Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Pivot Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Target Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Query: UMLS:C0020438 (
hypercalciuria
)
2,502
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Hypercalcuria
is the most common metabolic disorder found in patients with nephrolithiasis. As the prevalence of kidney stones rises in industrialized nations, understanding the pathogenesis and treatment of
hypercalciuria
becomes increasingly important.
Idiopathic hypercalciuria
(IH), defined as an excess urine calcium excretion without an apparent underlying etiology, is the most frequent cause of
hypercalciuria
and will be the focus of this paper. Calcium homeostasis is tightly controlled and slight disturbances in transport at the level of the intestine, bone, and/or kidney can lead to excessive urine calcium excretion and promote stone formation. IH is a systemic disorder with dysregulation of calcium transport at a combination of these calcium regulatory sites. The goal of treatment is to prevent stone formation and relies on a combination of dietary and pharmaceutical interventions. Dietary management includes increasing fluid intake, salt restriction, animal protein restriction, and maintaining a normal calcium intake. Thiazide diuretics have proven effective in preventing calcium stone formation by reducing the urinary excretion of calcium. It is important to note that while decreasing urinary calcium excretion is important the clinician should focus primarily on reducing the supersaturation of calcium oxalate as this determines the true tendency for stone formation.
...
PMID:Idiopathic hypercalciuria. 1651 69
Idiopathic hypercalciuria
is the most common metabolic abnormality in patients with nephrolithiasis. Through successive inbreeding, we have developed a strain of rats whose urine calcium (UCa) excretion is approximately 8-10-fold greater than that of control rats and who spontaneously form kidney stones. We have termed these rats genetic hypercalciuric stone-forming (GHS) rats. The physiology of the
hypercalciuria
in the GHS rats closely parallels that of man. We have recently shown that the GHS rat kidneys have an increased number of receptors for calcium (CaR) compared to Sprague-Dawley rats, the strain of rats originally bred to develop the GHS rats. Calcimimetics, such as cinacalcet (Cin), increase the sensitivity of the CaR to Ca. The effects of Cin on UCa are complex and difficult to predict. We tested the hypothesis that Cin would alter urinary (U) Ca and supersaturation with respect to calcium hydrogen phosphate (CaHPO(4)) and calcium oxalate (CaOx). GHS or control rats were fed a normal Ca diet (0.6% Ca) for 28 days with Cin (30 mg/kg/24 h) added to the diet of half of each group for the last 14 days. The protocol was then repeated while the rats were fed a low Ca (0.02% Ca) diet. We found that Cin led to a marked reduction in circulating parathyroid hormone and a modest reduction in serum Ca. Cin did not alter UCa when the GHS rats were fed the normal Ca diet but lowered UCa when they were fed the low Ca diet. However, Cin did not alter U supersaturation with respect to either CaOx or CaHPO(4) on either diet. If these findings in GHS rats can be confirmed in man, it suggests that Cin would not be an effective agent in the treatment of human idiopathic
hypercalciuria
and resultant stone formation.
...
PMID:Effect of cinacalcet on urine calcium excretion and supersaturation in genetic hypercalciuric stone-forming rats. 1655 25
Idiopathic hypercalciuria
(IH) has been speculated to have a predisposing role in the development of urinary tract infection (UTI), due to the uroepithelial cell damage it leads to. In this study, we aimed to investigate the effects of
hypercalciuria
on the bladder, ureters, and kidneys in rats with experimentally induced
hypercalciuria
.Normocalcemic
hypercalciuria
was induced by furosemide (60 mg/100 mL of drinking water) administration to 16-week-old male Wistar Albino rats for 14 days. Calciuria (calcium/creatinine ratio, mg/mg, Ca/Cr) increased from 0.07+/-0.01 at the beginning of administration to 0.41+/-0.1 on day 14 (p=0.000). The Ca/Cr ratio was 0.14+/-0.06 at the beginning of the study and 0.25+/-0.06 on day 14 in the control group rats (p=0.002 vs. the hypercalciuric group rats on day 14). Bladder, ureter, and kidney specimens of the rats, dissected on the 14th day, were fixed in 10% formalin and 2.5% gluteraldehyde solutions for light and electron microscopic examination, respectively. Histopathological and ultrastructural examination of the hypercalciuric rats revealed proliferation and apical cytoplasmic vacuole formation in transitional epithelial cells, mitotic activity in the intermediate cell line, vasodilatation, edema, and separation of collagen fibers in the bladder and ureter specimens. Light microscopic examination of the kidney specimens revealed a lot of erythrocyte in the glomerular capillary lumen, while electron microscopy revealed vacuolization of proximal and distal tubules, tubular degeneration, interstitial edema, and vasodilatation.In this study,
hypercalciuria
was observed to have adverse effects on the cell architecture of the uroepithelium and disruption of the epithelial barrier of the bladder and ureters and all kidney structures, especially on the proximal epithelial cells.
