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Best Practice in Interventional Management of Urolithiasis: An Update from the European Association of Urology Guidelines Panel for Urolithiasis 2022.

European Urology Focus, 2022
R. Geraghty   +11 more
semanticscholar   +1 more source

Urolithiasis in pregnancy

International Urogynecology Journal, 2009
Urolithiasis is the most common cause of urological-related abdominal pain in pregnant women after urinary tract infection. The disease is not uncommon during pregnancy occurring in 1/200 to 1/2,000 women, which is not different from the incidence reported in the nonpregnant female population of reproductive age.
Asterios Fotas   +2 more
openaire   +3 more sources

Urolithiasis in Adolescents

Archives of Pediatrics & Adolescent Medicine, 1978
The characteristics of 31 adolescent patients aged 11 to 20 years with urolithiasis were examined by means of a ten-year retrospective chart review. The majority of stones were found to be secondary to preexisting conditions, with the most common being bladder dysfunction (neurogenic or exstrophy).
Richard G. MacKenzie, Alwin C. Rambar
openaire   +3 more sources

An overview of global research landscape in etiology of urolithiasis based on bibliometric analysis

Urolithiasis, 2023
Caitao Dong   +7 more
semanticscholar   +1 more source

Protective roles of flavonoids and flavonoid-rich plant extracts against urolithiasis: A review

Critical reviews in food science and nutrition, 2018
In the urinary system, urolithiasis is the third prevalent disorder which causes severe pain in individuals. Urinary stones are composed of calcium oxalate (CaOx) and calcium phosphate in approximately 80% of patients.
Xiangquan Zeng, Y. Xi, Weibo Jiang
semanticscholar   +1 more source

Urolithiasis in childhood

Urology, 1977
The management of 131 children with urinary calculi is described. Boys out-numbered girls 2:1. Five per cent of the patients had identifiable metabolic causes, while 78 per cent had infected renal lithiasis. With appropriate therapy, stone disease became inactive in 79 per cent of the children.
R. Nagel, H. Marquardt
openaire   +3 more sources

Urolithiasis in Pregnancy

European Urology, 1984
A retrospective analysis of pregnancies complicated by urolithiasis in a major referral center for high-risk pregnancies indicated an incidence of 1:2,534. In contrast to previous series, the majority of patients were primiparas. The judicious use of hydration, analgesics and antibiotic therapy resulted in a high rate of spontaneous passage of stones ...
Sean O’Regan   +2 more
openaire   +3 more sources

Nutrition and Urolithiasis

New England Journal of Medicine, 1978
FORMATION of stones within the urinary tract is a complication of many varied metabolic disorders.1 The nutritional aspects of urolithiasis, especially if one includes fluid intake, are important in both cause and treatment. From the time of Hippocrates, the benefit of maintaining a high urine flow in patients with urinary calculi has been recognized ...
Lynwood H. Smith   +2 more
openaire   +3 more sources

International Alliance of Urolithiasis (IAU) guidelines on the metabolic evaluation and medical management of urolithiasis

Urolithiasis, 2022
G. Zeng   +22 more
semanticscholar   +1 more source

Urolithiasis.

East African medical journal, 1991
Inguinal varicocelectomy was performed on 27 selected infertile males with Grade III varicoceles. Follow up was effected for eighteen months. 18 (66%) patients recorded improvement in sperm count to above (20 X 10(6)/ML). 17 (63%) patients recorded improvement in active sperm mortility to above 40%.
openaire   +1 more source

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