Kidney Stone Risk Following Modern Bariatric Surgery

Over the past 10 years, a variety of reports have linked bariatric surgery to metabolic changes that alter kidney stone risk. Most of these studies were retrospective, lacked appropriate controls, or involved bariatric patients with a variety of inclusion criteria. Despite these limitations, recent clinical and experimental research has contributed to our understanding of the pathophysiology of stone disease in this high-risk population. This review summarizes the urinary chemistry profiles that may be responsible for the increased kidney stone incidence seen in contemporary epidemiological bariatric studies, outlines the mechanisms of hyperoxaluria and potential therapies through a newly described experimental bariatric animal model, and provides a focused appraisal of recommendations for reducing stone risk in bariatric stone formers.

Authors
Gonzalez R.D.1 , Canales B.K. 2, 3
Publisher
Current Science Inc.
Number of issue
5
Language
English
Pages
1-7
Status
Published
Volume
15
Year
2014
Organizations
  • 1 University of South Florida
  • 2 University of Florida
  • 3 Department of Urology
Keywords
morbid obesity; hyperoxaluria; bariatric surgery; Gastric bypass surgery; Hypocitraturia; nephrolithiasis; calcium oxalate stones
Date of creation
09.07.2024
Date of change
09.07.2024
Short link
https://repository.rudn.ru/en/records/article/record/134625/
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