...
PMID:Evaluation of histologic changes in the urinary tract of hypercalciuric rats. 1692 50
Idiopathic hypercalciuria
(IH) is defined as
hypercalciuria
that persists after correction of dietary inbalances and has no detectable cause. The excretion of urinary N-acetyl-beta-D-glucosaminidase (U-NAG), a marker of proximal tubular damage, has been previously reported as either increased or normal in children with IH. We evaluated U-NAG in 20 children (13 boys and 7 girls, mean age 10.3 years +/- 5.7 SD) with IH (urinary calcium excretion above 0.1 mmol/kg/24 hours, with no detectable cause) and with otherwise normal renal function tests. Ultrasound examination revealed urolithiasis (n=4) and nephrocalcinosis (n=1). The U-NAG values were evaluated in the spot urine collected from the second morning void and calculated as the urinary NAG/creatinine ratio (U-NAG/Cr) and expressed in nkat/mmol. The 24-hour urinary calcium excretion (U-Ca/24h) was assessed in a urinary sample from 24-hour collected urine and calculated in mmol/kg. The obtained results of U-Ca/24h and U-NAG/Cr were expressed as Z-scores. When compared to the reference data, the U-Ca/24h and U-NAG/Cr were significantly higher (p = 0.0004 and p = 0.006, respectively). There was no correlation between the U-NAG/Cr and U-Ca/24h (r = 0.18, p = 0.20). The U-NAG/Cr values were significantly higher in the 5 patients with urolithiasis/nephrocalcinosis, whether compared to the rest of the group (p = 0.02), or to the reference data (p = 0.01). The U-NAG/Cr activity was higher in 15 children without urolithiasis/nephrocalcinosis when compared to reference data (p < 0.01). There was no difference in U-Ca/24h between the children with and without urolithiasis/nephrocalcinosis (p = 0.58). These findings suggest that tubular impairment, as reflected by U-NAG/Cr, might occur in children with IH, especially in patients with urolithiasis/nephrocalcinosis. There doesn't seem to be a direct relationship between the U-NAG/Cr activity and the degree of calcium leakage.
...
PMID:Renal tubular impairment in children with idiopathic hypercalciuria. 1695 19
Idiopathic hypercalciuria
is a defect occurring in 5-10% of the general population and most commonly detected in patients with calcium kidney stones or osteoporosis. Although high-penetrance autosomal dominant inheritance cannot be ruled out,
hypercalciuria
is probably a polygenic phenomenon. Findings obtained in monogenic disorders characterized by renal calcium stones, and/or
hypercalciuria
, and/or nephrocalcinosis, have suggested a number of genes as candidate genes in the pathogenesis of idiopathic
hypercalciuria
, i.e. soluble adenylate cyclase, calcium sensing receptor, vitamin D receptor and 1-alpha hydroxylase, sodium-phosphate co-transporter-2, claudin-16, chloride channel 5, etc. All the genetic findings obtained so far do not support the idea of different types of idiopathic
hypercalciuria
, i.e. absorptive, renal, and resorptive. On the contrary, they support clinical observations, which suggest idiopathic
hypercalciuria
as a single disorder characterized by altered calcium transport in the intestine, kidney and bone, due to various different combinations of multiple genetic and dietary players.
...
PMID:Hypercalciuria revisited: one or many conditions? 1794 25
The evaluation of metabolic risk factor in children with renal stone disease is the basis of medical treatment aimed at preventing recurrent stone events and the growth of preexisting calculi. In this retrospective study, we evaluated the metabolic risk factors and clinical and family histories of 90 children with kidney stone disease who had been referred to our institution and subjected to clinical tests using a standardized protocol. The mean age of our pediatric patients was 10.7 years, and the male:female ratio was 1.14:1.0. Biochemical abnormalities were found in 84.4% of all cases. A single urine metabolic risk factor was present in 52.2% (n = 47) of the patients, and multiple risk factors were present in the remaining 31.1% (n = 28).
