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

Calcium-hydrogenphosphate was considered as one of the main factors governing renal calculus formation. The degree of saturation (expressed as activity product = AP) with respect to this phase was therefore calculated in urines of 36 hypercalciuric children (20 absorptive, 16 renal subtype) with isolated hematuria and 30 healthy controls. The effect of thiazide treatment on the urine saturation and on the evolution of hematuria was also investigated. The results were compared to the urinary calcium excretion (expressed as Ca/cr ratio). Urines of both hypercalciuric groups were saturated on basal conditions (AP above 3.5 x 10-6 mol2/l2; -lgAP below 6.4), the values differed significantly from those of the controls (-lgAP = 6.78 +/- 0.4 in the control-; 6.1 +/- 0.25 in absorptive-, 6.03 +/- 0.34 in renal hypercalciuria; p less than 0.001). Thiazide normalized the activity product in all groups. During thiazide therapy significant decrease in the occurrence of hematuria was noted (p less than 0.001 in both hypercalciuric groups). These data furnish further evidence on the relation of hypercalciuria and postglomerular hematuria. Simultaneous determinations of the state of saturation may provide further information on the "stone forming potential" of the urines investigated.
...
PMID:Hypercalciuria and postglomerular hematuria in children. The effects of thiazide on calcium excretion, urine saturation with respect to calcium-hydrogenphosphate and hematuria. 231 87

We have prospectively studied 37 adult patients (15 males, 22 females; age 31 +/- 10.6 years) with previously undiagnosed isolated hematuria in which hypercalciuria or hyperuricosuria was found. Eighteen of them had had episodes of gross hematuria. Isolated hypercalciuria (4.4 to 10.4, X 5.6 +/- 1.9 mg/kg/24 hr) was found in nine patients (Group I), isolated hyperuricosuria (784 to 1500, X 1088 +/- 228 mg/24 hr) in 11 (Group II), and both hypercalciuria (4 to 8, X 4.9 +/- 1 mg/kg/24 hr) and hyperuricosuria (752 to 1476, X 1042 +/- 181 mg/24 hr) in 17 patients (Group III). Thiazide treatment for patients with hypercalciuria and allopurinol for those with hyperuricosuria were administered; calciuria and uricosuria became normal by the first month of therapy in every case. In 22 (59.4%) cases (Responder patients) hematuria resolved completely as soon as calciuria and uricosuria became normal. In the remaining 15 cases (Nonresponder patients) hematuria persisted despite the normal calcium and uric acid excretions. Several disorders that explained hematuria were diagnosed later in most of Nonresponder patients. Responder patients persisted without hematuria on the follow-up; only in three patients a transient relapse of hematuria was seen associated with a sudden increase of calciuria and uricosuria because of treatment withdrawal. There were no differences in age, male/female ratio nor in the basal values of calciuria and uricosuria between Responder and Nonresponder patients. A familial history of urolithiasis was found more frequently in Responder patients (64%) than in Nonresponders (20%) (P less than 0.05). We conclude that hypercalciuria and hyperuricosuria are definable and potentially reversible causes of hematuria in adult patients.
...
PMID:Hematuria due to hypercalciuria and hyperuricosuria in adult patients. 281 Oct 59

Calcium-hydrogen-phosphate (CaHPO4) was considered as one of the main factors governing renal calculus formation. The degree of saturation (expressed as activity product) with respect to this phase was therefore calculated in urines of 36 hypercalciuric children (20 absorptive, 16 renal subtype) with isolated hematuria, 10 renal stone patients, and 30 healthy controls. On low calcium diet 12 children of the absorptive hypercalciuric-, 13 of the renal hypercalciuric and 7 of the renal stone forming children hat their urines in the saturated zone --irrespective of the evolution of hypercalciuria Ca/cr ratio. Thiazide normalised the activity product in all groups. The use of the Ca/cr ratio as the sole parameter in the investigation of children with isolated hematuria and hypercalciuria or calcium nephrolithiasis is therefore insufficient, simultaneous determinations of the state of saturation of urines is recommended. This technique should also allow a quantitative assessment of the various therapeutic regimens recommended.
...
PMID:[Determination of the degree of saturation of calcium hydrogen phosphate in the urine]. 292 36

