Publications by authors named "Teresa Moraleda-Mesa"

Background And Objective: The association of hypouricemia and hypercalciuria is rare. In 1974 a new syndrome named Hypouricemia with hypercalciuria and decreased bone density was described. Afterwards, some cases with such association were published in which the fractional excretion of urate was higher than 20ml/100ml FGR.

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Renal diseases associated with hypomagnesemia are a complex and diverse group of tubulopathies caused by mutations in genes encoding proteins that are expressed in the thick ascending limb of the loop of Henle and in the distal convoluted tubule. In this paper, we review the initial description, the clinical expressiveness and etiology of four of the first hypomagnesemic tubulopathies described: type 3 Bartter and Gitelman diseases, Autosomal recessive hypomagnesemia with secondary hypocalcemia and Familial hypomagnesemia with hypercalciuria and nephrocalcinosis. The basic biochemical patterns observed in renal tubular hypomagnesemias and the modalities of transport and interaction that occur between the transporters involved in the reabsorption of magnesium in the distal convoluted tubule are described below.

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Primary distal renal tubular acidosis (dRTA) is a rare tubulopathy characterised by the presence of hyperchloremic metabolic acidosis. It is caused by the existence of a defect in the function of the H -ATPase located on the luminal side of the α-intercalated cells or the Cl HCO3 (AE1) anion exchanger located on the basolateral side. Patients do not acidify the urine after acid overload (NH4Cl) or after stimulating H secretion by obtaining a high intratubular concentration of an anion such as chlorine (pH is measured) or HCO3- (urinary pCO is measured).

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Gout is recurrent inflammatory arthritis caused by the deposition of monosodium urate crystals in the joints. The risk factors that predispose to suffering from gout include non-modifiable factors such as gender, age, ethnicity and genetics, and modifiable factors such as diet and lifestyle. It has been shown that the heritability of uric acid levels in the blood is greater than 30%, which indicates that genetics play a key role in these levels.

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Objectives: Reflux nephropathy is a radiologic condition commonly used to express the existence of renal morphological lesions in patients who have or had vesicoureteral reflux (VUR). This morphological concept is used based on the image data collected, without conducting basic complementary renal function studies. The present study was designed to demonstrate that patients with active VUR present different functional renal alterations from those shown by patients with disappeared VUR.

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Gout is recurrent inflammatory arthritis caused by the deposition of monosodium urate crystals in the joints. The risk factors that predispose to suffering from gout include non-modifiable factors such as gender, age, ethnicity and genetics, and modifiable factors such as diet and lifestyle. It has been shown that the heritability of uric acid levels in the blood is greater than 30%, which indicates that genetics play a key role in these levels.

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Objectives: Reflux nephropathy is a radiologic condition commonly used to express the existence of renal morphological lesions in patients who have or had vesicoureteral reflux (VUR). This morphological concept is used based on the image data collected, without conducting basic complementary renal function studies. The present study was designed to demonstrate that patients with active VUR present different functional renal alterations from those shown by patients with disappeared VUR.

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Introduction: Split renal function measured in a diuretic renogram is the most popular tool in initial assessment and follow-up of patients with ureteropelvic junction obstruction (UPJO). This study aims to evaluate the use of maximum urinary osmolality after desmopressin administration (DDAVP) to detect renal dysfunction.

Patients And Methods: 56 children (33 males, 23 females) diagnosed with UPJO underwent quantification of the maximum urinary osmolality (UOsm) at diagnosis.

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Idiopathic hypercalciuria (IH) is defined as that clinical situation in which an increase in urinary calcium excretion is observed, in the absence of hypercalcemia and other known causes of hypercalciuria. In recent years, its diagnosis in pediatric age has been more frequent because it has been known that it can debut with very different symptoms, in the absence of kidney stone formation. The discovery of genetic hypercalciuric stone-forming rats has allowed us to glimpse the pathophysiological mechanism of IH since they show many data in common with humans with IH as normal levels of blood calcium, intestinal calcium hyperabsorption, increased bone resorption and a defect in the renal tubular calcium reabsorption.

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