Idiopathic hypercalciuria
(alone or in combination) and hypocitraturia (alone or in combination) were the most frequent risk factors identified in 40 and 37.8% of these patients, respectively. Renal colic or unspecified abdominal pain were the most frequent forms of presentation (76.9%), with 97.5% of stones located in the upper urinary tract. In most patients, stone disease was confirmed by renal ultrasonography (77%). A positive family history in first-degree and second-degree relatives was found in 46.2 and 32.5% of the cases, respectively. We conclude that specific urine metabolic risk factors are found in most children with kidney stones and that hypocitraturia is as frequent as
hypercalciuria
. Very often there is a positive family history of renal stone disease in first- and second-degree relatives.
...
PMID:Metabolic risk factors in children with kidney stone disease. 1935 Feb 77
Idiopathic hypercalciuria
(IH) is the most common metabolic abnormality in patients with calcium kidney stones. It is characterized by normocalcemia, absence of diseases that cause increased urine calcium, and calcium excretion that is greater than 250 mg/d in women and 300 mg/d in men. Subjects with IH have a generalized increase in calcium turnover, which includes increased gut calcium absorption, decreased renal calcium reabsorption, and a tendency to lose calcium from bone. Despite the increase in intestinal calcium absorption, a negative calcium balance is seen commonly in balance studies, especially on a low-calcium diet. The mediator of decreased renal calcium reabsorption is not clear; it is not associated with either an increase in filtered load of calcium or altered parathyroid hormone levels. There is an increased incidence of
hypercalciuria
in first-degree relatives of those with IH, but IH appears to be a complex polygenic trait with a large contribution from diet to expression of increased calcium excretion. Increased tissue vitamin D response may be responsible for the manifestations of IH in at least some patients.
...
PMID:New insights into the pathogenesis of idiopathic hypercalciuria. 1835 93
Idiopathic hypercalciuria
is the most important predisposing risk factor for calcium oxalate (CaOx) renal stone formation. We assessed the associations between spontaneous CaOx crystallization based on the Bonn Risk Index (BRI), urinary pH, calciuria, oxaluria, and citraturia in 140 Caucasian patients with
hypercalciuria
, aged 4-17 years, and compared the findings with those in 210 normocalciuric controls. Of the 140 hypercalciuric patients, 58 had renal stones, and 82 had recurrent erythrocyturia, renal colic, or urinary obstructive symptoms-but without stones. Urinary ionized calcium ([Ca(2+)]) levels were measured using a selective electrode, while the onset of crystallization was determined using a photometer and titration with 40 mmol/L ammonium oxalate (Ox(2-)). The calculation of the BRI was based on the [Ca(2+)]:Ox(2-) ratio. The BRI values were 12-fold higher in hypercalciuric children than in healthy controls, but no differences were found in the BRI between subjects with urinary stones and those with urolithiasis-like symptoms. An increased BRI suggested an association with
hypercalciuria
, lower urinary pH, hypocitraturia, and hypooxaluria. These data indicate that
hypercalciuria
is an important factor associated with increased urinary CaOx crystallization, although the causal pathways need further investigation. Determination of the BRI in children with
hypercalciuria
may improve the risk assessment of kidney stones.
...
PMID:Spontaneous urinary calcium oxalate crystallization in hypercalciuric children. 1935 Feb 80
Idiopathic hypercalciuria
is a common disorder in children and can present with a range of clinical presentations such as hematuria, voiding dysfunction, flank pain, abdominal pain, nephrolithiasis, urinary tract infection and decreased bone mineral density. In the review below we provide a brief overview of calcium metabolism, types and clinical consequences of
hypercalciuria
and a brief approach to evaluation and management of
hypercalciuria
.
...
PMID:Complications of hypercalciuria. 1948 48
Idiopathic hypercalciuria
may lead to bone loss via three pathogenic mechanisms described in HIV-negative patients: intestinal hyperabsorption, kidney loss and bone hyperabsorption. We conducted a cross-sectional study in a cohort of 217 HIV-positive antiretroviral-experienced patients, identifying
hypercalciuria
in 67 patients: the prevalence was 30.9% (95% confidence interval 27.4-37.0). The occurrence of
hypercalciuria
in subjects with normal values of parathormone may indicate an absorptive form of
hypercalciuria
. In this sample, other bone turnover markers and T-scores were not related to the condition. The results of this study show a high prevalence of idiopathic
hypercalciuria
in a group of antiretroviral-experienced patients. The consequences and the exact causes of this metabolic complication are not yet known and further investigation is needed.
...
PMID:Prevalence and factors associated with idiopathic hypercalciuria in HIV patients on combination antiretroviral therapy. 2129 93
<< Previous
1
2
3
4
5
Next >>