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Query: UMLS:C0020438 (hypercalciuria)
2,502 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

In 1819 patients with active or non active respectively nephrolithiasis the following parameters were assessed: plasma level of calcium, phosphate, and uric acid and urinary excretion of calcium, phosphate, oxalate, uric acid and creatinine. These parameters were estimated after 5 days of diet containing 400 mg of calcium, 800 mg of phosphate, 100 mg of purines and 40 g of proteins. In 3/4 of all examined patients at least one lithogenic factor was present. More than 40% of patients showed presence of hypercalciuria. Among these patients in 68% renal in 17% absorptive and in 15% undefined hypercalciuria was diagnosed. Patients with active nephrolithiasis showed a similar frequency of hypercalciuria but more profound abnormalities of Ca P metabolism than patients with non active renal stone disease.
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PMID:[Hypercalciuria and primary hyperparathyroidism in patients with kidney calculi. I. Hypercalciuria]. 164 63

1. Acromegaly is associated with metabolic disturbances of calcium and phosphorus which can also contribute to renal lithogenesis. 2. In order to characterize these disturbances more precisely, an oral calcium load test was performed on 14 active acromegalic patients. Serum and urinary levels of calcium, phosphorus, uric acid, creatinine and urinary cyclic AMP were determined. 3. Of the 14 patients, 5 (36%) presented hypercalciuria, 5 (36%) presented intestinal calcium hyperabsorption, and 6 (43%) had uric acid hyperexcretion. Two patients (14%) presented nephrolithiasis. 4. The medical records of 32 additional acromegalic patients with or without active disease were reviewed for a history of previous stones, which was observed in three cases (9.5%). 5. The present data suggest that nephrolithiasis occurs more frequently among acromegalic patients because of the underlying metabolic disturbances of calcium presented by this population.
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PMID:Metabolic factors for urolithiasis in acromegalic patients. 166 2

Using a specific citrate lyase method, renal excretion of citrate was studied in 32 normal Chinese males, 30 nondialysed uremic male patients and 35 male subjects who had a history of nephrolithiasis. Patients with uremia or nephrolithiasis were found to have a lower urinary citrate excretion. Tubular reabsorption of citrate was markedly decreased in uremic patients, but in stone patients, the increased renal tubular reabsorption of citrate was only found in patients with hypocitraturia, whose renal citrate excretion was below 650 mumol/day and whose urinary magnesium was also low. Hypocitraturia was found in 45% (16/35) of the patients with renal stones whether their filtered load of citrate was normal or subnormal. Urinary citrate excretion was correlated with renal creatinine clearance in both normal subjects and in patients with renal stones or chronic renal failure. However, urinary phosphate correlating with urinary citrate was only found in normal subjects and in patients with kidney stones. In normal subjects, we found a positive correlation between urinary citrate and phosphate, but in stone patients, we found a negative correlation. Hypercalciuria and hyperoxalaturia were noted in some stone formers, who had, moreover, a lower urinary citrate and ascorbate excretion level. Mean urinary ascorbate excretion in patients with renal stones was markedly below that in normal subjects. Thus, we suggest that low urinary citrate excretion may be prevalent in patients with renal stones or chronic renal failure, and that hypocitraturia can be found in some stone formers, whose tubular reabsorption of citrate may be increased.
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PMID:Renal excretion of citrate in patients with chronic renal failure or nephrolithiasis. 167 8

Clinical or biochemical findings were reevaluated in 34 pediatric patients with primary renal tubular hypokalemic metabolic alkalosis. The patients were subdivided into two groups. Bartter syndrome (primary renal tubular hypokalemic metabolic alkalosis with normocalciuria or hypercalciuria) was diagnosed in 18 patients with molar urinary calcium/creatinine ratios greater than 0.20, and Gitelman syndrome (primary renal tubular hypokalemic metabolic alkalosis with magnesium deficiency and hypocalciuria) was diagnosed in 16 patients with molar urinary calcium/creatinine ratios less than or equal to 0.20 and plasma magnesium levels less than 0.75 mmol/L. Some clinically important differences between the groups were observed. Patients with Bartter syndrome were often born after pregnancies complicated by polyhydramnios (8/18) or premature delivery (7/18) and had short stature (11/18) or polyuria, polydipsia, and a tendency to dehydration (16/18) during infancy (12/18) or before school age (18/18). Patients with Gitelman syndrome had tetanic episodes (12/16) or short stature (3/16) at school age (14/16). We conclude that the Bartter and Gitelman syndromes represent two distinct variants of primary renal tubular hypokalemic metabolic alkalosis and are easily distinguished on the basis of urinary calcium levels.
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PMID:Use of calcium excretion values to distinguish two forms of primary renal tubular hypokalemic alkalosis: Bartter and Gitelman syndromes. 841 May 32

