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Hyperuricemia and Renal Risk

High Blood Pressure & Cardiovascular Prevention, 2014
Asymptomatic mild hyperuricemia has been reported in association with a number of conditions associated with chronic kidney disease, including hypertension, insulin resistance, cerebrovascular and cardiac disease. Experimental studies indicate that serum uric acid may directly and indirectly promote renal damage by several pathogenetic mechanisms both ...
VIAZZI, FRANCESCA CHIARA   +3 more
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Hyperuricemia and gout

Current Opinion in Rheumatology, 1994
Due to high uric acid clearance, which occurs prior to puberty, hyperuricosuria rather than hyperuricemia may be the only clue to diagnosis of purine overproduction in children who have enzymatic defects or who develop the condition in the course of treatment of malignancies.
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Gout and hyperuricemia

Current Opinion in Rheumatology, 1997
Although there continue to be relatively few basic studies of the metabolism and transport of urate, clinical interest in gout and hyperuricemia remains high. A number of interesting new observations are described here from the published literature of the past year.
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Treatment of Hyperuricemia

JAMA: The Journal of the American Medical Association, 1980
To the Editor.— I appreciated the comments made by John H. Talbott, MD, on psoriasis-associated gouty hyperuricemia (242:1193-1197, 1979). Aside from what appears to be a typographical error in the probenecid dosage (0.5 g, rather than the stated 0.5 mg), the rate of urinary uric acid excretion may provide further information useful to the selection ...
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Prevalence of Diabetes in Patients with Hyperuricemia and Gout: A Systematic Review and Meta-analysis

Current Diabetes Reports, 2023
Jinguo Jiang   +6 more
semanticscholar   +1 more source

Management of Gout and Hyperuricemia

Primary Care: Clinics in Office Practice, 1984
The medical management of gout follows a logical course in eventually controlling the underlying hyperuricemia. Approached properly, it is one of the most gratifying rheumatic diseases for a physician to treat.
Peter A. Simkin, David Wisner
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Neonatal hyperuricemia

The Journal of Pediatrics, 1976
Serum concentrations and urinary excretion of uric acid were measured in ten normal newborn infants and in 13 patients with the idiopathic respiratory distress syndrome. In the normal infants, serum urate increased from a mean value of 6.0 mg/dl in cord blood to 7.0 mg/dl at 24 hours, followed by a decrease to 3.5 mg/dl over the next three days.
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Problems of Hyperuricemia

JAMA: The Journal of the American Medical Association, 1966
To the Editor:— We would like to comment on the interesting article by Brest et al ( 195 :42, 1966). We are reluctant to endorse blanket prophylactic administration of uricosuric agents to patients with diuretic-induced hyperuricemia for the following reasons: Except for gout and uric acid stone formation, there is no evidence that hyperuricemia is
Solomon Fisch, Robert J. Sperber
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Cystinuria With Hyperuricemia

JAMA: The Journal of the American Medical Association, 1967
CYSTINURIA is intrinsically a nonfatal metabolic abnormality with variable morbidity. The morbidity associated with this disorder is directly related to the relative insolubility of cystine and the resulting formation of cystine stones in the urinary tract.
John J. Canary, C. Robert Meloni
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[Hyperuricemia and Gout].

Giornale italiano di nefrologia : organo ufficiale della Societa italiana di nefrologia, 2016
Already known to ancient Egyptians, gout is one of the first diseases which have been described as a clinical entity. To date, gout is the most common form of inflammatory arthritis. Gout is defined by the deposition of monosodium urate crystals within tissues, causing episodes of acute arthritis and the development of tophi, nephrolithiasis, and urate
DELBARBA, Elisa   +4 more
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