Calcium hydrogen phosphate (CaHPO4) was considered as one of the main factors governing renal calculus formation. The degree of saturation with respect to this phase was therefore calculated in urines of 36 hypercalciuric children (20 absorptive, 16 renal subtype) with isolated hematuria, 10 renal stone patients, and 30 healthy controls. The effects of low calcium diet and hydrochlorothiazide treatment were also investigated in the patient groups. The results were compared to the widely used indicator of hypercalciuria (Ca/Cr ratio). Urines of both the hypercalciuric and the normocalciuric renal stone patients were saturated on basal conditions. On low calcium diet, 12 children of the absorptive hypercalciuric, 13 of the renal hypercalciuric and 7 of the renal stone-forming children had their urines in the saturated zone - irrespective of the evolution of Ca/Cr ratio. Thiazide normalized the activity product of CaHPO4 in all groups. The use of the Ca/Cr ratio as the sole parameter in the investigation of children with isolated hematuria and hypercalciuria or calcium nephrolithiasis seems to be insufficient; simultaneous determinations of the state of saturation of urines is recommended. This technique should also allow a quantitative assessment of the various therapeutic regimens recommended.
...
PMID:Data on the degree of saturation of urine with respect to calcium hydrogen phosphate in hypercalciuric children and renal stone formers. 325 61

The effect of short term hydrochlorothiazide therapy on urinary calcium excretion was compared to that of low calcium and a combined low calcium and low sodium diet in 30 children with postglomerular hematuria. On basal conditions 9 children were normocalciuric, 11 had absorptive, 10 renal hypercalciuria. The effect of thiazide treatment on the haematuria was also evaluated. Thiazide revealed to be more effective in reducing calcium excretion than low calcium diet alone in all groups (p less than 0.001 in normocalciuria; p less than 0.01 in both hypercalciuric groups). Combined low calcium--low sodium diet and thiazide treatment were equally effective in reducing calcium excretion in the hypercalciuric groups. On the first 3 days of thiazide treatment a slight increase of hematuria was observed; in the following period a significant decrease in the occurrence (p less than 0.01 in both hypercalciuric groups) and degree (p less than 0.01 in absorptive; p less than 0.02 in renal hypercalciuria) of hematuria was noted. These data furnish further evidence on the relation of hypercalciuria and post-glomerular hematuria.
...
PMID:Effect of thiazide on urinary calcium excretion and hematuria in children with postglomerular hematuria. 342 38

A calcium loading test performed on seven of eight children with idiopathic hypercalciuria identified the hyperabsorptive form of hypercalciuria in five and renal hypercalciuria in one. The type of hypercalciuria was not identified in the other patient. Three children presented with hematuria without calculus formation. Chlorothiazide reduced the urinary calcium excretion level in two of six patients to the normal range. The addition of cellulose phosphate to chlorothiazide reduced the urinary calcium excretion level to the normal range in those four patients who showed an incomplete response to chlorothiazide alone. There was clinical improvement with cellulose phosphate in another child whose symptoms did not disappear after chlorothiazide had reduced urinary calcium level to the normal range. Cellulose phosphate is effective in children with recurrent stone formation who have shown inadequate response to chlorothiazide.
...
PMID:Cellulose phosphate and chlorothiazide in childhood idiopathic hypercalciuria. 345 45

Between 1981 and 1983, 49 children aged 2 to 15 years were diagnosed as having idiopathic hypercalciuria (IH). They were divided into 3 groups based on their response to dietary manipulation: group I (32/49) had absorptive hypercalciuria; group II (8/49) had renal hypercalciuria and group III (6/49) had sodium-dependent hypercalciuria. Response to diet was more reliable than Pak's test in differentiating between the three groups. A control group (CG) of 45 healthy, age matched children determined baseline levels for all metabolic parameters. At the time of presentation IH children did not differ from the CG in height or weight. Fifty percent of IH children had first degree relatives with urolithiasis. Yet, only 16% of the IH children had urolithiasis, the majority presenting with gross hematuria and urinary tract infections (UTI). With few exceptions the clinical symptoms resolved when urine calcium excretion was controlled. Severe calcium restriction in a few patients produced osteoporosis and delayed bone age although growth velocity was unaffected. Thiazide therapy in a few patients produced some metabolic derangements. The authors conclude that IH in childhood is a benign disease which may present with UTI or hematuria. They further propose a new classification method based on response to dietary manipulation.
...
PMID:Idiopathic hypercalciuria in children. Classification, clinical manifestations and outcome. 359 Dec 93