To test the hypothesis that hyperfiltration in essential hypertension is linked to alterations in calcium metabolism, we studied the relationship between urinary calcium excretion and glomerular filtration rate (GFR, creatinine clearance) in 38 untreated essential hypertensives on a free diet. We also studied the influence of changes in calcium intake on GFR in 30 essential hypertensives (15 with well-defined hypercalciuria and 15 with normal urinary calcium excretion) and in 11 normotensive healthy subjects. In the patients on a free diet, urinary calcium excretion was directly and independently related to GFR (r = 0.56, P less than .001), while serum calcium showed an opposite trend (r = -0.27, P = .12). In patients on fixed calcium diets, GFR was significantly higher (P = .008) at low calcium intake (115 +/- 31 mL/min/1.73 m2) than at high calcium intake (98 +/- 22 mL/min/1.73 m2). Further analysis showed that the hyperfiltering effect of low calcium almost exclusively occurred in hypercalciuric patients and in hypertensive women. In hypercalciuric hypertensives there was a highly significant inverse correlation between GFR and serum calcium (r = -0.51, P = .004) and a similar correlation between GFR and plasma renin activity (r = -0.70, P = .003) in the high calcium phase of the study. Changes in calcium intake had no influence on GFR in normal subjects (Low Ca 103 +/- 22 mL/min/1.73 M2, High Ca 110 +/- 23 mL/min/1.73 m2). The data indicate that alterations in calcium metabolism interfere to an important extent with mechanism(s) regulating GFR in essential hypertension.
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PMID:Hyperfiltration and calcium metabolism in essential hypertension. 181 51

We have studied urinary sodium and magnesium excretion in 30 normal subjects (15 women and 15 men, mean age 43 +/- 14 years, mean weight 74 +/- 18 Kg) and in 60 hypercalciuric stone-forming patients, 30 with renal hypercalciuria (HR) (15 women and 15 men, mean age 39 +/- 10 years, mean weight 71 +/- 16 Kg) and 30 with absorptive hypercalciuria (HA), (15 women and 15 men, mean age 41 +/- 13 years, mean weight 69 +/- 12 Kg). The diagnosis of hypercalciuria and the classification in HA and HR was made with our ambulatory study protocol. Hypercalciuria was defined by a daily calcium excretion above 300 mg (men) or 220 mg (women), and patients with fasting calcium to creatinine ratio, and calcium per 100 ml of glomerular filtrate average value above 0.11 were considered to have HR. Control subjects and hypercalciuric patients were maintained on a diet containing 1200 mg Ca, 800 mg P, 200 mg Mg and 100 mmol Na per day for a 7-day period. Two 24-hour urine samples were collected on days 6 and 7 of this diet. On the morning of day 8, following a 12-hour fast, 300 ml of distilled water was drunk and a 2-hour urine sample was collected. A blood sample was taken halfway this time. In all blood and urine samples, calcium, magnesium, sodium, phosphorus and creatinine were quantified. Creatinine clearance and calcium, sodium and magnesium per 100 ml of glomerular filtrate were calculated from these determinations.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:[Urinary excretion of sodium and magnesium in idiopathic hypercalciuria]. 182 17

Hypercalciuria has been reported in rats with mild hyperprolactinemia due to implantation of anterior pituitary glands under the kidney capsule and in rats bearing transplantable tumors that secrete large amounts of prolactin (PRL) and growth hormone (GH). We studied Buffalo rats implanted subcutaneously with the new MMQ pituitary tumor line that secretes only PRL. Urinary calcium excretion increased as the tumors grew. Three weeks after tumor implantation in female rats, the urinary calcium excretion was 1.102 +/- 0.092 mg/100 g body weight (BW).24 hours compared with controls, 0.296 +/- 0.079, P less than .0005. Male tumor-bearing rats also had increased urinary calcium excretion compared with male controls. In tumor-bearing rats the urinary calcium excretion factored for urinary sodium excretion, dietary calcium intake, or urinary creatinine excretion was elevated. Urinary calcium excretion was correlated with serum PRL levels and with estimated tumor volume. Serum calcium, immunoassayable parathyroid hormone, and urinary cyclic adenosine monophosphate (cAMP) excretion were normal in the tumor-bearing rats. There was some evidence of loss of bone calcium in rats bearing the MMQ tumor, and serum levels of calcitonin were decreased. These results are similar to those found in anterior pituitary-grafted hypercalciuric rats. It is unlikely that parathyroid hormone (PTH) abnormalities are responsible for the hypercalciuria in the MMQ-bearing rats. The pituitary gland may have an effect on the distal renal tubule to decrease calcium reabsorption.
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PMID:Hypercalciuria in a new rat model of hyperprolactinemia. 184 86

