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Query: UMLS:C0451641 (
urolithiasis
)
3,973
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The relationship between the degree of metabolic acidosis and calcium
phosphate
stone formation was studied. Furthermore, the reasons why renal tubular acidosis (RTA) and primary hyperparathyroidism (PHPT) dominantly occur in women, and female stone formers more often produce calcium
phosphate
stone are discussed. Blood was slightly more acidotic in women than in men in both the
urolithiasis
and the control groups. Likewise, blood was significantly more acidotic and urinary pH significantly higher in patients with PHPT. Patients with RTA had severe metabolic acidosis, and urinary pH was highest among all groups. Calcium
phosphate
concentration was significantly higher in women than in men, and was also higher in patients with PHPT than in those with
urolithiasis
. All patients with RTA had pure calcium
phosphate
stones. The reasons why females are more acidotic and have more calcium
phosphate
in stones are suspected to be related to progesterone and urinary tract infection.
...
PMID:Relationship between metabolic acidosis and calcium phosphate urinary stone formation in women. 193 25
To estimate the epidemiology of upper urinary stones in the elderly, a total of 1,957 patients (1,349 men and 608 women) with
urolithiasis
were studied. The ratio of men to women was approximately 3:1 in middle-aged (between 30 and 59 years), 1:1 in young (29 or younger) and 1:1 in old patients (60 or older). Compared with the age distribution of the entire Japanese population, the incidence of urinary stones was very low in both male and female children, twice as high in middle-aged men, slightly higher in middle-aged women, and equal or slightly lower in the male and female elderly. Stones of calcium oxalate and uric acid occurred more frequently and those of calcium
phosphate
and struvite less frequently in men than in women. This tendency was especially obvious in the middle-aged. In the old generation, calcium oxalate stones occurred almost equally in men and women. Results of urinary stone analysis were similar among men of the three generations, although the incidence of uric acid stones increased with patient age. In women, however, the incidence of calcium oxalate was higher in the young and old generations, while that of calcium
phosphate
was higher in the middle-aged.
...
PMID:Epidemiology of urolithiasis in the elderly. 193 39
In 26 healthy individuals and 114 patients with
urolithiasis
, total urine protein levels were measured in a single sample by using the stain ponceau S. The findings were statistically analyzed. The levels of the protein were found to be 27-80 mg/l in the healthy individuals, while the distribution of the data was asymmetric as viewed from high values. The patients with
urolithiasis
exhibited their protein levels according to the type of nephrolithiasis. Proteinuria was demonstrated to be less pronounced in patients with oxalate and urate nephrolithiasis than in patients with coral
phosphate
calculi. There was a substantial asymmetry in the distribution of total urine protein for all the examined groups of
urolithiasis
patients, as well as great dispersion values, which fails to regard the parameter alone as a diagnostic criterion for the type of nephrolithiasis. At the same time it was noted that simultaneous examination of the levels of total protein, uric acid, potassium, and sodium enabled the type of a concrement (oxalate or
phosphate
) to be in vivo estimated with approximately 85% probability.
...
PMID:[Total urinary protein in different types of nephrolithiasis]. 194 15
To determine the current status of
urolithiasis
in 1988, in comparison with that in 1985, we analyzed the 1937 patients of
urolithiasis
at 17 departments of urology in Mie Prefecture and 2 departments of urology in Wakayama Prefecture. The ratio of male to female patients was 2.6 to 1.0. Geographically, the number of
urolithiasis
patients was most frequently distributed in Matsusaka City. The frequency of
urolithiasis
in the urban area was almost the same as that in the rural area. Most of the stones (96.3%) were in the upper urinary tract. The frequency of lower urinary tract calculi tended to be high in southern Mie Prefecture. The ratio of the upper urinary tract calculi to the lower urinary tract calculi in the urban area was higher than in the rural area. The age distribution in males was in the forties, while that in females was in the fifties. The average age was 46.4 years old. The surgical treatment was performed in 671 patients (34.6%) and the extracorporeal shock wave lithotripsy (ESWL) was the most frequent mode of treatment (85.0%), followed by cysto-lithotripsy (4.2%) and percutaneous nephro-uretero-lithotripsy (2.4%). The most frequent component of the urinary tract calculi was calcium oxalate and/or calcium
phosphate
(81.7%). The stone patient increased in the number during the summer season (July, August and September). In conclusion, in 1988 when the ESWL treatment started in Mie Prefecture, the epidemiologic features of
urolithiasis
was characterized as follows: the number of patients increased and the broad application of the ESWL treatment resulted in the decreased number of patients with spontaneous discharge and the increased number of patients with recurrent stones and with bilateral or multiple complex stones.
