Literature DB >> 1956278

Comparison of patients with idiopathic calcium phosphate and calcium oxalate stones.

M H Gault1, L L Chafe, J M Morgan, P S Parfrey, J D Harnett, E A Walsh, V M Prabhakaran, D Dow, A Colpitts.   

Abstract

Our primary objective was to test the hypothesis that a defect in acidification is more common in patients who have idiopathic calcium phosphate kidney stones than in those whose stones are formed mainly of calcium oxalate. Additionally, other risk factors might differ for these 2 stone types. Urine pH was measured serially over 24 hours, and along with ammonium and titratable acid, it was measured before and serially after ingestion of ammonium chloride in 3 groups of subjects: 24 patients with predominantly calcium phosphate stones, 30 patients with calcium oxalate stones, and 15 health non-stone-formers. Twenty-six parameters potentially related to stone formation and acidification were assayed on urines collected over 24 hours, and 15 parameters on blood. The data base was a computerized list of 5900 analyses of stones from patients living in Newfoundland. Patients not known by their physician to have had urinary tract infection, anatomical abnormality, hyperparathyroidism, or renal tubular acidosis were asked to participate in the study. Differences between means were considered significant if p values were less than 0.05 for F by analysis of variance and also less than 0.01 by t-test. In all patients with calcium oxalate stones and all non-stone-formers, urine acidified to pH less than 5.25, but in 8 of the 23 phosphate stone formers who completed the ammonium chloride study urine failed to acidify to pH less than 5.25. As all 8 had normal values for venous pH, total CO2, and chloride, they were considered to have incomplete renal tubular acidosis (IRTA). The 8 phosphate stone formers with IRTA had greater mean values for urine pH on all 9 specimens collected serially over 24 hours (all means greater than 6.2), and after administration of ammonium chloride (p less than 0.01), as well as lower mean values for urine titratable acid excretion (p less than 0.01), both after administration of ammonium chloride and in 24-hour urine samples, compared with the remaining phosphate stone formers whose urine acidified and the oxalate and non-stone-forming control groups. Nearly all the phosphate stone formers had 1 or more risk factors for stone formation, but with frequencies not significantly higher than those found in the oxalate group. Hypercalciuria and hypocitruria were the commonest, but increased oxalate or urate also occurred. Thus, idiopathic calcium phosphate stone formation can be associated with 1 or more of several risk factors, and, with the possible exception of those with IRTA, treatment should be similar to that given to patients with calcium oxalate stones.

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Year:  1991        PMID: 1956278     DOI: 10.1097/00005792-199111000-00001

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Medicine (Baltimore)        ISSN: 0025-7974            Impact factor:   1.889


  10 in total

1.  Furosemide/Fludrocortisone Test and Clinical Parameters to Diagnose Incomplete Distal Renal Tubular Acidosis in Kidney Stone Formers.

Authors:  Nasser A Dhayat; Michael W Gradwell; Ganesh Pathare; Manuel Anderegg; Lisa Schneider; David Luethi; Cedric Mattmann; Orson W Moe; Bruno Vogt; Daniel G Fuster
Journal:  Clin J Am Soc Nephrol       Date:  2017-08-03       Impact factor: 8.237

Review 2.  Kidney stone disease.

Authors:  Fredric L Coe; Andrew Evan; Elaine Worcester
Journal:  J Clin Invest       Date:  2005-10       Impact factor: 14.808

Review 3.  Incomplete Distal Renal Tubular Acidosis and Kidney Stones.

Authors:  Daniel G Fuster; Orson W Moe
Journal:  Adv Chronic Kidney Dis       Date:  2018-07       Impact factor: 3.620

4.  Composition and morphology of phosphate stones and their relation with etiology.

Authors:  Michel Daudon; Hassan Bouzidi; Dominique Bazin
Journal:  Urol Res       Date:  2010-10-22

Review 5.  A hypothesis of calcium stone formation: an interpretation of stone research during the past decades.

Authors:  Hans-Göran Tiselius
Journal:  Urol Res       Date:  2011-01-19

6.  Evidence for altered renal tubule function in idiopathic calcium stone formers.

Authors:  Elaine M Worcester; Fredric L Coe
Journal:  Urol Res       Date:  2010-07-15

7.  Studies on the role of calcium phosphate in the process of calcium oxalate crystal formation.

Authors:  Hans-Göran Tiselius; Bengt Lindbäck; Anne-Marie Fornander; Mari-Anne Nilsson
Journal:  Urol Res       Date:  2009-05-15

8.  Incomplete distal renal tubular acidosis from a heterozygous mutation of the V-ATPase B1 subunit.

Authors:  Jianning Zhang; Daniel G Fuster; Mary Ann Cameron; Henry Quiñones; Carolyn Griffith; Xiao-Song Xie; Orson W Moe
Journal:  Am J Physiol Renal Physiol       Date:  2014-08-27

9.  The calcium-sensing receptor promotes urinary acidification to prevent nephrolithiasis.

Authors:  Kirsten Y Renkema; Ana Velic; Henry B Dijkman; Sjoerd Verkaart; Annemiete W van der Kemp; Marta Nowik; Kim Timmermans; Alain Doucet; Carsten A Wagner; René J Bindels; Joost G Hoenderop
Journal:  J Am Soc Nephrol       Date:  2009-05-21       Impact factor: 10.121

10.  Contrasting histopathology and crystal deposits in kidneys of idiopathic stone formers who produce hydroxy apatite, brushite, or calcium oxalate stones.

Authors:  Andrew P Evan; James E Lingeman; Elaine M Worcester; Andre J Sommer; Carrie L Phillips; James C Williams; Fredric L Coe
Journal:  Anat Rec (Hoboken)       Date:  2014-01-30       Impact factor: 2.064

  10 in total

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