An increasing number of calcium oxalate stone events worsens treatment outcome. 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 obse...
Purpose: We define the role of urine volume as a stone risk factor in idiopathic calcium stone disea...
Clinical implications of abundant calcium phosphate in routinely analyzed kidney stones.BackgroundTo...
Recurrent renal stones occur in 7.5% ofCaucasian men and 3% of all women. Even withincreasing urbani...
Serial crystalluria determination and the risk of recurrence in calcium stone formers.BackgroundUrin...
PURPOSE: Kidney stone disease is characterized by a relatively high rate of recurrence. In our stud...
Introduction: Urinary stone disease is a common urologic problem and recurrence in stone formation i...
ABSTRACTObjective: Renal stone disease has become an important clinical condition worldwide, and it ...
BACKGROUND: Nephrolithiasis is a frequent condition. While it is generally accepted that such condit...
Conclusion: As more research is done on kidney stones it becomes abundantly clear that even more res...
Background: Because the causes of stones are uncertain, interventions to prevent recurrence have an ...
Kidney stones are mineral deposits in the renal calyces and pelvis that are found free or attached t...
PURPOSE: We investigate further the recurrence rate and risk factors for recurrence in 300 consecuti...
IntroductionNephrolithiasis is a major source of morbidity in the United States. In recent decades, ...
Background. The metabolic syndrome (MS) is associated with increased prevalence of kidney stones, ye...
Nephrolithiasis has been increasing over the last millennium. Although early epidemiologic studies h...
Purpose: We define the role of urine volume as a stone risk factor in idiopathic calcium stone disea...
Clinical implications of abundant calcium phosphate in routinely analyzed kidney stones.BackgroundTo...
Recurrent renal stones occur in 7.5% ofCaucasian men and 3% of all women. Even withincreasing urbani...
Serial crystalluria determination and the risk of recurrence in calcium stone formers.BackgroundUrin...
PURPOSE: Kidney stone disease is characterized by a relatively high rate of recurrence. In our stud...
Introduction: Urinary stone disease is a common urologic problem and recurrence in stone formation i...
ABSTRACTObjective: Renal stone disease has become an important clinical condition worldwide, and it ...
BACKGROUND: Nephrolithiasis is a frequent condition. While it is generally accepted that such condit...
Conclusion: As more research is done on kidney stones it becomes abundantly clear that even more res...
Background: Because the causes of stones are uncertain, interventions to prevent recurrence have an ...
Kidney stones are mineral deposits in the renal calyces and pelvis that are found free or attached t...
PURPOSE: We investigate further the recurrence rate and risk factors for recurrence in 300 consecuti...
IntroductionNephrolithiasis is a major source of morbidity in the United States. In recent decades, ...
Background. The metabolic syndrome (MS) is associated with increased prevalence of kidney stones, ye...
Nephrolithiasis has been increasing over the last millennium. Although early epidemiologic studies h...
Purpose: We define the role of urine volume as a stone risk factor in idiopathic calcium stone disea...
Clinical implications of abundant calcium phosphate in routinely analyzed kidney stones.BackgroundTo...
Recurrent renal stones occur in 7.5% ofCaucasian men and 3% of all women. Even withincreasing urbani...