Re: Silicate urolithiasis in a pediatric patient
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منابع مشابه
Re: Silicate urolithiasis in a pediatric patient
First, the authors mentioned that there were no associated risk factors for silicate stone in any form in the studied child.[1] I presume that the following risk factor ought to be seriously considered. In India, ground water is being used as raw water for 85% public water supply.[2] It was found that all parameters of permissible limit of drinking water, including silicate were not set for all...
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A retrospective review was performed of the records of 148 Croatian children with urolithiasis treated between 1989 and 2003. The study evaluated age, gender, family history, clinical symptoms, location of stone, laboratory findings, stone composition, mode of treatment and compared our results with data from higher and lower socio-economic countries. The mean age of our patients was 9.38 years...
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Although the prevalence of urolithiasis is nearly 2-3% in childhood, the risk of recurrence may range from 6.5-54%. There has been an increase in urinary stone disease among pediatric age groups, and stone disease has a multifactorial etiology. After the diagnosis, detailed metabolic evaluation is required. High recurrence rates, therapeutic irregularities and deficiency in diagnosis may lead t...
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Silicate urinary calculi are rare in humans, with an incidence of 0.2% of all urinary calculi. Most cases were related to excess ingestion of silicate, typically by taking magnesium trisilicate as an antacid for peptic ulcers over a long period of time; however, there also existed unrelated cases, whose mechanism of development remains unclear. On the other hand, zonisamide, a newer antiepilept...
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ژورنال
عنوان ژورنال: Indian Journal of Urology
سال: 2017
ISSN: 0970-1591
DOI: 10.4103/iju.iju_116_17