Literature DB >> 3009752

Diet calcium carbonate, phosphorus and acidifying and alkalizing salts as factors influencing silica urolithiasis in rats fed tetraethylorthosilicate.

C J Schreier, R J Emerick.   

Abstract

Three experiments were conducted to determine the effects of excess dietary calcium carbonate, phosphorus and urine acidifying and alkalizing salts on silica urolith formation in a model using rats fed dextrose-based diets containing 2% tetraethylorthosilicate (TES). Diets containing 2% TES lowered weight gains to 91-95% of gains made by rats fed non-TES diets. Urine silica concentrations of rats fed TES were generally in the range of 50-60 mg/dl. In experiment 1, rats fed TES with no additional dietary calcium carbonate had a silica urolith incidence of 35%. With additions of 1 and 2% calcium carbonate to the basal-TES diet, respective urolith incidences were 45 and 60% (r = 0.99, P less than 0.02). In experiment 2, monobasic sodium phosphate (MP) providing 0.2% additional phosphorus resulted in a mean urine pH of 6.42 and no uroliths. Dibasic sodium phosphate (DP) without and with 0.5% sodium bicarbonate (SB) resulted in respective urine pH values of 6.78 and 7.14 and urolith incidences of 15 and 20% (MP less than DP and DP + SB, P less than 0.05). However, the uroliths were small averaging less than 1 mg. In experiment 3, substitution of autoclaved egg albumin for casein, the protein source in experiments 1 and 2, resulted in urine pH of 7.45 and a silica urolith incidence of 46%. An equal-molar mixture of MP and DP providing an added 0.2% phosphorus resulted in a urine pH of 7.07 and reduced the urolith incidence to 4%, and 0.75% of dietary ammonium chloride either with or without the added 0.2% phosphorus gave urine acidification and complete protection from uroliths.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)

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Year:  1986        PMID: 3009752     DOI: 10.1093/jn/116.5.823

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Nutr        ISSN: 0022-3166            Impact factor:   4.798


  1 in total

1.  Sex differences in o-phenylphenol and sodium o-phenylphenate rat urinary bladder carcinogenesis: urinary metabolites and electrolytes under conditions of aciduria and alkalinuria.

Authors:  R Hasegawa; M Fukuoka; T Takahashi; A Yamamoto; S Yamaguchi; M A Shibata; A Tanaka; S Fukushima
Journal:  Jpn J Cancer Res       Date:  1991-06
  1 in total

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