...
PMID:[Epidemiologic study on urolithiasis in Mie prefecture. 2. Present status in 1988]. 206 3
Nephrolithiasis and endemic renal distal tubular acidosis are common in northeastern Thailand. The etiology is still unknown. It is generally accepted that urine electrolytes influence the capacity of urine to inhibit or promote renal and also bladder stones. The purpose of this study was to analyse the composition of the urine in the indigenous population in the northeast area and compare their values with data obtained from a group of age matched adults, living in Bangkok. Twenty-four hour urine samples from 23 normal adult villagers from six villages within the province of Khon Kaen and 34 normal adults living in Bangkok were collected, and the daily excretion of creatinine, uric acid, calcium and inorganic
phosphate
, sodium, potassium, chloride, magnesium and oxalate were assayed. Daily urinary sodium, potassium, chloride and
phosphate
of the villagers were significantly lower than those of Bangkokians. No difference in the urinary excretion of calcium, magnesium, uric acid, oxalate and creatinine was found. The Na/Ca, and Ca/PO4 ratios of villagers were significantly lower than those of the Bangkok subjects. The villagers excreted significantly lower amounts of Na in the face of relatively higher urinary Ca. The above data, combined with our previous study showing the low values of urinary citrate in the villagers in the same areas, strongly indicate that the indigeneous population is at high risk in developing
urolithiasis
. The causes for these electrolyte abnormalities are still unknown. Low contents of the major electrolytes in their diets might play an important role. Low
phosphate
output indicates low protein diets.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Urinary constituents in an endemic area of stones and renal tubular acidosis in northeastern Thailand. 207 84
The authors studied the features of
urolithiasis
in three different geographical regions: Moscow, the Kirghiz SSR, and Berlin from the findings of examination of the composition and structure of uroliths removed by operation or passed spontaneously, (602 concrements from Moscow, 10,000 from Berlin, and 127 from Kirghizia). X-ray diffraction measurement, infrared spectrophotometry, and polarizing microscopy were conducted to analyze the composition and structure of the stones. Complex biochemical examination was carried out in patients from Moscow and Kirghizia. According to the results of the study, the following features of
urolithiasis
are common in the studied regions: (1) prevalence of oxalate lithiasis on the whole, which points to the principal role of metabolic factors in lithogenesis; (2) approximately similar amounts of apatite carbonate crystals in the uroliths; (3) certain similarity in composition of concrements from Berlin and Kirghizia. The most essential differences are: (1) the frequency of renal oxalate stones is highest in Berlin and lowest in Moscow. The prevalent types of calcium oxalate stones are: whewellite of concentric structure (linked with hyperuricemia) in Kirghizia; whewellite of small randomly orientated crystals (linked with hypercalciuria) and stones with signs of transformation of weddellite to whewellite in Moscow; (2) lesser distribution of
phosphate
lithiasis in Berlin than in Kirghizia and particularly in Moscow. Prevalence of struvite crystals in stones from Moscow, the formation of which is linked with the vital activity of Proteus and E. coli; (3) higher distribution of urate lithiasis in Moscow and particularly in Kirghizia where significant metabolic risk factors of lithogenesis were revealed.
...