We evaluated the efficacy of selective treatment in 126 patients with recurrent calcium urolithiasis who were chosen on the basis of ability to correct underlying physiochemical disturbances. Patients with hyperparathyroidism underwent an operation. Patients with renal hypercalciuria were treated with thiazide and those with absorptive hypercalciuria were given a low calcium, low oxalate diet with or without thiazide. The only treatment for normocalciuric patients was high fluid intake, which was suggested also to the other groups. A significant individual mean reduction in stone formation was observed in all groups after 5 years of treatment. However, only 48 per cent of the normocalciuric patients were in remission after 5 years of high fluid intake therapy and 45 per cent of those with absorptive hypercalciuria were free of recurrence with diet only. Thiazide treatment seemed to be effective despite the type of hypercalciuria. The effect of the treatment on stone formation was mediated through reduction of risk factors in the urine. Conversely, a high level of risk factors commonly predicted stone recurrence.
...
PMID:Five years of experience with selective therapy in recurrent calcium nephrolithiasis. 608 13

In hypoparathyroidism the absence of parathyroid hormone leads to a reduction in the absorption of calcium by renal tubular cells. In spite of treatment with vitamin D, hypercalciuria persists and normocalcaemia can only be maintained by providing the kidney with a large load of calcium. Thiazide diuretics enhance tubular calcium reabsorption and it has been suggested that they can be used as an alternative to vitamin D. Bendrofluazide in a dose of 10 mg daily was given to 9 patients with severe hypoparathyroidism in addition to their usual treatment with calcium and vitamin D. Following the introduction of Bendrofluazide the calculated renal threshold for calcium reabsorption (TmCa/GFR) increased by a mean value of 0.14 mmol/l, and the mean rise in serum calcium was 0.13 mmol/l. This increase was due to a direct effect of the drug and was not caused by salt restriction or changes in glomerular filtration rate. The rise in serum calcium is modest compared to the rise following the introduction of vitamin D and except for patients with mild hypoparathyroidism, thiazides are not an alternative to vitamin D. They may however reduce the oral calcium load required to maintain normocalcaemia.
...
PMID:Effect of bendrofluazide on calcium reabsorption in hypoparathyroidism. 648 26

Previous studies have shown that thiazide diuretic agents reverse secondary hyperparathyroidism and reduce circulating 1,25-dihydroxyvitamin D3 [1,25(OH)2D3] and intestinal calcium absorption rates in patients with idiopathic hypercalciuria of the renal-leak variety. We have investigated whether thiazides can reverse the secondary increase in serum parathyroid hormone (PTH) and 1,25(OH)2D3 levels or intestinal calcium absorption induced by feeding rats a diet low in calcium (LCD, 0.02% calcium) but adequate in phosphorus and vitamin D. We found that LCD increased circulating immunoreactive PTH [chow vs. LCD, 0.52 +/- 0.06 vs. 1.06 +2- 0.1 (SE) ng/ml, P less than 0.001], 1,25(OH)2D3 (chow vs. LCD, 101 +/- 15 vs. 325 +/- 38 pg/ml, P less than 0.001), calcium uptake by everted gut sacs from duodenum, ileum, and descending colon, and net calcium absorption by descending colon studied in Ussing chambers in vitro. Chlorothiazide (CTZ) prevented the increase in PTH during LCD (chow + CTZ vs. LCD + CTZ, 0.69 +/- 0.07 vs. 0.73 +/- 0.06, NS) but not the increase in 1,25(OH)2D3 (chow + CTZ vs. LCD + CTZ, 88 +/- 10 vs. 277 +/- 31, P less than 0.002) or intestinal calcium transport. The drug caused no change in serum 1,25(OH)2D3 or intestinal calcium absorption in rats fed normal chow. In rats given exogenous 1,25(OH)2D3 to stimulate intestinal calcium absorption, CTZ reduced urine calcium excretion greatly but did not alter intestinal calcium absorption.
...
PMID:Effects of chlorothiazide on 1,25-dihydroxyvitamin D3, parathyroid hormone, and intestinal calcium absorption in the rat. 689 3


1 2 3 Next >>