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Query: UMLS:C0451641 (
urolithiasis
)
3,973
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
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
FActors predisposing to renal stone formation have been studied in 309 patients. Dehydration before diagnosis of
urolithiasis
was due in 12% of the cases to frequent diarrhea and in 36% to bad working conditions. Daily fluid intake was less than 1 liter in 25% of the patients before stone formation and was persistently low in 11% after stone discovery. 41% of the patients drank irregularly over the day, before stone formation, and 11% continued to do so after its detection. Immobilization was present in the patient's history in over 20% of the cases. Normocalcemic hypercalciuria was found in 26% of the patients. 24% of the patients drank
water
with a calcium concentration of 100--500 mg/l before the lithiasis was diagnosed; 21% continued to do so after stone discovery or paradoxically even drank harder
water
than before stone detection.
...
PMID:High fluid-low calcium intake: not all renal stone formers adhere to this simple treatment. 42 10
Urinary calculosis is, according to the different medical statistics, one of the most common diseases among flight personnel. The causes which favour
urolithiasis
are reviewed in relation with the flight factors themselves and the type of life which these professionals lead. Diet, low intake of fluids, and the loss of
water
through the skin and lungs, are together with the sedentary nature of the work the most obvious causes as etiological factors. The risks which this pathology supposes for flight personnel and their suitability for flight under these conditions are studied. Likewise, the measures which should be established to prevent this anomaly as far as possible are reviewed.
...
PMID:[Urolithiasis among flight personnel (author's transl)]. 43 Nov 65
A survey of 1974 discharge data from United States hospitals shows an apparent increase in
urolithiasis
. A negative correlation has been found between the geographical distribution of the relative frequency of hospital discharges, a diagnosis of
urolithiasis
, and reported
water
hardness.
...
PMID:Stone incidence as related to water hardness in different geographical regions of the United States. 50 78
Male Wistar rats were fed a basal diet, Purina Laboratory Chow, and an oxalate calculi-producing diet (CPD). The CPD was the basal diet containing 3 per cent glycolic acid. Sodium pyruvate, DL-alanine, alpha-keto glutaric acid, thiamine pyrophosphate, and L-glutamic acid were added to the CPD to determine their effectiveness in preventing calculi formation. The effectiveness of methyl glyoxal was determined by adding it to the drinking
water
. Rats fed CPD for 4 weeks developed calculi in the ureters, bladder, renal tubules, and/or renal pelvis and papilla. Rats in groups fed alanine and/or pyruvate had no calculi in their renal tubules or ureters; additionally, these rats had a significant reduction in incidence and amount of deposits in the renal pelvis and bladder. Rats in groups fed alpha-keto glutaric acid, thiamine pyrophosphate, L-glutamic acid, and methyl glyoxal developed equally or more severe oxalate
urolithiasis
than those on CPD alone. Results of this study show that either pyruvate or alanine at appropriate levels may be beneficial in preventing oxalate urolith formation.
...
PMID:Prevention of oxalate urolithiasis by some compounds. 64
An area of high incidence of renal calculi in Northern England and Scotland has been found to coincide with an area of soft
water
supply. However, in Wales and South West England the equation of soft
water
with high incidence of
urolithiasis
is lacking, and an enquiry into regional variations in diet reveals that a high intake of fruit and vegetables may protect against renal calculi.
...
PMID:The influence of calcium content of water, intake of vegetables and fruit and of other food factors upon the incidence of renal calculi. 116
The clinic-physiological examination of patients with
urolithiasis
has revealed that single and course taking of medicinal
water
Naftusya induces shifts of
water
-electrolyte exchange in the organism, their expressivity and direction are determined, as a rule, by the initial value of indices. As a whole, the effect of
water
Naftusya can be characterized as "equilibratory" one effecting by the "law of the initial value".
...
