Lecture 12 & 13 - Urolithiasis Flashcards

1
Q

what factors influence precipitation?

A
  1. solute
  2. proteins, inhibitors
  3. surfaces present
  4. bacteria
  5. pH
  6. other ions
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2
Q

what do stones likely result from?

A

nucleation + growth + aggregation from crystals

all aided by retention of urine

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3
Q

is finding crystals in urine significant?

A

not necessarily. it just indicates urine is supersaturated which indicates a risk for urolith formation

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4
Q

when are uroliths significant? if you see signs of….

A
  1. secondary bacterial infection
  2. obstruction
  3. hematuria, pyuria (pus in urine)
  4. urgency, stranguria, pollakiuria
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5
Q

how do you diagnose uroliths?

A

imaging - contrast studies, endoscopy

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6
Q

what are some treatment options for uroliths?

A
  1. emergency tx
  2. medical tx
  3. catheter removal
  4. urohydropropulsion
  5. cytoscopic retrieval
  6. lithotripsy
  7. surgery
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7
Q

describe emergency tx of uroliths. what is most impt?

A

tx hyperK and acidosis is most impt!

place IV catheter and start fluids then deal with the obstruction

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8
Q

describe medical tx of uroliths. what is the overall goal?

A

the goal is dissolution of the urolith. this is accomplished usually thru the diet.
need to know stone type in order to do the following with the diet:
- reduce solute
- modify urine pH
- alter population of ions

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9
Q

what tx is used for “sand” sediment?

A

catheter removal - flush, refill and repeat technique

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10
Q

describe urohydropropulsion

A

fill bladder under anesthesia and express to achieve a forceful stream and collect for examination

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11
Q

what is lithotripsy and what are the 2 kinds performed?

A

lithotripsy is when you have a fragment stone in vivo but the procedure is not much different from just performing surgery

  • ESWL: shock waves outside body used when uroliths are stuck in one location like ureteroliths or kidney stones
  • intracorporeal (laser) lithotripsy: laser up to stone, usually done for cystic calculi
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12
Q

which tx is most commonly performed for uroliths?

A

surgery is most common - usually a cystotomy

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13
Q

when should preventative strategies be considered?

A
  • recurrent urolithiasis
  • nephro or ureterolithiasis
  • no underlying cause
  • underlying cause that cant be controlled
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14
Q

what is a non-specific prevention?

A

increasing water consumption! it decreases the amount of mineral in urine and this is super impt!!

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15
Q

what are the most common stone types?

A
  1. struvites
  2. urates (purines)
  3. compound uroliths
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16
Q

what are struvites and how are they usually treated?

A

they are the most common

  • dogs with struvites will also have UTIs, cats will not
  • will often respond to dissolution and pH modulation
17
Q

what type of acidifer should you use with struvites?

A

ammonium chloride for pH modulation

18
Q

when do you need the alter a diet long-term for a patient with struvites?

A

dogs with sterile struvites and cats

19
Q

do you need to give abx to patients with struvites?

A

dogs should receive abx bc struvites are usually associated with a UTI in dogs.

treat like a complicated UTI - this means they need abx for 3 - 4 months!!

20
Q

Calcium Oxalates - how are they treated? what are the risk factors for getting them?

A

Ca oxalates cannot be dissolved, they must be physically removed.
- 30 - 50% recur in 3 years

risk factors:

  • breed = yorkies, mini-schnauzers, Lhasa, shih tzu
  • obesity
  • glucocorticoids
  • primary hyperparathyroidism
  • chronic metabolic acidosis
21
Q

hydrochlorothiazide

A
  • decrease ca excretion

- effect blunted with increased water consumption

22
Q

potassium citrate: what are its 2 actions and when should you consider using it?

A
  1. pH modulation - urine alkalinizer
  2. corrects hypocitraturia - decreases available ca in the urine

consider using when: diet and thiazides have failed and to achieve target pH

23
Q

does vitamin supplementation help prevent uroliths? Vit B6? Vit C? Vit D?

A

nope!
B6 - no data
C - avoid, can increase oxalates
D - avoid, potential for increase Ca

24
Q

purines - how are they treated?

A

check to make sure liver function is ok!

  1. diet/pH modulation - decrease protein in diet and aim for a neutral to slightly alkaline pH
  2. allopurinol - xanthine oxidase inhibitor. not recommended for prevention unless diets and alkalinization fail. not good for animals in liver failure.
25
Q

cystine: when do they occur? how are they treated?

A
  • uncommon
  • M»>F
  • characterized by cystinuria
  • frequently recurrent

Tx: decrease protein in diet and pH modulation

26
Q

what is the process of urolith formation? how does it start?

A

it starts by having urine be supersaturated.

precipitation –> nucleation –> cystallization aggregation