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Query: UMLS:C0451641 (
urolithiasis
)
3,973
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Seventeen hypercalciuria patients (8 control, 9 treatment) with a history of
urolithiasis
were randomly selected to receive low-calcium, low-
oxalate
diets with or without the addition of 30 g of dietary fiber as unprocessed wheat bran. Diet alone resulted in a 5.6 percent decrease in calciuria compared with a 23.5 percent decrease with the addition of the fiber. The addition of hydrochlorothiazide and potassium citrate further reduced calciuria by 40.4 percent and 34.5 percent, respectively. Oxaluria was decreased 21.4 percent by diet alone compared with 3.9 percent in the diet and fiber treatment group. Patient compliance to diets was good, and no complications resulted from fiber intake.
...
PMID:Effect of unprocessed wheat bran on calciuria and oxaluria in patients with urolithiasis. 215 68
A dose-related toxicity syndrome of renal, cerebral, and liver dysfunction; metabolic acidosis; and deposition of calcium
oxalate
crystals in tissues is reported in association with various apparently unrelated treatments for a wide range of diseases. The parenteral nutrient xylitol, the hyperosmolar agent glycerol, the polysorbate emulsifiers (e.g., in vitamin E preparations), the anesthetic methoxyflurane, and possibly the experimental hypoglycemic agent dichloroacetate all produce a toxicity syndrome very similar to that of ethylene glycol poisoning. In long-term, high-dose oral toxicity studies with rodents, these or similar agents also produce calcium
oxalate
bladder stones and bladder tumors. Studies with both unlabeled and labeled agents in humans and animals and in vitro experiments with purified enzymes, tissue homogenates, and isolated hepatocytes have provided both strong circumstantial and direct evidence for the existence of minor pathways of carbohydrate metabolism and of oxidative dealkylation and dehalogenation reactions in drug biotransformations that link these agents to endogenous
oxalate
production. Because urinary
oxalate
is now considered to be a critical factor in stone formation and because it is increasingly accepted that 80-90% of urinary
oxalate
is produced endogenously, it is now possible to formulate pathways that link
oxalate
production with dietary macronutrients. Therapeutic modifications of diet, in vivo hormonal milieu, and intracellular metabolic controls in relation to endogenous
oxalate
production may provide new forms of treatment for
urolithiasis
.
...
PMID:The relation of clinical catastrophes, endogenous oxalate production, and urolithiasis. 220 46
Different mathematical expressions have been proposed in the literature with the aim to reflect the risk of calcium
oxalate
urolithiasis
. Such expressions, as well as a number of new relationships proposed by us, have been evaluated in 76 patients and 34 normal subjects. Stone-formers were divided into two groups: patients with normal calcium and
oxalate
excretion and patients with hypercalciuria and/or hyperoxaluria. The results obtained were comparatively evaluated. Several formulae gave some acceptable results, but none of them were excellent. This can be explained by the fact that these discrimination indexes more or less reflect supersaturation and/or inhibition deficit, but none of them reflect promoting factors such as heterogeneous nucleation and/or aggregation capacity.
...
PMID:Can a relationship reflect the risk of calcium oxalate urolithiasis? 221 Sep 74
A study was made of 819 patients attending a metabolic stone clinic. A firm diagnosis was made in 708 (86%) and in 132 of these (19%) the diagnosis was thought to be chronic dehydration. The records were available for study for 87 males and 11 females in the chronic dehydration group. The mean age at presentation was 43 years. The causes of chronic dehydration were hot climate (62%), with hot occupation and low water intake almost equal in second place. In patients with a single cause of chronic dehydration, 57% also had a dietary risk factor for
urolithiasis
and this was most commonly high
oxalate
intake. Following dietary advice, the mean urinary volume increased from 1720 to 2475 ml/24 h. This was accompanied by a rise in mean urinary calcium from 6.02 to 6.96 mmol/24 h, presumably due to the calcium in the additional water drunk. Urinary
oxalate
did not change significantly. The mean follow-up time was 4.85 years and the stone recurrence rate was low. It was concluded that chronic dehydration is a common cause of
urolithiasis
; this can be treated satisfactorily by increasing water intake plus dietary advice in certain cases.
