Literature DB >> 18827800

The impact of sodium chloride and volume depletion in the chronic kidney disease of congenital chloride diarrhea.

Satu Wedenoja1, Timo Ormälä, Ulla B Berg, Stella F Edström Halling, Hannu Jalanko, Riitta Karikoski, Juha Kere, Christer Holmberg, Pia Höglund.   

Abstract

Congenital chloride diarrhea is due to mutations in the intestinal Cl(-)/HCO(3)(-) exchange (SLC26A3) which results in sodium chloride and fluid depletion leading to hypochloremic and hypokalemic metabolic alkalosis. Although treatment with sodium and potassium chloride offers protection from renal involvement in childhood, the long-term renal outcome remains unclear. Here we describe two cases of congenital chloride diarrhea-associated end-stage renal disease with transplantation. Further, we show that there is a high incidence of mild chronic kidney disease in 35 other patients with congenital chloride diarrhea. The main feature of the renal injury was nephrocalcinosis, without hypercalciuria or nephrolithiasis with small sized kidneys and commensurately reduced glomerular filtration rates. This suggests that diarrhea-related sodium chloride and volume depletion, the first signs of non-optimal salt substitution, promote urine supersaturation and crystal precipitation. The poor compliance with salt substitution along with long-lasting hypochloremic and hypokalemic metabolic alkalosis is likely to induce progressive calcification and renal failure. Both our patients developed nephrocalcinosis in the transplanted kidneys suggesting that this complication is a consequence of intestinal SLC26A3 deficiency. Interestingly, the transporter is expressed in the distal nephron but the recurrence of nephrocalcinosis in the transplanted kidney suggests that it does not play a significant renal role in this syndrome.

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Year:  2008        PMID: 18827800     DOI: 10.1038/ki.2008.401

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Kidney Int        ISSN: 0085-2538            Impact factor:   10.612


  13 in total

1.  Rare mutation in the SLC26A3 transporter causes life-long diarrhoea with metabolic alkalosis.

Authors:  Maen D Abou Ziki; Mohamud A Verjee
Journal:  BMJ Case Rep       Date:  2015-01-07

2.  Transcellular oxalate and Cl- absorption in mouse intestine is mediated by the DRA anion exchanger Slc26a3, and DRA deletion decreases urinary oxalate.

Authors:  Robert W Freel; Jonathan M Whittamore; Marguerite Hatch
Journal:  Am J Physiol Gastrointest Liver Physiol       Date:  2013-07-25       Impact factor: 4.052

Review 3.  The role of intestinal oxalate transport in hyperoxaluria and the formation of kidney stones in animals and man.

Authors:  Jonathan M Whittamore; Marguerite Hatch
Journal:  Urolithiasis       Date:  2016-12-02       Impact factor: 3.436

Review 4.  Diagnostic Challenge of Congenital Chloride Diarrhea and Ulcerative Colitis Overlap in an Adult Misdiagnosed with Bartter Syndrome: Case Report and Literature Review.

Authors:  Laila Fahad Sadagah; Ahmad Zaid Makeen; Eman Talal Kotbi
Journal:  Am J Case Rep       Date:  2022-07-05

5.  Type IV neonatal Bartter syndrome complicated with congenital chloride diarrhea.

Authors:  Hale Sakallı; Hakan İbrahim Bucak
Journal:  Am J Case Rep       Date:  2012-09-14

6.  Congenital chloride-losing diarrhea in a Mexican child with the novel homozygous SLC26A3 mutation G393W.

Authors:  Fabian R Reimold; Savithri Balasubramanian; David B Doroquez; Boris E Shmukler; Zsuzsanna K Zsengeller; David Saslowsky; Jay R Thiagarajah; Isaac E Stillman; Wayne I Lencer; Bai-Lin Wu; Salvador Villalpando-Carrion; Seth L Alper
Journal:  Front Physiol       Date:  2015-06-23       Impact factor: 4.566

7.  Effects of acid-base variables and the role of carbonic anhydrase on oxalate secretion by the mouse intestine in vitro.

Authors:  Jonathan M Whittamore; Susan C Frost; Marguerite Hatch
Journal:  Physiol Rep       Date:  2015-02-25

8.  Congenital chloride losing diarrhea: A single center experience in a highly consanguineous population.

Authors:  Naglaa M Kamal; Hekmat Yaqoub Khan; Mortada H F El-Shabrawi; Laila M Sherief
Journal:  Medicine (Baltimore)       Date:  2019-05       Impact factor: 1.817

9.  Development of an animal model of nephrocalcinosis via selective dietary sodium and chloride depletion.

Authors:  Shamir Tuchman; Laureano D Asico; Crisanto Escano; Daniel A Bobb; Patricio E Ray
Journal:  Pediatr Res       Date:  2012-11-22       Impact factor: 3.756

10.  Congenital chloride diarrhea and Pendred syndrome: case report of siblings with two rare recessive disorders of SLC26 family genes.

Authors:  Eva Lindberg; Claes Moller; Juha Kere; Satu Wedenoja; Agneta Anderzén-Carlsson
Journal:  BMC Med Genet       Date:  2020-04-15       Impact factor: 2.103

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