ESWL use has come under scrutiny with a shift in focus to cost-effectiveness and healthcare outcomes. Fortunately, advances in lithotripter technology have spawned several generations of devices that strive to improve stone-free rates and decrease complications. Most of all, a focus on patient selection criteria has helped improve procedural success. Years of experience utilizing ESWL for stone treatment have helped urologists better optimize its use and minimize complications. Improvements in technique along with more stringent patient and stone selection have helped ESWL remain a mainstay in the treatment of stone disease.
In our underserved patient population, AA patients were half as likely to submit a 24-hour urine collection than Caucasian patients, whereas patients with a positive family history of stones were more than twice as likely to submit than patients with no family history.
In this study, we measured the contributions of the ionization of the heme propionates to the reduction potentials of heme b and heme a (bis)N-methylimidazole complexes in various low-dielectric constant conditions. Additionally, we measured the effects of H-bond to the heme a formyl group on the reduction potential of the heme. The performed electrochemical measurements show that ionization of the heme propionates lead to the largest redox change in dichloromethane with no electrolyte. The measured reduction potential changes for heme b and heme a were -55 and -47 mV (±10 mV) per ionized propionate, respectively. For heme a, the study demonstrates how the dielectric constant of the medium is important in the magnification of the ΔpKa upon redox-linked ionization of the heme propionates and their roles in the proton pump of cytochrome c oxidase.
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