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Query: UMLS:C0451641 (
urolithiasis
)
3,973
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
We found that a few patients with
urolithiasis
had normal parathyroid hormone levels but high cyclic AMP excretion. The purpose of this paper was to study the endocrinological mechanism. Male rats were given intraperitoneally dibutyryl cyclic AMP (DBcAMP), a derivative of cyclic AMP, per 100 gm of body weight for 50 days. Feed and
water
were supplied ad libitum. Crystal formation or calcification in mainly the dystal tubules and collecting system were found in 3 out of 10 rats, and renal calcium stones in 2 rats. The cyclic AMP of the renal parenchyma, especially the renal medulla, was elevated by more than 100 times after DBcAMP administration. Serum calcium levels, urinary calcium and phosphate excretion, and the adrenaline levels of the renal parenchyma were significantly increased. Serum parathyroid hormone was slightly enhanced, but vitamin D and the noradrenaline levels of the renal parenchyma were not changed. Based on these findings, it is suspected that stone formation in rats injected DBcAMP occurs through the action of DBcAMP on the renal tubules to increase urinary calcium excretion and to make renal stones as a form of primary hyperparathyroidism.
...
PMID:[Studies on the endocrinological metabolism of the parathyroid. I. The production of renal calcinosis by cyclic AMP injection in rat]. 300 37
Abnormalities in renal tubular function have been reported in adult patients with idiopathic renal hypercalciuria. To determine if such abnormalities are present early in the natural history of renal hypercalciuria, we evaluated renal tubular function in ten children with idiopathic renal hypercalciuria, aged 5-17 years. Seven of the children presented with
urolithiasis
and three with hematuria. Urinary calcium excretion ranged from 4 to 9 mg/kg per day, (5.2 +/- 0.5, mean +/- SEM) with a mean fasting urinary calcium to creatinine ration of 0.31 +/- 0.03. Studies described in this report were performed after 1 week of ingesting a diet containing 1,000 mg calcium, 3,000 mg sodium, and 100 mg purine. Clearance of creatinine ranged from 84 to 159 ml/min per 1.73 m2. Tm phosphate (mg/100 ml GFR) was normal in each child (mean 4.66 +/- 0.06 mg/100 ml GFR). Fractional excretion of uric acid, sodium and beta-2-microglobulin were also normal in each child. Serum bicarbonate concentrations ranged from 21.5 to 27 mEq/l with a mean of 24.4 +/- 0.5 mEq/l and all patients lowered urinary pH to less than 5.5. Hypotonic diuresis demonstrated normal free
water
clearance with a mean of 12.8 ml/min per 100 ml Cin. Distal sodium delivery and fractional distal sodium reabsorption were normal with a mean of 13.6 +/- 1.2% and 92.7 +/- 0.5%, respectively.
Water
deprivation studies demonstrated a range of maximum urinary osmolality from 711 to 1,020 mosmol/kg
H2O
with a mean of 864 +/- 34 mosmol/kg
H2O
. Seven healthy children, ingesting an identical study diet, concentrated their urine to a mean of 1,059 +/- 31 mosmol/kg h2O.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Renal function in children with idiopathic hypercalciuria. 315 15
Plasma cortisol and urinary excretion of
water
, sodium, potassium, calcium and magnesium have been studied in the rat after application of heat stress. There was a significant increase in plasma cortisol level after exposure to heat. During heat stress complete cessation of urine formation was observed. In the next 30 min there was statistically significant increase in the urinary excretion of
water
, sodium and calcium but not of potassium and magnesium. Urinary calcium/magnesium ratio was also significantly elevated. The increase in urinary
water
and electrolyte excretion seemed to be mediated through prostaglandins since it could be abolished by administration of indomethacin prior to the application of heat stress. On the basis of these results, the possible role of heat stress in the genesis of
urolithiasis
has been discussed.
...