Hypercalciuria is one of the main causes of recurrent generation of urinary calcium-containing calculi. 107 patients with recurrent calcium nephrolithiasis were examined and results presented. Concentrations of potassium, sodium, chlorides, calcium, phosphorus, uric acid and creatinine were investigated in serum and urine, as well as indices of acid-base balance in arterial blood. pH-metry, "preliminary" and oral calcium tolerance test were also carried out. The microcomputer data analysis established that the diagnosis of primary hyperparathyroidism may be identified in case of increased serum calcium level before and after calcium load test, the same of parathyroid, and increased urinary cAMP excretion. Renal hypercalciuria is characterized by low blood calcium level in both periods of the oral test, high basal calciuria, increased urinary cAMP excretion and its slight decrease after the oral calcium load test, by a tendency to lower serum magnesium levels in high magnesuria. The patients with absorptive hypercalciuria had an upper normal or increased blood calcium level, a significant calcemic and calciuric "response" to the calcium load, reduction in urinary cAMP elimination and more severe decrease (close to 0) of these indices after oral calcium load and normal magnesium levels in blood and urine. On a base of the "preliminary" test data the patients with relapsing calcium nephrolithiasis and metabolic disorders may be differed from those without calcium and phosphorus metabolic deteriorations. The "preliminary" test defines indications for the oral calcium tolerance test, automatic diagnosis and computer data storage facilitate physician to work and to solve problems of the patients' survey.
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PMID:[The comprehensive examination of patients with recurrent calcium nephrolithiasis]. 185 97

Thirteen urolithiasis patients with unilateral obstructive uropathy were treated with percutaneous nephrostomy (PCN) either for urinary diversion, endopyelotomy, nephrolithtotmy or chemolysis. After percutaneous nephrostomy, the individual urine volume, creatinine clearance (Ccr), urinary absolute and fractional excretions of sodium, potassium, calcium, magnesium and inorganic phosphate were measured separately in timed urine collections from a pigtail catheter and from the urethra. The data showed that Ccr and the absolute urinary excretions of sodium, potassium, calcium, magnesium and inorganic phosphate were significantly lower in the PCN kidney immediately or 2 days after relief of obstruction. The ratio of total urinary calcium excretion to urinary creatinine excretion in the obstructed kidney was significantly greater than that in the contralateral kidney. The fractional excretions of calcium and magnesium increased as renal function decreased. The results showed that when the total Ccr is below normal, the apparent excretion of urinary calcium will be underestimated. However, when the total Ccr of patients is within normal range, hypercalciuria may be detected adequately and thus favors early implementation of an appropriate therapeutic strategy.
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PMID:Reduction of calcium excretion in the stone-forming kidney in unilateral ureteral obstruction. 188 28

It is generally accepted that acromegaly is often associated with hypercalciuria, but there are few reports on the frequency and the mechanisms of urolithiasis. Recently we consecutively experienced 2 cases of acromegaly with urolithiasis, and these experiences made us investigate the association between urolithiasis and acromegaly. Among 18 acromegalies from 1977 to March 1990 (10 males, 8 females, 24-64 years old), 13 cases (72%) fulfilled the criteria of hypercalciuria (urinary calcium (u-Ca) greater than or equal to 200 mg/day or u-Ca/urinary creatinine (u-Ca/u-Cr) greater than or equal to 0.15), and 7 cases (39%) suffered from urolithiasis that was diagnosed by KUB (4 cases) or X-ray computed tomography (CT) (3 cases). Especially in the last 2 years, 5 out of 7 cases (71%) were complicated with urolithiasis and all 7 cases were associated with hypercalciuria. These results suggest that hypercalciuria and urolithiasis are both much more frequent than previously reported. In 6 cases who were treated by pituitary adenomectomy from 1988-1989 (4 males, 2 females, 24-59 years old), we examined Ca metabolism before and after operation. Before operation, the levels of serum growth hormone (GH), u-Ca (mg/day), u-Ca/u-Cr (in all cases) and plasma somatomedin-C (Sm-C) (in 4 cases) were increased above the normal range. To determine the etiology of hypercalciuria, we performed the oral Ca load test under restriction of Ca (400 mg/day) and P (650 mg/day) intake. The results suggested that the hypercalciuria might be mainly due to the increased absorption of Ca from the intestine (so-called "Absorptive hypercalciuria"). However, the levels of serum vitamin D (Vit. D) metabolites were all within the normal range before operation. After operation, GH and u-Ca/u-Cr (in 5 cases) and u-Ca (mg/day) (in all cases) decreased significantly compared with before operation, and the levels of Sm-C (in all cases), serum 25-(OH)D3, 1 alpha, 25-(OH)2D3 (in 4 cases) and 24,25-(OH)2D3 (in 3 cases) were also reduced after operation. Surprisingly, u-Ca and u-Ca/u-Cr normalized only in 4 cases who showed a reduction in 1 alpha, 25-(OH)2D3 levels after operation, although there were no correlations between u-Ca (mg/day) or u-Ca/u-Cr and 1 alpha, 25-(OH)2D3. Significant correlations were found between u-Ca (mg/day) or u-Ca/u-Cr and Sm-C. The parathyroid function evaluated by the rapid Ca infusion test or nephrogenous cyclic adenosine monophosphate (NcAMP) was normal before and after operation.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
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PMID:[The frequency and mechanisms of urolithiasis in acromegaly]. 188 13


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