Kidney Calculi: Pathophysiology and as a Systemic Disorder

Authors

  • Arash Shadman Division of Nephrology, Department of Internal Medicine, Saint Louis University, Saint Louis, Missouri, USA Author
  • Bahar Bastani Division of Nephrology, Department of Internal Medicine, Saint Louis University, Saint Louis, Missouri, USA Author

Abstract

The pathophysiology of urinary stone formation is complex, involving a combination of metabolic, genetic, and environmental factors. Over the past decades, remarkable advances have been emerged in the understanding of the pathogenesis, diagnosis, and treatment of calcium kidney calculi. For this review, both original and review articles were found via PubMed search on pathophysiology, diagnosis, and management of urinary calculi. These resources were integrated with the authors' knowledge of the field. Nephrolithiasis is suggested to be associated with systemic disorders, including chronic kidney insufficiency, hematologic malignancies, endocrine disorders, autoimmune diseases, inflammatory bowel diseases, bone loss and fractures, hypertension, type 2 diabetes mellitus, metabolic syndrome, and vascular diseases like coronary heart diseases and most recently ischemic strokes. This is changing the perspective of nephrolithiasis from an isolated disorder to a systemic disease that justifies further research in understanding the underlying mechanisms and elaborating diagnostic-therapeutic options.

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Author Biography

  • Bahar Bastani, Division of Nephrology, Department of Internal Medicine, Saint Louis University, Saint Louis, Missouri, USA

    Professor of Medicine

    Diovision of Nephrology

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Published

2017-05-31

Issue

Section

REVIEW | Kidney Diseases

How to Cite

Kidney Calculi: Pathophysiology and as a Systemic Disorder. (2017). Iranian Journal of Kidney Diseases, 11(3), 180-191. https://ijkd.org/index.php/ijkd/article/view/3077

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