The Post cited a study published in 2016 found the incidence of kidney stones among teens in South Carolina increased from 1997 to 2012. Over a five-year period in that window, incidence jumped 28% ...
Medical experts have seen a significant increase in the number of children suffering from kidney stones. Some doctors think a diet full of over-processed and sodium-rich foods might be to blame.
The observational analysis suggested that people who smoke are more likely to develop CKD. However, when researchers used Mendelian randomization, which analyzes genetic data to test for direct causal ...