Nephrolithiasis Flashcards
what type of crystal is this?
- what is the pH of the urine?
- what is the other presentation?
- treatment:
These are calcium oxalate crystals
- their formation is NOT dependent on the pH of the urine
- they can also present as “dumbells”
- treatment:
- refrain from eating spinach, nuts
- normal/increased dietary calcium intake
What type of crystal is this?
forms in _____ urine
can also look like ______
This is a calcium phosphate crystal
it forms in alkaline urine
can also kinda look like a badmittin birdie
what is this?
what type of stone does it form?
forms in ______ urine
This is a magnesium ammonium phosphate
it forms the basis of struvite stones
“coffin lids”
they only form in alkaline urine
what type of crystals are these?
they form in _______ urine
Uric Acid crystal
uric acid crystals only form in acidic urine
what is this?
what is there characteristic shape?
what is it pathonomonic of?
develops in _____ urine
Cystine Crystals
they have a characteristic hexagonal shape
it is pathonomonic of cystinuria
sucker!!! the pH doesn’t matter for the formation of these crystals
What are the risk factors for developing kindey stones?
- what are promoters?
- what are inhibitors?
Other factors?
What are the risk factors for developing kindey stones?
- what are promoters? calcium, oxalate, uric acid
- what are inhibitors? citrate
Other factors? low fluid intake, low urine volume, personal history, family history, frequent UTIs (struvite stones), Enhanced enteric oxalate absorption (caused by shortening of bowels)
innervation of the kidneys:
sympathetic
parasympathetic:
kidney
sympathetic: T10-11
parasympathetic: S2-S4
Innervation Sympathetic/parasympathetic
- upper ureter
- middle ureter
- lower ureter
Innervation Sympathetic/parasympathetic
- upper ureter T11-12/vagal
- middle ureter: T12-L1/vagal
- lower ureter: L1-L2/ S2-S4
What is the imaging study of choice to detect stones and obstructions?
nonContrast helical CT Scans are the imgaging study of choice for stones and obstructions
What is the first choice for Acute management of a stone?
IVF if unable to tolerate oral hydration
Pain Medications (NSAIDs)
Medical Expulsive Therapy
What determines if a stone will pass?
The size and location of a stone are the determinants for whether a stone will pass or not.
- Size
- <4 usually passes
- 5-9 progressive decrease in pass rate
- >10 unlikely to pass
- Location:
- proximal ureteral less likely to pass
- ureterovesical junction is more likely to pass
A patient has hypercalciuria as a risk factor.
What steps can we take to target and reduce this as a risk factor?
We want to decrease the amount of calcium in the urine
do this by:
low salt
thiazide- make sure they maintain their hydration
Normal calcium diet
How can we target hyperoxalaturia?
we want to decrease the oxalate that is in the urine
go on a low oxalate diet: refrain from eating nuts and spinach
normal/increased calcium intake
how do we target the risk factor of hypocritraturia?
what type of stones are these pt. at risk for?
we want to increase the amount of citrate in the urine.
we can supplement their citrate but it may increase the pH of the urine which increases the risk for developing stones that contain phosphate (calcium phosphate or magnesium ammonium phosphate)
pt with hypocitraturia are at risk for developing
calcium oxalate stones