| Literature DB >> 26251832 |
Haewook Han1, Adam M Segal2, Julian L Seifter3, Johanna T Dwyer4.
Abstract
The incidence of kidney stones is common in the United States and treatments for them are very costly. This review article provides information about epidemiology, mechanism, diagnosis, and pathophysiology of kidney stone formation, and methods for the evaluation of stone risks for new and follow-up patients. Adequate evaluation and management can prevent recurrence of stones. Kidney stone prevention should be individualized in both its medical and dietary management, keeping in mind the specific risks involved for each type of stones. Recognition of these risk factors and development of long-term management strategies for dealing with them are the most effective ways to prevent recurrence of kidney stones.Entities:
Keywords: Calcium oxalate; Hypercalciuria; Hyperoxaluria; Nephrolithiasis; Prevention of kidney stone; Risk factors for kidney stones; Uric acid stone
Year: 2015 PMID: 26251832 PMCID: PMC4525130 DOI: 10.7762/cnr.2015.4.3.137
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Clin Nutr Res ISSN: 2287-3732
Type of stones
| Type | Frequency (%) | Sex | Crystals | Radiography |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Calcium oxalate/ mix | 75 | M | Envelope | Round, radiodense, sharply outlined |
| Calcium phosphate (brushite) | 5 | F>M | Amorphous: Alkaline urine | Small, radiodense, sharply outlined |
| Uric acid | 5-15 | M=F | Diamond; Acid urine | Round/ staghorn, radiolucent, filling defect |
| Struvite (Mg ammonium phosphate) | 10-20 | F | Coffin lid; Infection/ urea splitter | Staghorn, laminated radiodense |
| Cystine | 1 | M=F | Hexagon | Staghorn, radiodense |
Courtesy from Dr. J. Seifter, Harvard Medical School, Renal Division Brigham and Women's Hospital, Boston
Figure 1Type of stones. Light microscopy of urine crystals. (A) Hexagonal cystine crystal (200X); (B) coffin-lid shaped struvite crystals (200X); (C) pyramid-shaped calcium oxalate dehydrate crystals (200X); (D) dumbbell-shaped calcium oxalate monohydrate crystal (400X); (E) rectangular uric acid crystals (400X); and (F) rhomboidal uric acid crystals (400X). Reprinted with permission by Elsevier and reference [12].
Normal values of 24-hour urinalysis
| Normal value | Cause of abnormal values | |
|---|---|---|
| Ca | <250 mg/d for males | ↑ Idiopathic hypercalciuria, high Na diet (high urine Na), high protein diet |
| <200 mg/d for females | ↓ with bone disease | |
| Phosphorus | 0.6-1.2 g/d | ↓ with bowel disease, malnutrition, with large amount of food intake |
| Mg | 30-120 mg/d | ↓ with some laxatives, malnutrition, malabsorption |
| Oxalate | 20-40 mg/d | ↑ with high oxalate diet, high vitamin C consumption |
| if > 80, intestinal (Inflammatory bowel disease) or oxalosis | ||
| Citrate | >450 mg/d for males | ↓ RTA, hypokalemia, high animal protein diet, acidosis, diarrhea |
| >550 mg/d for females | ||
| Uric acid | <0.8 g/d for males | ↑ with high animal protein diet (high purine), alcoholic beverages, overproduction |
| <0.75 g/d for females | ||
| Volume | >2,000 ml/d | ↓ with low fluid intake |
| pH | 5.8-6.2 | ↓ RTA, urea splitting infection, acidosis, high animal protein intake (high purine content) |
| ↑ vegetarian diet, high citrus consumption, soft drink | ||
| Na | 50-150 mEq/d (1,150-3,450 mg) | ↑ with high Na diet |
| ↓ with low volume | ||
| K | 20-100 mEq/d | <20 meq Bowel disease, diuretics, laxatives |
| Cl | 70-250 mEq/d | |
| Urea nitrogen | 6-14 g/kg/d | ↑ with high protein diet |
| PCR | 0.8-1.4 g/d | ↑ with high protein diet |
| Sulfate | 20-80 mEq/d | ↑ with high protein diet |
| Ammonium | 15-60 mM/d | ↑ pH > 7 urea splitting infection |
| ↓ pH < 5.5 CRI, UA stones, gout | ||
| Cr | 18-24 mg/kg for males | ↑ with more than 24 hour collection |
| 15-20 mg/kg for females | ↓ with under collection |
Range: courtesy from Litolink Corp, Chicago, IL, RTA: renal tubular acidosis, PCR: protein catabolic rate, CRI: chronic renal insufficiency, UA: uric acid, Cr: creatinine.
