Results 291 to 300 of about 239,893 (351)
Dynamic Uric Acid Changes and Outcomes in CKD in the African American Study of Kidney Disease and Hypertension. [PDF]
John P, Jalal D.
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Uric Acid in First-Episode Psychosis: A Systematic Review. [PDF]
Rego D, Ferreira SR, Madeira N.
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Low salivary uric acid levels are independently associated with periodontitis. [PDF]
Lorente L +9 more
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Uric acid can be a true cause of hypertension, not a simple bystander. [PDF]
Ko KD.
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FBP1 promotes ABCG2-mediated uric acid excretion through activation of the PI3K/AKT/CREB signaling pathway. [PDF]
Bai Q +7 more
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Revealing the hidden impact of SGLT2 inhibitors on uric acid levels: a retrospective multicenter cohort study. [PDF]
Habeeb EA +7 more
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Current Rheumatology Reports, 2007
Uric acid nephrolithiasis is typically found in individuals with a low urine pH and a normal concentration of urinary uric acid. Patients with a history of gout are at greater risk of forming uric acid stones, as are patients with obesity, diabetes, or the complete metabolic syndrome. The unifying renal tubular abnormality of these disorders appears to
Scott E, Liebman +2 more
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Uric acid nephrolithiasis is typically found in individuals with a low urine pH and a normal concentration of urinary uric acid. Patients with a history of gout are at greater risk of forming uric acid stones, as are patients with obesity, diabetes, or the complete metabolic syndrome. The unifying renal tubular abnormality of these disorders appears to
Scott E, Liebman +2 more
openaire +4 more sources
Annals of Internal Medicine, 1979
Excerpt To the editor: The article by Simkin and associates in the July issue (1) discussed a common problem in clinical medicine and provoked much conversation among the physicians here.
C, Greenberg, B K, Jayaswal
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Excerpt To the editor: The article by Simkin and associates in the July issue (1) discussed a common problem in clinical medicine and provoked much conversation among the physicians here.
C, Greenberg, B K, Jayaswal
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The American Journal of Medicine, 1968
Urinary tract stones were known in prehistoric times. The oldest stone was unearthed in upper Egypt, dated approximately 4800 B.C. (Shattock, 1905). Stones have been discovered from Egyptian mummies of different dynasties (Miller, 1929; Wesson, 1935; Guthrie, 1946; Sigerist, 1951; Butt, 1956).
A B, Gutman, T F, Yü
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Urinary tract stones were known in prehistoric times. The oldest stone was unearthed in upper Egypt, dated approximately 4800 B.C. (Shattock, 1905). Stones have been discovered from Egyptian mummies of different dynasties (Miller, 1929; Wesson, 1935; Guthrie, 1946; Sigerist, 1951; Butt, 1956).
A B, Gutman, T F, Yü
openaire +2 more sources

