نتایج جستجو برای: calcium oxalate stone

تعداد نتایج: 194699  

Journal: :Asia Pacific journal of clinical nutrition 1999
S C Noonan G P Savage

Oxalic acid and its salts occur as end products of metabolism in a number of plant tissues. When these plants are eaten they may have an adverse effect because oxalates bind calcium and other minerals. While oxalic acid is a normal end product of mammalian metabolism, the consumption of additional oxalic acid may cause stone formation in the urinary tract when the acid is excreted in the urine....

Journal: :American family physician 2011
Lynda Frassetto Ingrid Kohlstadt

The incidence of nephrolithiasis (kidney stones) is rising worldwide, especially in women and with increasing age. Kidney stones are associated with chronic kidney disease. Preventing recurrence is largely specific to the type of stone (e.g., calcium oxalate, calcium phosphate, cystine, struvite [magnesium ammonium phosphate]), and uric acid stones); however, even when the stone cannot be retri...

2016
Allen L. Rodgers Bernhard Hess Giovanni Gambaro Alberto Trinchieri

Urinary stone disease is a very common disease whose prevalence is still increasing. Stone formation is frequently associated with other diseases of affluence such as hypertension, osteoporosis, cardiovascular disease, metabolic syndrome, and insulin resistance. The increasing concentration of lithogenic solutes along the different segments of the nephron involves supersaturation conditions lea...

Journal: :Kidney international 2002
Saeed R Khan Patricia A Glenton Renal Backov Daniel R Talham

BACKGROUND Cell membranes and their lipids play critical roles in calcification. Specific membrane phospholipids promote the formation of calcium phosphate and become a part of the organic matrix of growing calcification. We propose that membrane lipids also promote the formation of calcium oxalate (CaOx) and calcium phosphate (CaP) containing kidney stones, and become a part of their stone mat...

Journal: :Biomedicine & pharmacotherapy = Biomedecine & pharmacotherapie 2007
A Cupisti M Meola C D'Alessandro G Bernabini E Pasquali A Carpi G Barsotti

Epidemiological data suggest an association between kidney stones and some features of metabolic syndrome such as an overweight condition, arterial hypertension or glucose intolerance. However, mechanisms remain to be elucidated. This study aimed to evaluate insulin resistance, as assessed by homeostasis model assessment (HOMA-IR), and urine composition analysis in patients affected by calcium ...

2014
Hafiza Sobia Ramzan

Formation of renal calculi is one of the common urological disorders. Urinary stone disorder has always been a common disease currently affecting 10-12% of the population in industrialized countries. The highest prevalence of this disease seems to be at the age of 20-40 years for men, while for the women, the incidence of this disease is somewhat later. Various previous studies have shown that ...

2014
Hulya Ozturk Emine Dagistan Ugur Uyeturk

Journal homepage: http://www.pediatricurologycasereports.com A child with a large bladder stone: A case report Hulya Ozturk, Emine Dagistan, Ugur Uyeturk Abstract Bladder stones account for approximately 5% of all urinary system stones and are prevalent among children living in poor or rural regions. The symptoms and findings in children with bladder stones are usually urgency, frequency, incon...

2015
Emmanuel Letavernier Sophie Vandermeersch Olivier Traxer Mohamed Tligui Laurent Baud Pierre Ronco Jean-Philippe Haymann Michel Daudon Pavlos Malindretos.

Renal stone incidence has progressively increased in industrialized countries, but the implication of Randall plaque in this epidemic remains unknown. Our objectives were to determine whether the prevalence of Randall plaque-related stones increased during the past decades after having analyzed 30,149 intact stones containing mainly calcium oxalate since 1989 (cross-sectional study), and to ide...

Journal: :Journal of the American Society of Nephrology : JASN 1996
J L Porile J R Asplin J H Parks Y Nakagawa F L Coe

Urine from mammalian kidneys is regularly supersaturated with respect to calcium oxalate monohydrate, the most common solid phase in human nephrolithiasis, and also inhibits the nucleation, growth, and aggregation of calcium oxalate crystals. Nephrolithiasis is often associated with increased supersaturation, and it is assumed that this increase overbalances the inhibition effects, causing ston...

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