablet preparation chosen, and a number of participants dropped out of the study. In the remaining participants, compliance was acceptable when evaluated on the basis of urinary potassium and undesired side effects did not occur. In the short term (up to 3 months), PC evoked compensated metabolic alkalosis (pH and citrate in urine increased; blood gases remained normal), a drop in urinary calcium, together with increasing oxaluria, hydroxyapatite supersaturation, and calcium
phosphate
crystalluria. In the long term (greater than 12 months) PC urinary pH and citrate "dissociated", in that pH returned to pretreatment baseline values, whereas citrate stayed at high levels. In normocitraturics but not in hypocitraturics, urinary urea and sodium increased with PC. Hypocitraturics appeared to be less sensitive to the effects of PC, as reflected by the relatively small rise in urinary pH and citrate, and they maintained higher mean levels of indicators of bone metabolism (osteocalcin, alkaline phosphatase, hydroxyproline) despite continuous administration of PC. It was concluded that although the PC tablet preparation was effective it may not be an ideal anti-stone drug treatment in the long term and that, especially in hypocitraturics, the intrinsic metabolic defect of RCU may not be sufficiently well controlled.
...
PMID:Citrate and recurrent idiopathic calcium urolithiasis. A longitudinal pilot study on the metabolic effects of oral potassium citrate administered over the short-, medium- and long-term medication of male stone patients. 155 90
A retrospective study was done on the nature and degree of crystalluria in fasting and postprandial urine in patients with recurrent idiopathic calcium
urolithiasis
(RCU) for whom stone analysis was available. RCU was stratified into subgroups in accordance with stone analysis. The crystals were obtained and identified using a filter technique and polarization microscopy, respectively. Crystalluria score, relative saturation products (RSPs), and low-molecular-weight inhibitors were assessed. Calcium oxalate crystals were never observed in either male or female patients with stones composed exclusively of calcium oxalate, and only sporadically in patients with mixed stones (the additional component was calcium
phosphate
in most cases). Other crystalluria phases, such as amorphous calcium
phosphate
, a urate-containing phase, and a phase presenting as spherolytic particles, were slightly more frequent in patients with mixed stones. In contrast to crystalluria, RSPs and inhibitors differed in male and female patients, suggesting that crystalluria may not be under the exclusive control of these factors. The following conclusions were reached. (1) Calcium oxalate crystalluria is absent from RCU with pure calcium oxalate stones; hence, calcium oxalate crystalluria does not qualify as a diagnostic aid. (2) The co-existence of the isotropic phase and mixed stones may indicate that the formation of these concretions is characteristic for a major RCU subgroup. (3) On the basis of clinical chemistry and physicochemical data in urine and of crystalluria, it appears that the pathogenesis of RCU differs in male and female subjects.
...
PMID:Crystalluria in idiopathic recurrent calcium urolithiasis. Dependence on stone composition. 155 91
Population based data on 24-h urinary excretion of calcium, oxalate, magnesium,
phosphate
, uric acid and creatinine were collected from 220 children (aged 3-16 years) living in Cimitile, Campania, southern Italy. Mean excretion rates for 7 days were correlated with age, body weight, body mass index and height. The prevalence of hypercalciuria (greater than 4 mg/kg body weight) and of hyperoxaluria (greater than 60 mg/day) were 9.1% and 1.8%, respectively. The same 20 children were also identified as hypercalciuric when a calcium/creatinine ratio of greater than 0.15 was considered. No significant differences between boys and girls were found in the urinary excretion of the five constituents implicated in
urolithiasis
. The study data provide additional childhood reference values for urinary excretion of compounds related to stone formation.
...
PMID:Population based data on urinary excretion of calcium, magnesium, oxalate, phosphate and uric acid in children from Cimitile (southern Italy). 157 Dec 11
Calcium
phosphate
urolithiasis
and bilateral renal dysplasia was diagnosed in an 8-week-old Border Terrier with a history of urine dribbling, which had been observed from the time of birth. Most reported cases of calcium
phosphate
urolithiasis
are secondary to hypercalcemic disorders, but this was not detected. In addition, despite renal dysplasia, there was no evidence of renal failure. After cystotomy and calculus removal, the dog has remained clinically normal.
...
PMID:Calcium phosphate urolithiasis and renal dysplasia in a young dog. 161 88
Of 1,211 patients with
urolithiasis
treated at this institution over a nine years period, there were 77 (6.4%) pediatric cases. The commonest age group was 6-10 years (55.8%). Male:female ratio was 7.6:1. Hindus constituted 72.7% of the patients. There was no significant seasonal variation. The commonest site was urinary bladder (67.5%). The upper: lower urinary tract stone ratio was 1:2.85. Majority belonged to the lower-middle or poor income groups having a cereal based diet with minimal or poor protein intake. The common constituents of stones were calcium (98.7%), oxalate (87%),
phosphate
(84.4%) and uric acid (76.6%). Of all these, uric acid had the richest concentration (grade of ++ or more) in 93.2%. Only 4 stones (5.2%) were "pure": calcium oxalate--3 and calcium
phosphate
--1; whereas 73 (94.8%) were mixed stones. Of these, 9 (11.7%) were "predominant" mixed stones, with only one constituent having rich concentration (grade of ++ or more) and all others being either trace or +. The rest 64 (83.1%) were "heterogenous" mixed stones having rich concentration of more than one constituent.
...
