Urolithiasis Flashcards
1
Q
Definition of urolithiasis
A
- formation of kidney stones/renal calculi within the urinary tract
- often begins in the calyces & pelvis, some develop in the lower urinary tract
2
Q
Causes of urolithiasis (2)
A
- Primary
- supersaturation of urine w crystalline material (most commonly calcium)
- low urine volume - Secondary
- UTI - crystalline material encrust on a necrotic focus on the mucosa
- indwelling catheter/foreign body in bladder
- vit A def - squamous metaplasia of upp urinary tract mucosa
- low urinary pH - uric acid stones
3
Q
Types of renal calculi (4)
A
- Calcium stones (65-70%)
- Triple stones (15%)
- Urate stones (6%)
- Cystine stones (3%)
4
Q
Features of calcium stones
A
- composed of calcium oxalate +/- calcium phosphate
- most common cause = supersaturation 2 to hypercalciuria
- hypercalciuria may be idiopathic (55%) or with associated hypercalcemia due to hyperparathy, diffuse bone disease, vit D intoxication, milk-alkali syndrome, renal tubular acidosis of Cushing’s syndrome, sarcoidosis
- other causes: hyperoxaluria, increased uric acid secretion (hyperuricosuric calcium nephrolithiasis)
5
Q
Features of triple stones
A
- magnesium ammonium phosphate
- assoc w infections by urea splitting bacteria eg proteus - converts urea to ammonia - alkaline urine - promotes ppt of salts
- high urea content - huge stones - staghorn calculi
6
Q
Features of urate stones
A
- from uric acid
- predisposing factors: hyperuricemia (gout, leukemia), low urinary pH
7
Q
Features of cystine stones
A
- associated with genetic defects in renal transport/amino acids
8
Q
Effects of urolithiasis (3)
A
- Urinary stasis - infection, further stone formation, obstruction
- Ulceration - bleeding (hematuria), fistula formation
- Pain, urinary colic