2 results match your criteria: "University of Toronto (MLH)[Affiliation]"

Are individual analyses of multiple short urine collections throughout the 24 hours superior to a standard 24-hour urine collection in precipitation risk assessment of healthy subjects?

Nephrology (Carlton)

March 2021

Division of General Internal Medicine, Department of Medicine, Toronto General Hospital and Li Ka Shing Knowledge Institute of St. Michael's Hospital and Division of Nephrology, University of Toronto (MLH), Toronto, Ontario, Canada.

Purpose: The commonly used 24-hour collection technique has been the mainstay of diagnosis for supersaturation but has some certain limitations. Hence, superiority of multiple short urine collections as a new alternative in precipitation risk assessment was assessed compared to the standard 24-hour urine collection among healthy subjects.

Materials And Methods: Individual urine samples of 26 healthy subjects were acquired every 2 to 3 hours throughout the 24 hours.

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Impact of Prolonged Fasting on the Risk of Calcium Phosphate Precipitation in the Urine: Calcium Phosphate Lithogenesis during Prolonged Fasting in a Healthy Cohort.

J Urol

July 2018

Division of General Internal Medicine, Department of Medicine, Toronto General Hospital and Li Ka Shing Knowledge Institute of St. Michael's Hospital and Division of Nephrology, University of Toronto (MLH), Toronto, Ontario, Canada.

Purpose: Intermittent fasting and curtailing water intake for extended periods were likely common in Paleolithic times. Today it occurs for religious and dietary reasons. This restriction in intake should cause a decrease in the urine flow rate while raising the concentration of certain substances in urine to the point of precipitation.

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