Abstract: | 1. Calcification in renal tuberculosis is not warranting a healing process, but may be a clinical manifestation of the disease. 2. Calcification presenting at least one year after the start of treatment should be considered differently from calcification first seen on presentation, and s,ould be treated in the same way as renal calculi. In view of the high incidence of associated active renal tuberculosis, calcification present when first seen should be removed, preferably with partial excision if the lesion is amenable to this form of treatment, but if it is not removed, patients should be followed up indefinitely, as complications can occur at any time. 3. Extra-renal calcification is more common in patients suffering from genito-urinary tuberculosis who present with renal calcification. 4. The incidence of renal calcification in patients suffering from renal tuberculosis is increasing. This could either be due to the host, the pathogenic organism, or possibly the treatment. As the host and treatment have not changed, it would suggest some alteration in the character of the organism. |