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Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12710/11339
Title: Actualities in urolithiasis. The relevance of Randall's plaques
Authors: Martin, Vladimir
Keywords: calcification;kidney;physiological;urinary tract physiology;urolithiasis
Issue Date: 2018
Publisher: MedEspera
Citation: MARTIN, Vladimir. Actualities in urolithiasis. The relevance of Randall's plaques. In: MedEspera: the 7th Internat. Medical Congress for Students and Young Doctors: abstract book. Chișinău: S. n., 2018, p. 126-127.
Abstract: Introduction. Renal calculi have been plaguing humanity since the advent of civilization. The majority of kidney stones consist of calcium oxalate, followed by calcium phosphate, uric acid, cysteine, and struvite stones. Many factors influence the development of a stone including diet, genetics, environment, and comorbid conditions. Aim of the study. To describe a hypothesis for the initial events leading to urinary stones. A biomechanical perspective on Randall's plaque formation through form and function relationships is applied to functional units within the kidney, we have termed the 'medullopapillary complex' - a dynamic relationship between intratubular and interstitial mineral aggregates. Materials and methods. A complete research was performed to examine the existing literature on the anatomical and physiological relationships in the renal medulla and papilla. Sectioned human renal medulla with papilla from radical nephrectomy specimens were imaged using a high resolution micro X-ray computed tomography. The location, distribution, and density of mineral aggregates within the medullo-papillary complex were identified. Results. Mineral aggregates were seen proximally in all specimens within the outer medulla of the medullary complex and were intratubular. Distal interstitial mineralization at the papillary tip corresponding to Randall's plaque was not seen until a threshold of proximal mineralization was observed. Mineral density measurements suggest varied chemical compositions between the proximal intratubular (330 mg/cm3) and distal interstitial (270 mg/cm3) deposits. A review of the literature revealed distinct anatomical compartments and gradients across the medullo-papillary complex that supports the empirical observations that proximal mineralization triggers distal Randall's plaque formation. Conclusions. Randall's plaques may not be the entire explanation for lithogenic phenomena, they do play an important role in a subset of patients with calcium oxalate stones, whose incidence has been increasing in recent decades. The early stone event is initiated by intratubular mineralization of the renal medullary tissue leading to the interstitial mineralization that is observed as Randall's plaque. We base this novel hypothesis on a multiscale biomechanics perspective involving form and function relationships, and empirical observations. Additional studies are needed to validate this hypothesis.
URI: https://medespera.asr.md/wp-content/uploads/Abastract-Book-2018.pdf
http://repository.usmf.md/handle/20.500.12710/11339
Appears in Collections:MedEspera 2018

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