1.Changes in Urinary Stone Composition in the Tunisian Population: A Retrospective Study of 1,301 Cases.
Akram ALAYA ; Abdellatif NOURI ; Mohsen BELGITH ; Hammadi SAAD ; Riadh JOUINI ; Mohamed Fadhel NAJJAR
Annals of Laboratory Medicine 2012;32(3):177-183
BACKGROUND: Studies that evaluate the effect of age on stone composition are scarce. The aim of this study was to highlight the changes in epidemiological characteristics (stone composition and location) of urolithiasis according to patients' age. METHODS: We studied 1,301 urolithiasis patients with age ranging from 6 months to 92 yr (781 males and 520 females). Stone analysis was performed using a stereomicroscope and infrared spectroscopy to determine the morphological type and molecular composition of each stone. RESULTS: The annual average incidence of new stone formation was 31.7 per 100,000 persons. In 71.8% of cases, calculi were located in the upper urinary tract. Compared to other age groups, children and old men were more affected by bladder stones. Calcium oxalate monohydrate was the most frequent stone component, even though its frequency decreased with age (59.5% in young adults and 43.7% in the elderly, P<0.05) in favor of an increase in uric acid stones (11.5% in young adults and 36.4% in the elderly, P<0.05). Struvite stones were rare (3.8%) and more frequent in children than in adults. CONCLUSIONS: The analysis of these data showed that urinary stones in Tunisian patients are tending to evolve in the same direction as the stones in patients from industrialized countries.
Adolescent
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Adult
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Age Factors
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Aged
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Aged, 80 and over
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Calcium Oxalate/chemistry
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Child
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Child, Preschool
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Female
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Humans
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Infant
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Kidney Calculi/chemistry/diagnosis/epidemiology
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Magnesium Compounds/chemistry
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Male
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Middle Aged
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Phosphates/chemistry
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Retrospective Studies
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Spectrophotometry, Infrared
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Tunisia/epidemiology
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Uric Acid/chemistry
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Urinary Bladder Calculi/chemistry/diagnosis/epidemiology
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Urinary Calculi/*chemistry/diagnosis/epidemiology
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Young Adult
2.Comparison of Mineral Contents in Three Different Tobacco Formulations.
Ikram HOUAS ; Hassen TEYEB ; Arancha ROCHINA-MARCO ; Wahiba DOUKI ; Mohamed Fadhel NAJJAR ; Lotfi GAHA ; Maria Luisa CERVERA ;
Biomedical and Environmental Sciences 2017;30(1):52-58
We identified and quantified a variety of mineral elements in 18 tobacco samples purchased from a Tunisian market. In total, 25 mineral elements have been measured in cigarettes, water pipe tobacco, and smokeless tobacco using inductively coupled plasma-optical emission spectroscopy following microwave-assisted digestion. Statistical analyses were performed using SPSSTM, version 18.0. The lowest concentrations of all studied elements were observed in water pipe tobacco. Significantly higher concentrations of Al, Fe, Mg, Na, Ca, Cr, and Co were found in smokeless tobacco, while cigarettes brands contained the highest concentrations of K, Mn, Ni, Ba, and Sr. There was no significant difference between the mineral contents of local and foreign cigarettes and conventional and light cigarettes. Our findings demonstrated that local smokeless tobacco appears to be the most hazardous tobacco type. The concentration of minerals in light cigarettes was not significantly different from the concentration in conventional cigarettes.
Elements
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Tobacco
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chemistry
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Tobacco, Smokeless
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analysis