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Active clinical trials for "Urinary Calculi"

Results 31-40 of 132

Uric Acid Based Renal Stones: Clinical, Metabolic and Genetic Characterization

Renal StoneUrinary Stones

Reporting prevalence of uric acid based renal stones among patients with nephrolithiasis admitted to Mansoura Urology and Nephrology center (MUNC). Furthermore, identification of monogenic and polygenic uric acid stone formers. Identification of factors associated uric acid stone recurrence as well as determinants of laterality in patients with uric acid based renal stones

Recruiting5 enrollment criteria

The Use of the "Comprehensive Complication Index" for Urinary Lithiasis Surgery.

Complication,PostoperativeLithiasis1 more

The study will be prospective non-interventional and will include patients with kidney stones who are to undergo one of the following three techniques: retrograde nephrolithotripsy, percutaneous nephrolithotripsy and extracorporeal nephrolithotripsy depending on the size of the stone. Data regarding post operative descriptions will be recorded and comprehensive complication index will be used for the assesment of the burden.

Recruiting3 enrollment criteria

Multiomics Biomarkers for Urolithiasis

Urolithiasis

This is a prospective case series study. To compare urine sample of recurrent stone-formers and non-stone former by multiomics approach to identify potential markers for stone recurrence.

Recruiting12 enrollment criteria

The Effect of the COVID-19 on Patient Preferences and Decision Making for Obstructive Urinary Stone...

Urinary StoneUrinary Calculi1 more

In this study, the investigators aim to evaluate the intervention preferences of patients with obstructive urinary stones who are suitable for operation during the COVID-19 pandemic. The secondary aim is to compare and evaluate the preferences compared to the pre-pandemic period and to gain a perspective on how the decision-making process has changed from the patient's point of view. Thus, by trying to understand how the COVID-19 epidemic affects the treatment choice decisions of patients, the investigators aim to determine how the state of anxiety changes these preferences.

Recruiting7 enrollment criteria

Stone Disease of the Urinary Tract in Children

Urinary Lithiasis

The incidence of stone disease of the urinary tract in children is increasingly increasing with a remarkable economic impact for its management. This incidence is variable according to race, geographic region, socio-economic status and dietary habits. Oxalo-calcium stones are the most common but the biochemical nature of urinary stones varies depending on the region where those of a phosphatic nature are characterized by a higher incidence in Europe. The diagnosis is confirmed by imaging. The unprepared abdomen (ASP) has low diagnostic accuracy. The scanner is the reference tool but remains an irradiating examination. Risk factors for disease recurrence include primarily the presence of an underlying urinary metabolic abnormality and young age. Urinary metabolic abnormalities vary from one study to another. The understanding of lithogenesis, its evaluation as well as the therapeutic options is essential for adequate and adapted management in the pediatric population.

Recruiting7 enrollment criteria

Role of Non-contrast MDCT in the Assessment of Upper Urinary Tract Calculi Post ESWL to Predict...

Urinary Stone

Urinary stones are a common disease affecting one in 11 people . Their clinical presentation varies from being silent to severe loin pain owing to urinary obstruction. Currently, ESWL is the treatment of choice for most renal calculi ⩽30 mm, with success rates of 60-99%. Although many treatment options exist, ESWL has the advantages of simplicity and non-invasiveness. In contrast, failure of a first ESWL attempt requires a follow-up ESWL procedure, or an alternative procedure, both of which increase medical costs. Advancements in imaging have significantly contributed to this process. In the mid- 1990s, computed tomography (CT) began to replace intravenous urography (IVU), abdominal films (KUB), and ultrasound (US) in stone diagnosis. Studies demonstrated that CT had superior sensitivity and specificity for stone diagnosis compared to the aforementioned modalities. Now non-contrast multidetector CT (NC-MDCT) is the gold standard for the detection of urinary system calculi. CT is also clinically useful as it can show alternate renal and non-renal pathology if present. Many factors have been reported to predict ESWL outcome, such as skin-to-stone distance (SSD), stone size, stone location, multiplicity, the energy used, and Hounsfield Unit (HU) values measured by non-contrast computed tomography (NCCT).

Recruiting10 enrollment criteria

Urosepsis in Patients With Urinary Tract Calculi Receiving Surgical Intervention

UrosepsisUrinary Tract Stone

Urosepsis is one of major cause of the overall sepsis leading to high morbidity and mortality, which commonly resulted from urinary tract calculi. The investigator aim to identified the incidence and risk factors of urosepsis in the patients with urinary tract calculi underwent surgical intervention in tertiary-care university hospital.

Recruiting2 enrollment criteria

Study of the Benefits of a Short Spa Treatment on the Elimination of Residual Lithic Fragments After...

CalculiUrinary

Current urological therapeutic modalities are represented by extracorporeal lithotripsy (ECL), rigid (URS) or flexible (URSsple) uretero-renoscopy and percutaneous nephrolithotomy (PCNL). They make it possible to extract the vast majority of stones by minimally invasive techniques but leave behind small residual lithic fragments (FR) that can always cause pain, infection, or promote the development of a larger stone. A non-invasive technique that can help eliminate them would be of great benefit to many patients by avoiding painful recurrences and limiting reprocessing; combined with appropriate medical management, it would limit the rate of remote recurrences and long-term complications. The treatment called "hydro-posturotherapy" has been developed in some spas that are approved for kidney diseases such as Vittel or Capvern. It includes several modalities: posturotherapy, lumbar percussion and hyperdiuresis. The main objective is to compare at 3 months, on the unprepared abdomen (ASP) and the low-dose scanner without injection, the elimination of kidney stone fragments under the effect of a short spa treatment with posturotherapy, lumbar percussion and controlled hyperdiuresis compared to the recommended standard treatment. The result will be assessed in 3 categories: complete elimination (SF: "without fragments" or "stone-free"), elimination of more than 50% of the fragments; elimination of less than 50% of the fragments.

Terminated8 enrollment criteria

Evaluation of Infection in Obstructing Urolithiasis

Kidney StoneKidney Calculi3 more

Obstructing urolithiasis can be life-threatening in the setting of urinary tract infection. The purpose of this study is to identify and validate risk factors and markers for the presence of infection and development of sepsis among patients with obstructing urolithiasis.

Active4 enrollment criteria

Flexiva Pulse Registry

Urinary CalculiBenign Prostatic Hyperplasia

To obtain post-market safety and efficacy data for FlexivaTM Pulse High Power Single-Use Laser Fibers during lithotripsy and soft tissue procedure of holmium laser enucleation of the prostate (HoLEP).

Active22 enrollment criteria
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