| Literature DB >> 18042297 |
Shradha Rathi1, William Kern, Kai Lau.
Abstract
UNLABELLED: Vitamin C is a precursor of oxalate and promoter of its absorption, potentially causing hyperoxaluria. Malabsorption causes Calcium (Ca) chelation with fatty acids, producing enteric hyperoxaluria. CASE: A 73-year-old man with both risk factors was hospitalized with serum creatinine of 8.4 mg/dL (versus 1.2 mg/dL four months earlier) (normal 0.6-1.3 mg/dL). Given his oxalate-rich diet, chronic diarrhea, and daily 680 mg vitamin C and furosemide, we postulated Ca oxalate-induced nephropathy, a diagnosis confirmed by documenting hyperoxaluria, and finding of diffuse intraluminal crystals and extensive interstitial fibrosis on biopsy. He was hemodialysed 6 times to remove excess oxalate. Two weeks off vitamin C, his creatinine spontaneously fell to 3.1 mg/dL. Three months later, on low oxalate diet and 100 mg vitamin B6, urine oxalate to creatinine ratio decreased from 0.084 to 0.02 (normal < 0.035), while creatinine fell and stayed at 1.8 mg/dL.Entities:
Year: 2007 PMID: 18042297 PMCID: PMC2235877 DOI: 10.1186/1752-1947-1-155
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Med Case Rep ISSN: 1752-1947
Figure 1Serum creatinine, urine oxalate:creatinine ratio, and creatinine clearance vs. clinical timeline. (a) The chart shows the trend of serum creatinine (gray bars, with the values shown on the left axis), starting from a baseline of 1.2 mg/dL just over 4 months ago, gradually increasing up to 3.1 mg/dL 8 days ago, and rapidly increasing to 8.4 mg/dL on admission (day 0). The urine oxalate:creatinine ratio (red squares connected by lines, with values shown on the right axis) clearly shows hyperoxaluria at admission (0.084 at day 1, compared to a normal of 0.035). Vitamin C was stopped on day 4, and creatinine started improving after 2 days. (b) Renal function in terms of creatinine clearance (% of normal) is also shown.
Figure 2Slides from left kidney biopsy and CT image of abdomen. There is extensive interstitial fibrosis and tubular atrophy, with marked medial fibrosis in an artery on the lower right (trichrome/10x) (a); bright crystals are seen under partial polarization within the lumens of two tubules (arrows) (H&E/20x) (b). A 10 mm calculus is seen in the right extra renal pelvis (arrow) in the CT (c).
Figure 3Pathophysiology and management of hyperoxaluric nephropathy.