1.Effect of Renal Insufficiency on Stone Recurrence in Patients with Urolithiasis.
Ho Won KANG ; Sung Phil SEO ; Won Tae KIM ; Yong June KIM ; Seok Joong YUN ; Sang Cheol LEE ; Wun Jae KIM
Journal of Korean Medical Science 2014;29(8):1132-1137
The study was designed to assess the relationship between glomerular filtration rate (GFR) and urinary stone-forming constituents, and to assess the effect of renal insufficiency on stone recurrence risk in first stone formers (SF). Baseline serum creatinine levels were obtained, and renal insufficiency was defined as creatinine clearance < or =60 mL/min (Cockroft-Gault). This retrospective case-control study consists of 342 first SF; 171 SF with normal renal function were selected with 1:1 propensity scores matched to 171 SF with renal insufficiency. Urinary metabolic evaluation was compared to renal function. GFR was positively correlated with urinary calcium, uric acid, and citrate excretion. Subjects with renal insufficiency had significantly lower urinary calcium, uric acid, and citrate excretion than those with normal renal function, but not urine volume. With regard to urinary metabolic abnormalities, similar results were obtained. SF with renal insufficiency had lower calcium oxalate supersaturation indexes and stone recurrence rates than SF with normal renal function. Kaplan-Meier curves showed similar results. In conclusion, GFR correlates positively with urinary excretion of stone-forming constituents in SF. This finding implies that renal insufficiency is not a risk factor for stone recurrence.
Aged
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Causality
;
Disease-Free Survival
;
Female
;
*Glomerular Filtration Rate
;
Humans
;
Incidence
;
Male
;
Middle Aged
;
Recurrence
;
Renal Insufficiency/*diagnosis/*epidemiology
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Reproducibility of Results
;
Republic of Korea/epidemiology
;
Risk Assessment
;
Sensitivity and Specificity
;
Urolithiasis/*diagnosis/*epidemiology
2.Effect of Renal Insufficiency on Stone Recurrence in Patients with Urolithiasis.
Ho Won KANG ; Sung Phil SEO ; Won Tae KIM ; Yong June KIM ; Seok Joong YUN ; Sang Cheol LEE ; Wun Jae KIM
Journal of Korean Medical Science 2014;29(8):1132-1137
The study was designed to assess the relationship between glomerular filtration rate (GFR) and urinary stone-forming constituents, and to assess the effect of renal insufficiency on stone recurrence risk in first stone formers (SF). Baseline serum creatinine levels were obtained, and renal insufficiency was defined as creatinine clearance < or =60 mL/min (Cockroft-Gault). This retrospective case-control study consists of 342 first SF; 171 SF with normal renal function were selected with 1:1 propensity scores matched to 171 SF with renal insufficiency. Urinary metabolic evaluation was compared to renal function. GFR was positively correlated with urinary calcium, uric acid, and citrate excretion. Subjects with renal insufficiency had significantly lower urinary calcium, uric acid, and citrate excretion than those with normal renal function, but not urine volume. With regard to urinary metabolic abnormalities, similar results were obtained. SF with renal insufficiency had lower calcium oxalate supersaturation indexes and stone recurrence rates than SF with normal renal function. Kaplan-Meier curves showed similar results. In conclusion, GFR correlates positively with urinary excretion of stone-forming constituents in SF. This finding implies that renal insufficiency is not a risk factor for stone recurrence.
Aged
;
Causality
;
Disease-Free Survival
;
Female
;
*Glomerular Filtration Rate
;
Humans
;
Incidence
;
Male
;
Middle Aged
;
Recurrence
;
Renal Insufficiency/*diagnosis/*epidemiology
;
Reproducibility of Results
;
Republic of Korea/epidemiology
;
Risk Assessment
;
Sensitivity and Specificity
;
Urolithiasis/*diagnosis/*epidemiology
3.Urologic Diseases in Korean Military Population: a 6-year Epidemiological Review of Medical Records.
Se Young CHOI ; Chang Gyo YOON
Journal of Korean Medical Science 2017;32(1):135-142
We sought to describe the incidence rate of the urologic disease in the Korean military by reviewing diagnoses made in active duty soldiers from 2008 to 2013. A total of 72,248 first visits were generated in the Defense Medical Statistics Information System (DMSIS) with its gradually increasing trend over 6 years. A sharp increase of first visit was observed after implementation of the regular health check-up for all conscripted soldiers since 2013. Urolithiasis, prostatitis, epididymoorchitis, urethritis, and varicocele were prevalent. Prostatitis was the highest diagnosis made in the outpatient service, while varicocele was ranked the highest in the inpatient service. The incidence rates of urologic disease varied from 12.3 to 34.2 cases per 1,000 person-years. The urologic disease in conscripted men showed different distribution when we separated the population into conscripted and professional soldiers. Epididymoorchitis was the highest disease followed by urolithiasis, dysuresia, and balanoposthitis in 2013. This study underscores that the urologic disease has spent significant amount of health care resources in the Korean military. This calls for further study to find any significant difference and contributing factors of the urologic disease in the military and the civilian population.
Delivery of Health Care
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Diagnosis
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Epidemiology
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Humans
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Incidence
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Information Systems
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Inpatients
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Male
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Medical Records*
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Military Personnel*
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Outpatients
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Prostatitis
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Urethritis
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Urolithiasis
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Urologic Diseases*
;
Urology
;
Varicocele
4.Daily Mean Temperature Affects Urolithiasis Presentation in Seoul: a Time-series Analysis.
Seoyeon LEE ; Min Su KIM ; Jung Hoon KIM ; Jong Kyou KWON ; Byung Hoon CHI ; Jin Wook KIM ; In Ho CHANG
Journal of Korean Medical Science 2016;31(5):750-756
This study aimed to investigate the overall cumulative exposure-response and the lag response relationships between daily temperature and urolithiasis presentation in Seoul. Using a time-series design and distributing lag nonlinear methods, we estimated the relative risk (RR) of urolithiasis presentation associated with mean daily temperature, including the cumulative RR for a 20 days period, and RR for individual daily lag through 20 days. We analyzed data from 14,518 patients of 4 hospitals emergency department who sought medical evaluation or treatment of urolithiasis from 2005-2013 in Seoul. RR was estimated according to sex and age. Associations between mean daily temperature and urolithiasis presentation were not monotonic. Furthermore, there was variation in the exposure-response curve shapes and the strength of association at different temperatures, although in most cases RRs increased for temperatures above the 13℃ reference value. The RRs for urolothiasis at 29℃ vs. 13℃ were 2.54 in all patients (95% confidence interval [CI]: 1.67-3.87), 2.59 in male (95% CI, 1.56-4.32), 2.42 in female (95% CI, 1.15-5.07), 3.83 in male less than 40 years old (95% CI, 1.78-8.26), and 2.47 in male between 40 and 60 years old (95% CI, 1.15-5.34). Consistent trends of increasing RR of urolithiasis presentation were observed within 5 days of high temperatures across all groups. Urolithiasis presentation increased with high temperature with higher daily mean temperatures, with the strongest associations estimated for lags of only a few days, in Seoul, a metropolitan city in Korea.
Adult
;
Age Factors
;
Aged
;
Databases, Factual
;
Emergency Service, Hospital
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Female
;
Humans
;
Male
;
Middle Aged
;
Regression Analysis
;
Republic of Korea
;
Risk
;
Seoul
;
Sex Factors
;
Temperature
;
Time Factors
;
Urolithiasis/diagnosis/epidemiology/*etiology