Literature DB >> 7933820

An increasing number of calcium oxalate stone events worsens treatment outcome.

J H Parks1, F L Coe.   

Abstract

Current practice recommends metabolic evaluation of patients who have formed multiple renal stones, but not those with one stone or temporally remote stones. This presumes that recentness and recurrence imply greater risk of new future stones. We hypothesize that number of stones reflects how long patients are permitted to form stones untreated, and that forming more stones, itself, raises risk of future stones despite treatment. Our report is a retrospective analysis of 371 male patients selected from a comprehensive clinical and laboratory data base containing 2,527 patients with nephrolithiasis. Before treatment, number of stone events rises with time of observation, and rate of stone event occurrence is constant or falls. During treatment, relapse is correlated with number of pretreatment stones. Life table analysis showed increasing relapse for patients grouped into those with one, two, and three or more stones. Even though number of stones seems controlled by the interval of observation before treatment, more stones predict higher relapse during treatment. Perhaps by leaving nuclei of crystals as residues, stones appear to promote new stones, and the practice of waiting while patients declare themselves multiple stone formers may not always be the best.

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Year:  1994        PMID: 7933820     DOI: 10.1038/ki.1994.224

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Kidney Int        ISSN: 0085-2538            Impact factor:   10.612


  9 in total

Review 1.  Effectiveness of Treatment Modalities on Kidney Stone Recurrence.

Authors:  Anna L Zisman
Journal:  Clin J Am Soc Nephrol       Date:  2017-08-22       Impact factor: 8.237

2.  Predictors of Symptomatic Kidney Stone Recurrence After the First and Subsequent Episodes.

Authors:  Lisa E Vaughan; Felicity T Enders; John C Lieske; Vernon M Pais; Marcelino E Rivera; Ramila A Mehta; Terri J Vrtiska; Andrew D Rule
Journal:  Mayo Clin Proc       Date:  2018-12-04       Impact factor: 7.616

Review 3.  Insights on the pathology of kidney stone formation.

Authors:  Andrew P Evan; Fredric L Coe; James E Lingeman; Elaine Worcester
Journal:  Urol Res       Date:  2005-08-03

4.  Mineralogy and chemistry of urinary stones: patients from North Jordan.

Authors:  Iyad Ahmed Abboud
Journal:  Environ Geochem Health       Date:  2007-12-07       Impact factor: 4.609

5.  The ROKS nomogram for predicting a second symptomatic stone episode.

Authors:  Andrew D Rule; John C Lieske; Xujian Li; L Joseph Melton; Amy E Krambeck; Eric J Bergstralh
Journal:  J Am Soc Nephrol       Date:  2014-08-07       Impact factor: 10.121

6.  Metabolic assessment in pure struvite stones formers: is it necessary?

Authors:  Alexandre Danilovic; Thiago Augusto Cunha Ferreira; Samirah Abreu Gomes; Isabela Akemi Wei; Fabio Carvalho Vicentini; Fabio Cesar Miranda Torricelli; Giovanni Scala Marchini; Eduardo Mazzucchi; Miguel Srougi; William Carlos Nahas
Journal:  J Bras Nefrol       Date:  2021 Apr-Jun

7.  Protocol-based metabolic evaluation in high-risk patients with renal stones in North India.

Authors:  Sandeep Julka; Sushil Kumar Gupta; Aneesh Srivastava
Journal:  Indian J Endocrinol Metab       Date:  2012-03

8.  Relationship between urine specific gravity and the prevalence rate of kidney stone.

Authors:  Weipu Mao; Hui Zhang; Zhipeng Xu; Jiang Geng; Ziwei Zhang; Jianping Wu; Bin Xu; Ming Chen
Journal:  Transl Androl Urol       Date:  2021-01

9.  Neutrophil-lymphocyte ratio acts as a novel diagnostic biomarker for kidney stone prevalence and number of stones passed.

Authors:  Weipu Mao; Jianping Wu; Ziwei Zhang; Zhipeng Xu; Bin Xu; Ming Chen
Journal:  Transl Androl Urol       Date:  2021-01
  9 in total

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