Literature DB >> 3430961

Reduced glomerular filtration rate and hypercalciuria in primary struvite nephrolithiasis.

C Kristensen1, J H Parks, M Lindheimer, F L Coe.   

Abstract

Struvite nephrolithiasis is caused by infection with bacteria that possess the enzyme urease, and convert urea to ammonia that raises urine pH and crystallizes with magnesium and trivalent phosphate ion. Of the 75 of our 1431 stone patients with struvite stones 52 were women. Struvite stones occurred almost exclusively in women; a minority of women and most men had mixed stones of struvite and calcium oxalate. Increased serum creatinine levels and reduced creatinine clearance were common in patients with struvite stones, not in those with mixed stones; both were rare in calcium stone disease. Men and women with mixed struvite, calcium oxalate stones were hypercalciuric, but women with struvite stones were not. Patients with mixed stones usually had initial symptoms of stone passage, and were less likely to need surgery, including nephrectomy, or to form contralateral stones. Patients with struvite stones usually presented with infection or no symptom, not passage. We conclude that struvite stones occur in two forms. The struvite stone is a disease of women, presumably occurring de novo from infection. The mixed stones occur in both sexes, presumably from secondary infection in hypercalciuric patients who begin with calcium-oxalate stone disease.

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Year:  1987        PMID: 3430961     DOI: 10.1038/ki.1987.270

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


  8 in total

1.  Evaluating factors that dictate struvite stone composition: A multi-institutional clinical experience from the EDGE Research Consortium.

Authors:  Ryan K Flannigan; Andrew Battison; Shubha De; Mitchell R Humphreys; Markus Bader; Ekaterina Lellig; Manoj Monga; Ben H Chew; Dirk Lange
Journal:  Can Urol Assoc J       Date:  2017-12-22       Impact factor: 1.862

2.  AKI in a Patient with Urinary Tract Infection, Urinary Crystals, and a Bladder Stone.

Authors:  Claire F Schretlen; Bernard G Jaar; Mohamad Hanouneh
Journal:  Kidney360       Date:  2022-03-03

Review 3.  Kidney stones.

Authors:  Saeed R Khan; Margaret S Pearle; William G Robertson; Giovanni Gambaro; Benjamin K Canales; Steeve Doizi; Olivier Traxer; Hans-Göran Tiselius
Journal:  Nat Rev Dis Primers       Date:  2016-02-25       Impact factor: 52.329

4.  Kidney stones and the risk for chronic kidney disease.

Authors:  Andrew D Rule; Eric J Bergstralh; L Joseph Melton; Xujian Li; Amy L Weaver; John C Lieske
Journal:  Clin J Am Soc Nephrol       Date:  2009-04-01       Impact factor: 8.237

Review 5.  Do kidney stone formers have a kidney disease?

Authors:  Anna L Zisman; Andrew P Evan; Fredric L Coe; Elaine M Worcester
Journal:  Kidney Int       Date:  2015-09-16       Impact factor: 10.612

Review 6.  Management of staghorn renal stones.

Authors:  Akif Diri; Banu Diri
Journal:  Ren Fail       Date:  2018-11       Impact factor: 2.606

7.  The necessary pathway for metabolic and crystallographic analysis of kidney stones: struvite may not differ from its counterparts.

Authors:  Igor Pietrobom; Ita Pfeferman Heilberg
Journal:  J Bras Nefrol       Date:  2021 Apr-Jun

8.  Associations between interventions for urolithiasis and urinary tract cancer among patients in Taiwan: The effect of early intervention.

Authors:  Chien-Liang Lin; Wen-Tsung Huang; Wen-Chou Fan; Yin-Hsun Feng; Chia-Ho Lin; Chian-Shiung Lin; Chih-Cheng Lu; Tse-Chou Cheng; Chao-Jung Tsao; Sheng-Hsiang Lin
Journal:  Medicine (Baltimore)       Date:  2016-12       Impact factor: 1.817

  8 in total

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