Tuesday, 12 August 2008

Renal Stone Disease: Treatment For The 21st Century

�UroToday.com - Renal infinitesimal calculus disease is one of the most ancient afflictions of human race and stiff a common cause for both bureau and emergency brake room urologist's visits. Approximately one of eight Caucasian patients forms a urinary tract endocarp within their lifetime.

The recurrence rate for these patients is about 50% in the ensuing decade. Men and patients with a phratry history of stone disease are three fold more likely to have a stone than the general population. The differences 'tween genders english hawthorn be diet, activity or gender related. Men have been shown to egest more oxalate in their urine piece women pass more citrate accounting for some of the differences in stone production. Residents in more affluent Western societies with diets high in animate being protein ar at highest risk for renal calculi.


With the development of ESWL, minuscule caliber endoscopes and safe percutaneous access to the upper urinary tract, the entire urinary tract potty be accessed, visualized and treated with minimally invasive techniques. While treatment options continue to improve, many patients command advanced techniques for hard stone management issues caused by stone type, location, size, and patient anatomical differences.


With the increased obesity in the Western world, more difficult stone situations are encountered by urologists. Recent evidence based guidelines have bee introduced to attend in selecting the most effective treatment for case-by-case renal infinitesimal calculus patients. Thus, the open renal surgical operation of 2 decades past tense has been largely replaced by newer less ghoulish treatment options. The understanding of the pathogenesis of stone disease has too progressed, and has light-emitting diode to prophylactic dietary measures and medications to forbid stone return. Most stone-formers can now be offered prophylactic measures, if not definitive discourse, for their recurrent rock disease.


Presented by: Culley C. Carson, MD, at the Masters in Urology Meeting - July 31, 2008 - August 2, 2008, Elbow Beach Resort, Bermuda

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