One person in four in the industrialized countries suffers from hyperuricemia and is therefore at risk of developing gouty arthritis, nephrolithiasis, or any of the other consequences of urate deposition. At present, far too little is known about urate deposition and the mechanisms by which it occurs, as well as about its clinical consequences, which include formation of toph; over the helix of the ear or in bones close to joints that have never exhibited an attack, development of bursitis, chronic tendovaginitis leading to carpal tunnel syndrome, and gouty paraplegia. Information on these matters is needed to estimate the risks of hyperuricemia and to determine when therapeutic intervention is indicated. The contributions and discussions in this book, resulting from an international symposium held in December 1990 in the Medizinische Poliklinik in Munich, provide an up-to-date source of current knowledge about hyperuricemia in man and its clinical consequences.
Contributions by: R.D. de Abreu, G. van den Berghe, G. Calabrese, D.J. McCarty, B.T. Emmerson, B. Gathof, M. Gonella, U. Gresser, W. Gröbner, I. Kamilli, W. Löffler, W. Mohr, G. Nuki, D. Perrett, J.G. Puig, F. Roch-Ramel, M. Schattenkirchner, K.L. Schmidt, J.T. Scott, H.A. Simmonds, O. Sperling, R. Terkeltaub, R.W.E. Watts, H.F. Woods, N. Zöllner