Risk factors of kidney stone
| Hereditary and other disease related | Environment | ||
|---|---|---|---|
| Genetic | Idiopathic hypercalciuria | Climate | Heat |
| Kidney disease related | Medullary sponge kidney | Dietary | Na |
| Systemic disease | GI, Inflammatory bowel diseases (Ox and UA stones) | ||
| Hyperparathyroidism | CaP stone | ||
| Renal tubular acidosis (RTA) | Hypercalcemic states, | ||
| Sarcoid | Hypercalciuria, CaOx stone | ||
PKD: polycystic kidney disease, DM: diabetes mellitus, GI: gastrointestinal, Ox: oxalate, UA: uric acid, CaP: calcium phosphate, CaOx: calcium oxalate
Conditions favoring development of various kidney stones
| Factors | Functions |
|---|---|
| Increased urinary crystalloids | Form nucleus on existing surface |
| Supersaturated urine | |
| Decreased inhibitors | Magnesium (complexes with oxalate) |
| Citrate (complexes with calcium) | |
| Nephrocalcin, uropontin | |
| Tamm Horsfall | |
| Increased promoters | Uric acid |
| Dehydration | Low urine volume, supersaturated urine |
| Urine pH | Alkaline → Ca phosphate |
| Acidic → Uric acid, cysteine | |
| Diet | High protein/sodium/Ca → hypercalciuria, uricosuria, oxaluria |
| High oxalate → oxaluria | |
| Medication | Furosemide: decrease urinary volume |
| Na bicarbonate: increase urinary Ca |
Figure 2Model of idiopathic hypercalciuria.
Summary of evaluation of stone disease
| First stone | Recurrent stone and follow up |
|---|---|
| Basic medical evaluation | One 24-hr urine analysis: Ca, Phos, Mg, Oxalate, Citrate, uric acid, volume, creatinine, pH, urea nitrogen, Na, K |
Adapted from practice guideline at department of nephrology, Harvard Vanguard Medical Associate.
Acid-ash and alkaline-ash foods
| Acid-ash foods | Alkaline ash foods | ||
|---|---|---|---|
| Meat | Meat, fish, fowl, shellfish, egg | ||
| Dairy and other protein | All types of cheese | Dairy | Milk and milk products |
| Fat | Bacon, nuts (Brazil, filberts, walnuts) | Fat | Nuts (almonds, chestnuts, coconuts) |
| Starch | All types esp. whole wheat | ||
| Vegetables | Corn, lentils | Vegetables | All types except corn and lentils |
| Fruits | Cranberries, plums, prunes | Fruits | All types except cranberries, plum and prunes |
| Desserts | Plain cakes, cookies | Sweets | Molasses |
Modified from reference [66].
Figure 3Extracorporeal shock wave lithotripsy (ESWL).
Management of all types of kidney stones
| Abnormality | Evaluate | Management |
|---|---|---|
| Hypercalciuria | Urine Na and urea nitrogen | Na, protein restriction, Thiazide, not low Ca diet |
| Hypercalcemia | PTH, ionized Ca, vitamin D, malignancy, thyroid, bone disease etc | Parathyroidectomy, treat underlying disorder |
| Hyperoxaluria | Dietary oxalate, low dietary Ca, vitamin D, sweeteners, ileal disease, gastric bypass, ethylene glycol, enzyme deficiencies | Restrict oxalate, supplement magnesium, Ca, pyridoxine, cholestyramine |
| Hypocitraturia | Urinary citrate, serum potassium (K), creatinine, malabsorption, RTA, acetazolamide | Alkali (potassium citrate), sodium citrate if volume deplete |
| Hyperuricosuria | Dietary purines | Purine restriction, allopurinol, alkali |
| Acid urine (pH) | Exclude chronic diarrhea, gout, ileostomy | Alkali (Potassium citrate) |
| Low urine volume | 24 hr urine volume | At least 2.5 liters fluid intake |
PTH: parathyroid hormone, RTA: renal tubular acidosis.
Dietary recommendation to prevent kidney stones
| Nutrients | Recommendation |
|---|---|
| Ca | 800-1,200 mg/d |
| Oxalate | 40-50 mg/d |
| Na | 2,000-3,000 mg/d |
| Protein | 0.8-1.4 g/kg/d |
| Fluid | >2.5 L/d |
| Vitamin D | Low dose if vitamin D insufficiency or deficiency (1,000 IU/d) |
| Vitamin C | Dietary Reference Intake |
Adapted from reference [55].