PMID:[The characteristics of the chemical composition and structure of urinary stones and their prevalence in the cities of Moscow, Berlin and of the Kirghiz SSR]. 214 36
We studied 40 patients with calcium
urolithiasis
and idiopathic hypercalciuria in an attempt to identify patients with an absorptive or renal type of hypercalciuria. An oral calcium tolerance test was performed in all patients, resulting in a rise in serum calcium in all cases (2.35 +/- 0.09 mmol/l vs 2.49 +/- 0.09 mmol/l; P less than 0.001). This was also true for serum
phosphate
(0.96 +/- 0.17 mmol/l vs 1.09 +/- 0.18 mmol/l; P less than 0.001), TmPO4/GFR (0.95 +/- 0.19 mmol/l vs 1.20 +/- 0.25 mmol/l; P less than 0.001) and fasting calcium excretion (3.14 +/- 1.16 mmol/100 l GF vs 6.17 +/- 2.02 mmol/100 l GF; P less than 0.001). All patients showed a drop in nephrogenous cAMP excretion (1.33 +/- 0.95 nmol/dl GF vs 0.74 +/- 0.72 nmol/dl GF; P less than 0.001). iPTH levels declined significantly (2.70 +/- 1.50 pmol/l vs 2.11 +/- 1.19 pmol/l; P less than 0.001). However, discordant individual changes in suppression of nephrogenous cAMP excretion, and rises in fasting calcium excretion prohibited a distinction between the absorptive or renal type of hypercalciuria. It is concluded that an oral calcium tolerance test is not helpful in the choice of management of patients with idiopathic hypercalciuria.
...
PMID:The usefulness of an oral calcium tolerance test in the choice of management of patients with idiopathic hypercalciuria. 216 24
The concentration of urinary ionic calcium was estimated using an ion-selective electrode and ion analyzer for healthy controls and patients with calcium
urolithiasis
. The following results were obtained: 1) After calculating the ionic strength and calibrating the standard solutions of ionic calcium in each urine, the urinary ionic calcium was estimated using an ion-selective electrode and ion analyzer. The reproducibility and accuracy of the value of urinary ionic calcium were satisfactory. 2) There was a significant correlation between the concentration of urinary ionic calcium and the total calcium excretion. Although the percentage of ionic calcium did not show any correlations among the total calcium, oxalate and urinary pH, it had an inverse relation to urinary citrate and
phosphate
. 3) In calcium stone formers, the excretion of ionic calcium was higher than in healthy controls significantly. 4) In hypercalciuric calcium stone formers, the concentrations and excretions of total and ionic calcium were significantly higher than in normocalciuric calcium stone formers. However, the percentage of ionic calcium was not different. 5) When the patients were treated with citrate orally, the excretion of urinary citrate was increased, and the excretion of ionic calcium and the percentage for total calcium were decreased significantly. There were significant reductions of ionic calcium in the urine after oral administration of rice-bran. 6) The estimation of urinary ionic calcium might be important to evaluate the urinary risk in recurrent calcium stone, and to estimate the effects of the preventive treatments for its recurrence.
...
PMID:[Estimation of the concentration of urinary ionic calcium and its clinical role in urolithiasis]. 229 24
In a retrospective study, 760 Saudi patients with
urolithiasis
were epidemiologically and metabolically studied (41% were from the Central region, 32% South, 14% West, 9% North, and 1% East; the remaining 3% were Saudi but of unknown region). The male to female ratio was 5:1; 87 percent of the patients were aged thirty to sixty years and 11 patients were under age fourteen. There was no clear relation of stone formation to occupation. Sixty-nine percent of calculi were renal, 29 percent ureteric, and only 3 percent were bladder calculi. Two hundred seventy-eight operative procedures were done (36.5% of all patients), including pyelolithotomy, nephrolithotomy, ureterolithotomy, ESWL, cystolithotomy, and extractions by basket. Infection was a rarity (6%) and urinary schistosomiasis was found in 33 patients (4.3%), 24 of whom were from a schistosoma-infested region. Raised serum calcium was found in only 5.7 percent and raised serum urate in 13 percent. Increased urinary excretion of urate was found in 60 percent and hypercalciuria in 9 percent. Seventy-six percent of stones analyzed (239) were calcium oxalate, 20.5 percent urate, and 3.3 percent
phosphate
.
...
PMID:Urolithiasis in Saudi Arabia. 229 13
In calcium oxalate
urolithiasis
, the monohydrate and dihydrate forms can be found. The aim of this paper is to examine a group of patients with calcium oxalate calculi to determine the calcium oxalate form and the possible relationship with calcium and other urinary biochemical parameters. It was found that calcium oxalate monohydrate is more frequent in the normocalciuric group and also is associated with a lack of inhibitory capacity, while a mixed calculus of calcium oxalate and
phosphate
or calcium oxalate dihydrate can be related with hypercalciuria.
...
PMID:Relation between calcium oxalate hydrate form found in renal calculi and some urinary parameters. 230 91
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