PMID:Effect of acute environmental heat stress on urinary water and electrolyte excretion in the rat. 318 59
1. Because urinary prostaglandin excretion could play a role in idiopathic hypercalciuria (IH), we studied the excretion of prostaglandin E (PGE), calcium and sodium at various urine flows in 21 patients (14 males) with
urolithiasis
and IH, seven stone formers (five males) with normal calciuria and 20 controls (11 males). Dietary composition was comparable and sodium intake was restricted to 100-120 mmol/day. 2. Analyses were performed on 30 min urine collections obtained after overnight
water
deprivation and during
water
diuresis. Male IH patients had increased levels of urinary PGE at all ranges of urine flow. PGE excretion correlated directly with urine flow in patients and controls, but the slope of this relationship in individual IH male patients was steeper than in controls (P less than 0.01). Calciuria correlated directly with urine output in patients with IH but not in controls. Calcium and sodium excretion were directly correlated (P less than 0.0001) in patients and controls. There were no significant differences between absorptive IH (seven patients) and renal IH (eight patients). There were no significant differences between stone formers with normocalciuria and control subjects. 3. The findings suggest that increased urinary PGE could play a role in the hypercalciuria syndrome, possibly by promoting natriuresis.
...
PMID:Increased urinary excretion of prostaglandin E in patients with idiopathic hypercalciuria. 320 91
The increased production and excretion of oxalate in primary hyperoxaluria causes
urolithiasis
, nephrocalcinosis with renal failure, and systemic oxalosis. Systemic oxalosis occurs late in the course of the disease when there is both oxalate retention and increased oxalate synthesis. The uraemia can be controlled by conventional haemodialysis or peritoneal dialysis but treatment cannot usually keep up with accelerated rate of oxalate production, and dialysed patients develop systemic oxalosis. Most attempts to treat primary hyperoxaluria by renal transplantation have been unsuccessful because of rapid recurrence of nephrocalcinosis with uraemia and systemic oxalosis. Dynamic studies of overall oxalate metabolism in vivo have shown that the renal retention factor becomes a major determinant of oxalosis when the GFR decreases to less than 25 ml min-1 1.73 m-2. We conclude provisionally that vigorous haemodialysis should be begun and transplantation arranged when the GFR reaches this level. Such early transplantation with vigorous perioperative haemodialysis and a large perioperative diuresis of
water
gives good immediate graft function and oxalate mobilisation from the miscible oxalate pool. The longer term outlook is then influenced more by the factors which determine the success of renal transplantation in non-hyperoxaluric patients.
...
PMID:Renal transplantation in primary hyperoxaluria. 331 61
Current therapy for
urolithiasis
patients includes instructions to increase
water
intake and 24-hour urine output. Previous studies have measured changes in the 24-hour urine volume to evaluate the efficacy of fluid therapy in each patient. We used paper test strips to monitor urine pH and specific gravity in 22 of our stone clinic patients: 10 were instructed to increase
water
intake just before the study (group 1) and 12 were not so instructed (group 2). Mean specific gravities of 1.0222 (1.0238 corrected for pH) for group 1 and 1.0197 (1.0220 corrected for pH) for group 2 did not differ significantly. Urine specific gravities also were compared for 3 intervals: 1 to 9 a.m., 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. and 5 p.m. to 1 a.m. Of the 22 patients 10 (3 from group 1 and 7 from group 2) had significant diurnal variations in the urine specific gravities, corrected and uncorrected, among these 3 periods. In addition, both groups had a significantly higher mean specific gravity from 1 to 9 a.m. (1.0234 uncorrected and 1.0248 corrected) than from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. (1.0194 uncorrected and 1.0218 corrected). The 5 p.m. to 1 a.m. (mean of 1.0220 uncorrected and 1.0239 corrected) specific gravity did not differ significantly in either group. If 1.015 is the highest acceptable specific gravity of urine in stone patients, the findings suggest inadequate dilution of urine in these patients, whether or not they were instructed to increase
water
intake. Also, the significant diurnal variation in urine specific gravity would allow a nighttime triggering event at these hours of higher urine concentration.
...
PMID:Specific gravity test strips used in monitoring urine concentrations of urolithiasis patients. 333 31
Plasma Cortisol and urinary excretion of
water
, sodium, potassium, calcium and magnesium have been studied in the rat after application of 2 types of neurogenic stress:--(a) tight rubber band tourniquet and (b) electric shock. Plasma cortisol levels increased significantly after application of either type of stress. During both type of stress, there was statistically significant increase in the urinary excretion of
water
, sodium and calcium but not of potassium and magnesium. Urinary calcium/magnesium ratio was also significantly elevated. The results suggest that stress may be one of the factors involved in the genesis of
urolithiasis
.
