Search results for "Stone analysis"

showing 2 items of 2 documents

Slightly radiopaque uric acid calculi: impact upon therapeutic considerations?

1989

Ten patients with slightly radiopaque urinary calculi were treated by percutaneous litholapaxy or even open surgery. The stone analysis revealed uric acid as the main stone composite suggesting that these patients should have been treated by oral litholysis alone alkalinizing the urine and decreasing uric acid levels with allopurinol. CT density measurements proved that concrements with HE less than 600 can be successfully dissolved by oral medication alone. Twenty-four patients were subsequently treated by oral citrate alkalinizing the spontaneous urine to pH 6.8-7.2 dissolving even large staghorns within 6-8 weeks. CT density measurements have become a routine diagnostic procedure when po…

Aged 80 and overMalemedicine.medical_specialtyPercutaneousbusiness.industryUrologyUrinary systemOpen surgeryHydrogen-Ion ConcentrationMiddle Agedurologic and male genital diseasesStone analysisSurgeryUric Acidchemistry.chemical_compoundKidney CalculichemistryLitholapaxyMedicineUric acidHumansFemalebusinessTomography X-Ray ComputedAgedUrologia internationalis
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Urolithiasis Following Portacaval Shunt in Rats

1987

A reliable technique for a portacaval anastomosis (PCA) in rats was first published by Lee and Fisher 1961. Since then the biological and biochemical consequences have been studied extensively in numerous investigations. The occurrence of a urolithiasis following PCA was first reported by Herz et al. 1972. Disturbances of uric acid metabolism that were caused by the shunt were thought to be responsible. They should lead to an increased production of endogenous uric acid and thus to hyperuricosuria. Investigations that were published since then mainly focused on chemical stone analysis (Bichler et al. 1974; Rasenack et al. 1977; Wallace et al. 1984).

medicine.medical_specialtyStone formationbusiness.industryPortacaval anastomosisPortacaval shuntHyperuricosuriamedicine.diseaseStone analysisGastroenterologychemistry.chemical_compoundchemistryInternal medicineMedicineUric acidbusiness
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