Clin Chem Lab Med
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In randomized controlled trials, prior to statistical analysis, the data are checked for outliers and erroneous data. Statistical tests are, traditionally, not very good at distinguishing between errors and outliers, but they should be able to point out main endpoint results closer to expectation than compatible with random sampling. ⋯ In randomized controlled trials, main endpoint p-values larger than p=0.95 will be rare, because they would indicate similarities closer than compatible with a normal distribution of random data samples. Also very low p-values like p<0.0001 will be rarely encountered, because it would mean that the trial was overpowered and should have had a smaller sample size. It would seem appropriate, therefore, to require investigators to explain such results and to consider rejecting the research involved. So far, in randomized controlled trials the null-hypothesis is generally rejected at p<0.05. Perhaps we should consider rejecting the entire study if the main endpoint p-values are >0.95 or <0.0001.
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In idiopathic recurrent urolithiasis (IRCU) calcium oxalate and calcium phosphate are components of stones. It is not sufficiently known whether in urine the nucleation (liquid-solid transition) of each salt requires a different environment, if so which environment, and whether there is an impact on stone formation. Nucleation was induced by in vitro addition of oxalate or calcium to post-test meal load whole urine of male stone patients (n=48), showing normal daily and baseline fasting oxaluria. ⋯ Conversely, when the calcium excess was extreme, calcium-rich hydroxyapatite developed, followed by calcium oxalate; F-Cit, not total and complexed citrate, was decreased in IRCU vs. male controls; F-Cit rose pH-dependently, and the ratio F-Cit at original pH vs. F-Cit at pH 6.0 correlated inversely with the nucleation index T-Ox/T-Ca; MA correlated inversely with the ratio F-Cit at pH 6.0, respectively, original pH, but directly with the urinary albumin/non-albumin protein ratio. In summary 1) to study calcium oxalate and calcium phosphate nucleation in whole urine of IRCU patients is feasible; 2) at this crystallization stage the two substances, dominant in calcium stones, appear intimately linked, 3) in stone-forming urine, calcium phosphate may be ubiquitously present, likely as particles < 0.22 microm; 4) together with co-precipitation of calcium oxalate and calcium phosphate, low F-Cit and alteration of proteinuria may act in concert and accelerate stones.