...
PMID:Acute effects of neurogenic stress on urinary electrolyte excretion. 342 32
High dietary levels of magnesium (greater than 2 g/kg drymatter [DM]) have been implicated as the main causal factor of urinary calculi in concentrate-fed lambs. Experiments were performed to try to reproduce this effect of high magnesium (from added calcined magnesite) on the incidence of
urolithiasis
in lambs. In the first, store lambs were given diets containing magnesium in the following concentrations: A,2.9; B,8.6 g/km DM. Twenty-four blackface lambs were each allocated to A and B and the control group of 160 lambs was fed a combined dried grass/sugar beet pulp pellet and hay ad libitum (diet C). The animals were housed and fed ad libitum until they were killed at an average liveweight of 35 kg. No animals showed clinical signs of
urolithiasis
and post mortem only a trace of calculous material was recovered from one lamb fed diet A. In the second experiment housed Suffolk and Suffolk cross lambs were fed a starter beginning at three to four weeks old and changed to a finisher at a liveweight of 23 kg. The feeds were either high magnesium starter (5.7) and finisher (6.0) or low magnesium starter (2.3) and finisher (2.8 g/kg DM). Twenty-two single lambs and 32 twins were assigned to both high and low magnesium diets. Lambs fed additional magnesium drank more
water
/kg DM intake and one of the single lambs showed clinical signs of
urolithiasis
and was killed. No others showed clinical signs and from the 62 killed there was no post mortem recovery of calculous material.
...
PMID:Role of magnesium in the aetiology of ovine urolithiasis in fattening store lambs and intensively fattened lambs. 366 May 71
The tumor-promoting effect of uracil-induced calculi on rat urinary bladder carcinogenesis was investigated in male F344 rats pretreated with N-butyl-N-(4-hydroxybutyl)nitrosamine (BBN). Since uracil-induced calculi and papillomatosis of the bladder are reversible, uracil was given for a limited period after the treatment with BBN. Animals were given 0.05% BBN in their drinking
water
for 4 wk and then treated with uracil as 3% of the diet for 8 or 16 wk. After the uracil treatment, rats were given basal diet without uracil until Wk 28 of the experiment. Animals were killed from each group at the end of either Wk 12, 20, or 28. The incidence of carcinoma of the bladder was 40% after only 8 wk of uracil treatment following BBN initiation and increased to 100% when uracil treatment was extended to 16 wk. After discontinuation of uracil treatment, the papillomatosis disappeared, but the incidence of carcinoma steadily increased with increasing time. In the control group given BBN alone, only 1 of 16 rats had carcinoma at Wk 28. The present findings clearly demonstrate that uracil-induced
urolithiasis
had a strong promoting activity on BBN bladder carcinogenesis.
...
PMID:Strong promoting activity of reversible uracil-induced urolithiasis on urinary bladder carcinogenesis in rats initiated with N-butyl-N-(4-hydroxybutyl)nitrosamine. 367 2
In recent years, many hospitals in China have employed magnetized
water
in the treatment of
urolithiasis
with quite satisfactory results. Since 1979, we have carried out the following basic researches: (1) We compared the effectiveness of several different types of apparatus producing magnetized
water
and found that the best type was the Shanghai JW-1 mode apparatus with 1,350 gauss and to-and-fro magnetizing for 12 times. (2) We had tested the solubility of oxalate, uric acid and phosphate urolith both in ordinary and in magnetized
water
and found that phosphate urolith had better solubility in the latter. (3) The physical and chemical characteristics of magnetized
water
were studied, and the calcium crystals were found to be also soluble in it. (4) Experiments on fishes living in magnetized
water
showed that in their kidneys the amount of calcium crystals and tissue calcium level were lower than those in ordinary
water
. The basic theory of treatment of
urolithiasis
with magnetized
water
is discussed.
...
PMID:[Effect of magnetic water on urinary calculi--an experimental and clinical study]. 368 54
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