PMID:Spectrum of pediatric urolithiasis in western India. 180 Mar 38
The paper considers a clinical role of crystalluria and its relation to
urolithiasis
. Examination of 185274 cases of symptomless crystalluria in the citizens of Kharkov and Kharkov region revealed oxalic-calcic urinary crystals in 12.2%, urate crystals in 3.6% and
phosphate
crystals in 1.2% of the examinees. Oxalic-calcic crystalluria in urgent urinary conditions occurs significantly more frequently (25.8%). Crystalluria was studied in 372 nephrolithiasis patients. Urinary crystals were found in 44.0%. The type of the crystals corresponded to chemical composition of the urinary concrements. Oxalic-calcic nephrolithiasis was detected in a younger group of patients (aged 37.3 +/- 1.3). It is suggested to consider crystalluria as microurolithiasis indicating predisposition to lithogenesis in the urinary tract and as a preclinical manifestation of
urolithiasis
.
...
PMID:[Crystalluria]. 182 78
A series of 270 paediatric stone patients was studied retrospectively according to the clinical pattern of
urolithiasis
(age and sex, stone location, stone analysis, recurrence rate) and aetiology of stone disease (infection, anatomical, metabolic or idiopathic). Infection stones occurred earliest and more commonly in males and were usually upper tract struvite calculi related to Proteus infection. Anatomical stones were most commonly associated with pelviureteric junction (PUJ) obstruction and had a high recurrence rate, despite surgical correction of obstruction. Idiopathic stones most resembled those found in adult
urolithiasis
by virtue of occurring latest, being sited in the ureter more often and being more frequently composed of calcium oxalate. Metabolic stones were most frequently calcium
phosphate
or cystine and virtually all were renal. They comprised the smallest group but had the highest recurrence rate.
...
PMID:Clinical patterns of paediatric urolithiasis. 188 49
A retrospective study was done on the nature and degree of crystalluria in spontaneously voided fasting and postprandial urine of patients with recurrent idiopathic calcium
urolithiasis
(RCU) divided into normocalciuria (20 males, 20 females) and hypercalciuria patients (20 males, 20 females), and controls (20 males, 20 females). The crystals were obtained using a filter technique and identified by microscopy. In addition, individual data, clinical chemistry variables and indices reflecting the risk of calcium
phosphate
and calcium oxalate crystallization were evaluated. In contrast to findings of other investigators of crystalluria we observed only a few crystals on the filters. The most frequently occurring phases were (in this order) a urate-containing phase (tentatively termed uric), an amorphous calcium
phosphate
phase (tentatively termed isotropic) and a phase of spheroid-like particles, not yet definitely characterized (tentatively termed spheroid). Calcium oxalate crystals were found only exceptionally. There was no relationship between the degree of calciuria (normo- versus hypercalciuric RCU) and crystalluria. Among RCU, males generally had a predominance of the isotropic, females of the spheroid phase, as compared with controls. Also, RCU females were generally obese, and their spheroid score and lean body mass correlated negatively and significantly. The calcium
phosphate
and calcium oxalate risk indices were always low in normal individuals, higher in RCU. Patients of both sexes with urinary stones had normal parathyroid gland function, but higher total calcium in fasting serum and higher urinary pH as compared with controls.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Crystalluria determined by polarization microscopy. Technique and results in healthy control subjects and patients with idiopathic recurrent calcium urolithiasis classified in accordance with calciuria. 188 22
Thirteen
urolithiasis
patients with unilateral obstructive uropathy were treated with percutaneous nephrostomy (PCN) either for urinary diversion, endopyelotomy, nephrolithtotmy or chemolysis. After percutaneous nephrostomy, the individual urine volume, creatinine clearance (Ccr), urinary absolute and fractional excretions of sodium, potassium, calcium, magnesium and inorganic
phosphate
were measured separately in timed urine collections from a pigtail catheter and from the urethra. The data showed that Ccr and the absolute urinary excretions of sodium, potassium, calcium, magnesium and inorganic
phosphate
were significantly lower in the PCN kidney immediately or 2 days after relief of obstruction. The ratio of total urinary calcium excretion to urinary creatinine excretion in the obstructed kidney was significantly greater than that in the contralateral kidney. The fractional excretions of calcium and magnesium increased as renal function decreased. The results showed that when the total Ccr is below normal, the apparent excretion of urinary calcium will be underestimated. However, when the total Ccr of patients is within normal range, hypercalciuria may be detected adequately and thus favors early implementation of an appropriate therapeutic strategy.
...
PMID:Reduction of calcium excretion in the stone-forming kidney in unilateral ureteral obstruction. 188 28
Urinary lithogenic promoters and inhibitors were estimated in normal Indian men and women of young and old ages to understand the sex difference in the risk of stone disease. Young men displayed increased
phosphate
excretion and a higher mean calcium (both lithogenic promoters) and lower excretion of citrate (lithogenic inhibitor) compared to women of the same age indicating that young men are more at risk for calculous disease than women. In the older postmenopausal women, there was increased excretion of calcium and magnesium and a lower mean citrate than in the younger women suggesting that oestrogenic activity during reproductive years appears to offer protection against calculogenesis. This study indicates that sex differences exist in the excretion of lithogenic promoters and inhibitors which partly explain the difference in the incidence of
urolithiasis
between men and women.
...
PMID:Influence of sex and age in the risk of urolithiasis--a biochemical evaluation in Indian subjects. 189 47
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