Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0020438 (hypercalciuria)
2,502 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Nephrolithiasis (NL) has high and increasing prevalence in western countries. Most renal stones contain calcium and/or uric acid and often occur as idiopathic stones, while seldom are caused by genetic disorders. Conversely, cystinuria, xantinuria, 2-8 dihydroxyadeninuria only occur in patients with mutations of corresponding genes. Inherited NL must be suspected in case of early onset, positive family history, severe recurrence rate, associated biochemical disorders, abnormal urinary sediment, renal insufficiency, involvement of other organs or apparatus. Pathophysiology is based on different mechanisms: electrolytic abnormalities, altered tubular transport, acid-base imbalances, cystic renal diseases. Sometimes NL is iatrogenic. Here we review some genetic NL, not only characterized by clinical relevance but also by the scientific interest in view of our better understanding of mechanisms of stone formation. Namely, Dents syndrome, calcium sensing receptor mutations, familial hypopomagnesiemic hypercalciuria (FHHNC), hypophosphatemic rickets (HHRH), renal tubular acidosis (dRTA), primary hyperoxaluria (PH), cystinuria, 2-8 dihydroxyadeninuria (2-8 DHA). We will briefly report on prevalence, genetics, pathophysiology, clinical aspects and treatment. The need for early diagnosis stems from the fact that, for most of these, selective treatment may be highly effective and can prevent progression to ESRD. Lastly, a better knowledge and understanding of genetic NL is a premise to study polymorphisms of candidate genes also in the setting of so-called idiopathic disease.
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PMID:[Genetic approach to nephrolithiasis]. 2647 54