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Journal ArticleDOI

Obesity and urolithiasis: evidence of regional influences

TLDR
In overweight and obese patients, the urinary excretion of risk factors for stone formation, including calcium, oxalate and urate, and also of inhibitory substances, such as citrate, were significantly higher than in patients with normal weight or underweight.
Abstract
There is evidence that obese patients have an increased risk of renal stone formation, although this relationship could be less evident in some populations. The aim of this study was to evaluate the impact of overweight and obesity on the risk of renal stone formation in a population consuming a Mediterranean diet and to better elucidate the mechanisms underlying the increased risk of urolithiasis observed in obese subjects. We performed a retrospective review of 1698 stone forming patients (mean age 45.9 ± 14.6 years; 984/714 M/F), attending outpatient stone clinics in Milan and Florence, seen between January 1986 and June 2014. Records were reviewed and data collected pertaining to age, gender, weight, height, stone composition, association with diabetes type 2 or gout and metabolic profile of 24-h urine to perform a descriptive study. We estimated prevalence ratios for body mass index (BMI) categories (underweight: BMI <18.5, normal: BMI 18.5-24.9, overweight: BMI 25-29.9 and obese ≥30). Overweight and obesity were present in 40.7 and 8 % of the men and in 19.9 and 8.7 % of the women in the study population. The mean BMI of patients with urolithiasis was found to be 24.5 ± 7.5 kg/m2. BMI values were positively correlated with age (p = 0.000) and mean BMI was higher in males than in females (25.5 ± 8.9 vs 23.2 ± 4.4 kg/m2). In males, rates of overweight and obesity in renal stone formers were higher than the rates reported in the Italian general population in 2004 only for the age group 25-44 years, whereas males in all the other age groups and in females the rates of overweight and obesity in renal stone formers were similar to rates reported in the Italian general population. The rates of overweight and obesity were significantly different in patients with different chemical stone composition. In particular, patients with uric acid stones have rates of overweight and obesity higher than patients with calcium stones or other types of calculi. Also the rates of type 2 diabetes and gout were greater in patients with overweight and obesity. In overweight and obese patients, the urinary excretion of risk factors for stone formation, such as calcium, oxalate and urate, and also of inhibitory substances, such as citrate, were significantly higher than in patients with normal weight or underweight. The prevalence of overweight and obesity in patients with urinary calculi from a country consuming a Mediterranean diet is not higher than in the general population. It should be taken into account that not all the dietary patterns that are associated with obesity may involve a parallel increase in the risk of forming kidney stones and that epidemiological findings from one country could not be confirmed in other countries with different climatic, socioeconomic and cultural features.

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Journal ArticleDOI

Prevalence of renal uric acid stones in the adult

TL;DR: To estimate uric acid renal stone prevalence rates of adults in different countries of the world, PubMed was searched for papers dealing with “urinary calculi and prevalence or composition” for the period from January 1996 to June 2016 to collect further information on specific topics.
Journal ArticleDOI

Oral chemolysis is an effective, non-invasive therapy for urinary stones suspected of uric acid content

TL;DR: Oral chemolysis was effective with a complete and partial response rate of stones at 3 months of 61% and 14%, respectively; 25% of stones could not be dissolved and more precise stone diagnostics to exclude non-uric-acid stones could further improve outcome.
Journal ArticleDOI

The Association of Uric Acid Calculi with Obesity, Prediabetes, Type 2 Diabetes Mellitus, and Hypertension

TL;DR: The uric acid calculi were also seemingly associated with obesity in patients with urolithiasis undergoing surgical management, and there was a remarkable association with prediabetic and diabetic states.
Journal ArticleDOI

The influence of metabolic syndrome and its components on the development of nephrolithiasis.

TL;DR: The associations of metabolic syndrome and nephrolithiasis are reviewed, discussing the pathophysiology, urinary parameters, and clinical presentations so that urologists will have a more comprehensive understanding of this complex population of metabolic stone formers enabling improved patient management and treatment of stone disease.
Journal ArticleDOI

Obesity-related indices and its association with kidney stone disease: a cross-sectional and longitudinal cohort study.

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors explored the relationship between kidney stone disease (KSD) and various obesity-related indices, including body mass index (BMI), waist circumference (WC), waistto-height ratio (WHtR), waist-to-hip ratio(WHR), abdominal volume index (AVI), body roundness index(BRI), conicity index, and triglyceride glucose index was examined in cross-sectional analysis; additionally, the risk of developing kidney stones was analyzed in a subset of the main cohort.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Obesity, Weight Gain, and the Risk of Kidney Stones

TL;DR: Obesity and weight gain increase the risk of kidney stone formation, and the magnitude of the increased risk may be greater in women than in men.
Journal ArticleDOI

Association of urinary pH with body weight in nephrolithiasis.

TL;DR: The results confirm the previously proposed scheme that obesity may sometimes cause uric acid nephrolithiasis by producing excessively acid urine due to insulin resistance by concluding that urinary pH is inversely related to body weight among patients with stones.
Journal ArticleDOI

Food intake patterns and body mass index in observational studies.

TL;DR: It was showed that no consistent associations could be identified between BMI or Ob and food intake patterns, derived from diet index, factor analysis or cluster analysis, however, the heterogeneity ofFood intake patterns identified by such analyses and the lack of gold standards for the application of these techniques hampers consistent analysis of a relation between food Intake patterns and health.
Journal ArticleDOI

Trends in carbohydrate, fat, and protein intakes and association with energy intake in normal-weight, overweight, and obese individuals: 1971–2006

TL;DR: Energy intake and the prevalence of obesity have increased dramatically and dietary interventions should focus on decreasing energy intake and potentially by substituting protein for fat or carbohydrates.
Journal ArticleDOI

DASH-Style Diet Associates with Reduced Risk for Kidney Stones

TL;DR: Consumption of a DASH-style diet is associated with a marked decrease in kidney stone risk, and higher DASH scores were associated with reduced risk even in participants with lower calcium intake.
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