National Kidney Foundation: Diet Guidelines for Kidney stone. Litolink Corp, Chicago, IL.
Oxalate content of foods
| Foods (3.5 oz or 100 g) | Oxalate (mg) | Foods (3.5 oz or 100 g) | Oxalate (mg) | Foods (3.5 oz or 100 g) | Oxalate (mg) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Flours & Mills | Seed containing vegetables | Leafy vegetables | |||
| Barley flour | 56 | Cucumber, raw | 20 | Amaranth leaves, raw | 1,090 |
| Buckwheat flour | 269 | Eggplant, raw | 190 | Beet leaves, raw | 610 |
| Corn meal | 54 | Eggplant, green, long, raw | 55 | Brussels sprouts, raw | 360 |
| Rice flour, brown | 37 | Okra, raw | 50 | Cabbage, green raw | 100 |
| Rye flour, dark | 51 | Pepper, raw | 40 | Chicory, raw | 210 |
| Semolina flour | 48 | Snap beans, raw | 360 | Chinese cabbage, raw | 6 |
| Soy flour | 183 | Squash, raw | 20 | Chinese, kale, raw | 23 |
| Wheat flour, white unbleached | 40 | Tomato, raw | 50 | Chives, raw | 1,480 |
| Wheat flour, whole | 67 | Yard long beans, green, raw | 38 | Collards, raw | 450 |
| Wheat Germ | 269 | Coriander, raw | 10 | ||
| Endive, raw | 110 | ||||
| Kale, raw | 20 | ||||
| Fruits | Legumes (Beans & Peas) | Leek | 89 | ||
| Bitter melon, raw | 71 | Anasazi beans, boiled | 80 | Lettuce, raw | 330 |
| Papaya raw | 5 | Azuki beans, boiled | 25 | Parsley, raw | 1,700 |
| Green goose berries | 88 | Black beans, boiled | 72 | Purslane, raw | 1,310 |
| Black berries | 19 | Cowpeas (blackeye peas), boiled | 4 | Spinach, raw | 970 |
| Blueberries, strawberries, red | 15 | Gabanzo beans, boiled | 9 | Turnip greens, raw | 50 |
| raspberries | Great northern beans, boiled | 75 | Watercress, raw | 310 | |
| Black raspberries | 55 | Kidney beans, red cooked | 16 | ||
| Concord grapes | 25 | Lentils, boiled | 8 | Tuber & Root vegetables | |
| Currents | 19 | Lima beans, large, boiled | 8 | Beetroot, boiled | 675 |
| Lemon peel | 83 | Navy beans, boiled | 57 | Carrot, raw | 500 |
| Lime peel | 110 | Peas, green, split, boiled | 6 | Cassava root, raw | 1,260 |
| Rhubarb | 800 | Peas, raw | 50 | Parsnip, raw | 40 |
| Peas, yellow, split, boiled | 5 | Potato, raw | 50 | ||
| Pink beans, boiled | 75 | Radish, raw | 480 | ||
| Pinto beans, boiled | 27 | Rutabaga, raw | 30 | ||
| Red beans, boiled | 35 | Sweet potato, raw | 240 | ||
| Soybeans, boiled | 56 | Turnip, raw | 210 | ||
| Nuts | White beans, small boiled | 78 | Other vegetables | ||
| Almonds, roasted | 469 | Corn, sweet, raw | 10 | ||
| Cashews, roasted | 262 | Garlic, raw | 360 | ||
| Hazelnuts, raw | 222 | Onion, raw | 50 | ||
| Macadamia nuts, raw | 42 | ||||
| Peanuts, raw | 142 | Miscellaneous foods | |||
| Pecans, raw | 64 | Black pepper | 419 | ||
| Pine nuts, raw | 198 | Chocolate | 117 | ||
| Pine nuts, roasted | 140 | Stem & Stalk vegetables | Cocoa powder | 623 | |
| Pistachio nuts, roasted | 49 | Asparagus, raw | 130 | Indian tea (1 C) | 72 |
| Soy nuts (1 oz) | 392 | Broccoli, raw | 190 | Soy protein | 496 |
| Walnuts, raw | 74 | Cauliflower, raw | 150 | Soy yogurt | 113 |
| Celery, raw | 190 | Soybean cracker | 207 | ||
| Tofu | 275 |
Sources: references [80818283].