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Urinary Calculi in Renal Transplant Recipients

Overview
Journal Transplantation
Specialty General Surgery
Date 1988 May 1
PMID 3285534
Citations 12
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Abstract

Unlabelled: Urinary calculi are an uncommon complication in renal transplant recipients. During a 15-year period, in 544 cases of kidney transplantation with a functioning allograft for more than 3 months, and a long-term follow-up, we have observed 9 cases (1.7%) of urinary calculi. Calculi occurred in 6 male and 3 female patients, 6 patients were recipients of living related and 3 of cadaveric kidneys. Calculi were diagnosed as early as 3 months and as late as 3.5 years after transplantation, but most were detected within the first year. The location of the calculi was the bladder in 4 cases, the transplant in 3, and indeterminant in 2. Crystallographic analysis of retrieved stones revealed calcium oxalate and/or phosphate in 4 cases, triple phosphate in 2, and uric acid in 1. All patients had one or more stone-predisposing factors, such as obstructive uropathy and recurrent urinary tract infection (4 cases), hyperoxaluria (3), or hypercalciuria (2). During long-term follow-up (mean 60 months), only one patient lost the renal graft, 14.5 years after transplantation, primarily from causes unrelated to urinary calculi. One instance of stone recurrence was noted.

In Conclusion: (1) urinary calculi after renal transplantation are relatively uncommon; (2) predisposing factors and crystallographic composition of the calculi are identical in type, but not frequency, to those of nontransplant patients; and (3) with proper medical and surgical management, post-transplant urolithiasis does not appear to affect graft prognosis.

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Urine metabolic risk factors and outcomes of patients with kidney transplant nephrolithiasis.

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Results of minimally invasive surgical treatment of allograft lithiasis in live-donor renal transplant recipients: a single-center experience of 3758 renal transplantations.

Sarier M, Duman I, Yuksel Y, Tekin S, Demir M, Arslan F Urolithiasis. 2018; 47(3):273-278.

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