PMID:[Effect of the mineral water naftusy on some indices of water-electrolyte metabolism in man]. 134 Apr 57
By using an ethylene glycol-induced
urolithiasis
model, we assessed the role of testosterone in the pathogenesis of
urolithiasis
. The intact and castrated male and female rats were fed with 0.5% ethylene glycol in drinking
water
for four weeks. The renal excretions of oxalate, citrate and other electrolytes were measured, and the stone and crystal deposit were examined microscopically. The results showed that drinking a loading of 0.5% ethylene glycol for four weeks produced hyperoxaluria in all rats, but the intact male rats excreted more urinary oxalate than any other groups of rats. The ethylene glycol-fed rats exhibited hypocitraturia except the castrated male rats. However,
urolithiasis
occurred in intact male but not female rats. Castration in male rats fed with ethylene glycol dramatically decreased the incidence of renal stone from 71.4% (5/7) to 14.3% (1/7). On the other hand, there was still no renal stone formed in the oophorectomized female rats which received ethylene glycol treatment. These data indicate that serum testosterone level plays a determinant role in
urolithiasis
formation.
...
PMID:Determinant role of testosterone in the pathogenesis of urolithiasis in rats. 155 10
A questionnaire survey was carried out to determine the prevalence of urinary stone disease in 406 male workers in several occupations. There were 119 quarry drilling and crusher workers (outdoor, physically active), 77 quarry truck and loader drivers (outdoor, physically inactive), 92 postal deliverymen (outdoor, physically active), 75 postal clerks (indoor, physically inactive), and 43 hospital maintenance workers (indoor, physically active). The prevalence of urinary stone disease was five times higher in outdoor workers (5.2 per cent) compared to indoor workers (0.85 per cent, P less than 0.05). Contrary to expectation, no increased risk of
urolithiasis
was apparent in physically inactive workers. Chronic dehydration is likely to be the most important risk factor for the increased risk of
urolithiasis
in outdoor workers in the tropics, and should be easily prevented by increased
water
intake.
...
PMID:Dehydration from outdoor work and urinary stones in a tropical environment. 157 29
Almost all segments of the gastrointestinal tract have been used as urinary tract substitutes. The specific nutritional and gastrointestinal complications depend on the particular portion of bowel that is removed from the alimentary tract. The use of stomach theoretically may predispose the patient to hypergastrinemia and peptic ulcer disease, hypocalcemia, and iron deficiency or megaloblastic anemia. Resection of a large amount of jejunum causes malabsorption. Limited use of colon segments usually is well tolerated, but loss of large parts of the colon directly decreases available absorptive area, resulting in diarrhea. Resection of the ileum and ileocecal valve can lead to several disease states. One is mixed secretory-osmotic diarrhea. Decreased ileal reabsorption of bile salts results in fat malabsorption and steatorrhea. The presentation of increased amounts of bile salts and fatty acids to the colon decreases
water
absorption and stimulates active chloride and
water
secretion, producing a cholera-like high-volume secretory diarrhea. The loss of the ileocecal valve and ileum segment accelerates intestinal transit time, which does not allow for complete digestion and absorption of food.
Water
and electrolytes remain associated with undigested food particles and may overwhelm the absorptive capacity of the colon, resulting in an osmotic diarrhea. A second problem is vitamin B12 deficiency. Surgical reduction of sites in the terminal ileum for active and exclusive uptake of vitamin B12 might lead to hypovitaminosis. If this is unrecognized, patients may develop irreversible neurologic injury. A third problem is cholelithiasis. Derangements in bile salt metabolism can occur when as little as 10 cm of ileum is resected, and the propensity to form gallstones is increased. Pigment gallstones appear to be the predominant stone associated with ileal resections. The fourth possible problem is
urolithiasis
, the etiology of which is multifactorial in patients with ileal resections. With decreased availability of bile salts, fat malabsorption occurs. Fatty acids bind with calcium and magnesium to form soaps, resulting in increased levels of free oxalate available for absorption. Moreover, fatty acids directly increase colonic permeability to oxalate.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
...
PMID:Nutritional and gastrointestinal complications of the use of bowel segments in the lower urinary tract. 194 6
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