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Journal ArticleDOI

Dyslipidaemia in overweight children and adolescents is associated with an increased risk of kidney stones.

TLDR
This Polish study explored the influence of nutritional status and lipid disturbances on urinary lithogenic factors and the risk of kidney stone formation in children and adolescents from three to 18 years of age.
Abstract
Aim There is conflicting evidence about the role of obesity in paediatric nephrolithiasis. This Polish study explored the influence of nutritional status and lipid disturbances on urinary lithogenic factors and the risk of kidney stone formation in children and adolescents from three to 18 years of age. Methods We carried out serum lipid profile evaluations and 24-h urine chemistry analyses on 493 overweight/obese paediatric participants (mean age 13 years) without nephrolithiasis and 492 healthy normal weight sex and age-matched controls. Results A third (33%) of the study group had blood lipid disturbances, with more acidic urine, lower urinary citrate excretion and a higher fraction of ionised calcium and higher Bonn Risk Index than the controls. The participants' body mass index standard deviation score (BMI Z-score) was positively correlated with urinary oxalate and uric acid and negatively correlated with citrate excretion. Total cholesterol, low-density lipoprotein cholesterol and triglycerides correlated negatively with citraturia, while high-density lipoprotein cholesterol correlated positively. Conclusion The main factor that predisposed overweight and obese children to kidney stones was hypocitraturia. Urinary citrate excretion was related to both BMI Z-scores and all lipid fraction abnormalities. However, hypercholesterolaemia and particularly low-density lipoprotein hypercholesterolaemia seemed to play a major role.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

Untargeted lipidomics based on UPLC-QTOF-MS/MS and structural characterization reveals dramatic compositional changes in serum and renal lipids in mice with glyoxylate-induced nephrolithiasis.

TL;DR: A mouse model for renal urolithiasis is established and it is found that polyunsaturated fatty acids mediated inflammatory responses and that the oxidative stress induced by oleylethanolamine and glycerophosphoethanolamine plasmalogens is closely related to the development of kidney stones.
Journal ArticleDOI

Pediatric Nephrolithiasis: Trend, Evaluation and Management: A Systematic Review

TL;DR: Evaluation of patients, particularly young children, includes metabolic assessment, andStone analysis and 24-urine collection analysis are very helpful for determining underlying diseases, and pediatric nephrolithiasis has an increasing rate worldwide.
Journal ArticleDOI

Idiopathic Osteoporosis and Nephrolithiasis: Two Sides of the Same Coin?

TL;DR: It is proposed to consider idiopathic nephrolithiasis and osteoporosis as two possible expressions of a unique clinical syndrome and the clinical approach to both disorders should be modified in order to program an efficient primary and secondary prevention strategy.
Journal ArticleDOI

Kidney Stones as an Underrecognized Clinical Sign in Pediatric Cushing Disease

TL;DR: It is illustrated that kidney stones are an underestimated complication of pediatric CD, especially when compared with the prevalence of nephrolithiasis in the general pediatric population.
Journal ArticleDOI

Lipidomics Reveals the Therapeutic Effects of EtOAc Extract of Orthosiphon stamineus Benth. on Nephrolithiasis.

TL;DR: The EEOS can inhibit the stones formation by improving oxidative stress and inflammation mediated by glycerophospholipid metabolism, providing a new direction for further study of the efficacy of OS.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Influence of Overweight on 24-hour Urine Chemistry Studies and Recurrent Urolithiasis in Children

TL;DR: Unlike in adults, in children, overweight adjusted for gender and age was not associated with 24-hour urine chemistry studies and was not a risk factor for recurrent UL.
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