...
PMID:Chronic dehydration stone disease. 222 29
To the now 17 case reports in caucasian patients of an
urolithiasis
in a rare purine metabolism disorder 2,8-dihydroxyadeninuria due to missing activity of adenine phosphoribosyltransferase 3 further cases are presented. Firstly, a monozygotic twin pair is afflicted (13-year-old boys). All calculi be composed of pure 2,8-DHA, except a mixed calculus in a 38-year-old man containing of 80% 2,8-DHA and 20% calcium
oxalate
. The actual literature is reviewed.
...
PMID:[Urolithiasis in 2,8-dihydroxyadeninuria: presentation of 3 additional cases]. 223 80
We have evaluated the urinary excretion of promoting (calcium, phosphorus, uric acid,
oxalate
) and inhibiting (citrate, magnesium, glycosaminoglycans) factors of crystallization in subjects with idiopathic hypercalciuria and calcium
urolithiasis
and in a control group. The examined children had a free diet and were drug free for the last 2 weeks. They were not affected by malabsorption, D-RTA, urinary tract infection, or urinary tract malformation (factors interfering with urinary excretion of citrate and
oxalate
). In the patients with calcium
urolithiasis
, the daily urinary excretion of
oxalate
was significantly higher (p less than 0.01), and the urinary excretion of citrate was significantly lower (p less than 0.001) than in the subjects with idiopathic hypercalciuria and in the control group. Among the subjects with idiopathic hypercalciuria, those aged 4-9 years had a significantly reduced, though in the normal range, urinary excretion of citrate as compared with those aged 10-15 years (362 +/- 189 and 503 +/- 198 mg/g creatinine/24 h, respectively; p less than 0.01). Our data show that hypocitruria may play an important role in the pathogenesis of
urolithiasis
in children with idiopathic hypercalciuria. In these cases, the urinary citrate excretion was not inversely related to age, as has been suggested by other authors.
...
PMID:Promoters and inhibitors of calcium urolithiasis in children. 225 56
The most important measure in the prophylaxis of idiopathic calcium
urolithiasis
is dietary advice. Patients should be kept to a high-fluid intake, increasing their diuresis by at least 0.51. The mineral content of drinking water seems to be of minor importance, but the liquid should be low in carbohydrates and
oxalate
. The intake of animal proteins should be reduced to no more than five meals with meat, fish or poultry per week. Excesses of
oxalate
-rich food must be avoided. The daily intake of calcium in dairy products should be in the range of 800-1200 mg. Sodium and refined carbohydrates should be moderately restricted. Medical treatment is indicated only in cases of recurrence under the appropriate diet. Selective treatment according to urinary chemical composition is favoured; alkali citrate, thiazides, allopurinol, and pyridoxine are of major interest.
...
PMID:Prophylaxis in idiopathic calcium urolithiasis. 229 Dec 48
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
A 27-year-old woman with multiple bilobal liver metastases of a carcinoid tumour and carcinoid syndrome was treated with the somatostatin analogue Octreotide, 450-600 micrograms daily subcutaneously. This improved previous attacks of marked epigastric pain, while endocrine activity and tumour mass remained unchanged. Shortly after treatment had begun, soft fatty stools and oxaluria were noted. After six months severe renal colics were found to be due to non-opaque caliceal calculi, and a contracted non-functioning gallbladder was discovered. The calculi consisted of
oxalate
. The enteric hyperoxalosis, oxaluria and
urolithiasis
were presumably side effects of the Octreotide treatment.
...
PMID:[Enteral hyperoxalosis due to therapy with a somatostatin analog]. 229 34
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