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)

We have studied 83 patients with recurrent calcium stone formation in an attempt to determine an approximate incidence of metabolic disturbances associated with stone disease. Male veterans (n = 42), male non-veterans (n = 13), and women (n = 28) composed the group. We divided the groups in such fashion because they represented generally two distinct socioeconomic groups. Primary hyperparathyroidism was present in 19 per cent of the subjects; a marked predominance of women (15/16) was noted. Hypercalciuria of renal or intestinal origin was present in 23 per cent of the group. Of interest was a group of male veterans (17/83) in whom normocalciuria, normocalcemia, and normal serum phosphate were associated with high values of immunoreactive parathyroid hormone. These subjects had low urine phosphate. This set of findings indicates that these patients may be a new subgroup of stone-forming patients. Metabolic abnormalities could not be detected in 38 per cent of the patients. Classification of stone subjects is essential for rational management.
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PMID:Some characteristics of recurrent calcium stone formers in Puerto Rico. 45 11

Mechanisms involved in the hypercalciuria caused by high levels of protein intake were investigated. Six healthy males participated in a 20-day metabolic study. During the first 10-day period, all subjects were given a 47 g protein diet and during the second 10-day period, a 142 g protein diet. Calcium, magnesium and phosphorus intakes were kept constant at 515, 320 and 1,110 mg daily, respectively. Urinary calcium was elevated significantly when the protein intake was increased. Glomerular filtration rate and calcium clearance were increased significantly when the high protein diet was fed; the fractional tubular reabsorption of calcium was decreased from 98.4 to 97.4%. Thus, the increase in urinary calcium caused by the high protein diet appears to be due in part to an increase in the filtered load of calcium by the glomeruli and in part to a decrease in calcium reabsorption by the renal tubules. The level of protein intake had no effect on the fasting serum concentrations of parathyroid hormone, total calcium, magnesium or inorganic phosphorus or plasma ultrafiltrable calcium.
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PMID:Effect of level of protein intake on calcium metabolism and on parathyroid and renal function in the adult human male. 45 94

Metabolic evaluation of patients with multiple or recurrent calcium stones has been fruitful. The great majority of cases has demonstrated abnormalities contributing to stone formation. Hypercalciuria on the basis of increased intestinal absorption of calcium was a common finding. The evaluation led to improved guide lines for therapy.
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PMID:The benefits of evaluation of the patient with recurrent or multiple calcium stones. 45 48

We studied weanling rats fed 0.06% (group 1) and 0.10% (group II) magnesium (Mg) during phosphate depletion (PD) in order to evaluate the role of Mg in the bone, soft tissue, and serum changes of PD. The following results were obtained: 1) serum Mg remained stable in the face of a negative Mg balance; 2) the hypercalcemic and hypercalciuric response to PD was the same in both groups; 3) bone Mg content was decreased with PD in both groups and was associated with a significant decrease in bone calcium and phosphorus. We conclude that: 1) the hypomagnesemia of PD is dependent mainly on the dietary intake of Mg; 2) the hypercalcemia and hypercalciuria of PD are not caused by primary changes in Mg homeostasis; 3) low-dietary Mg during PD may cause a defect in soft tissue utilization of P in the growing rat.
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PMID:Influence of dietary magnesium in experimental phosphate depletion: bone and soft tissue mineral changes. 46 91

Eighty-eight urinary tract stone formers (74 men) with idiopathic hypercalciuria were treated by dietary calcium restriction alone. Short-term control of hypercalciuria was achieved in only 27 patients and all but 12 eventually escaped control. Failure of control was twice as likely in patients with severe hypercalciuria. Almost all patients lived in a hard water area. In such areas at least, attempts to control hypercalciuria by diet alone are likely to fail and early introduction of additional treatment is advisable. In most severe hypercalciurics, such treatment should be introduced from the start.
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PMID:Dietary treatment of idiopathic hypercalciuria. 46 84

A 9 year old girl with idiopathic Fanconi syndrome and hypercalciuria is described. In order to determine whether the increased calcium excretion was directly or indirectly due to the disturbed phosphate metabolism, the behavior of the calcium excretion during therapy, the serum levels of 1,25-dihydroxyvitamin D and parathyroid hormone, and the effect of parathyroid hormone on the renal tubules were investigated. Normal serum 1,25-dihydroxyvitamin D and parathyroid hormone levels, lack of a correlation between the serum phosphate concentration and the degree of hypercalciuria, as well as unsuccessful therapy of the hypercalciuria with oral phosphate indicate that the increased calcium excretion cannot be explained by impaired renal phosphate reabsorption. The hypercalciuria in the patient was therefore regarded as being due to a primary decrease of tubular calcium reabsorption.
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PMID:Hypercalciuria in idiopathic Fanconi syndrome. 47 82

Two methods of oral calcium load or tolerance test for the indirect assessment of calcium absorption were compared. In 16 patients in whom the diagnosis of absorptive hypercalciuria was made independently, an exaggerated urinary total calcium excretion during four hours following calcium load, indicative of increased calcium absorption according to the method of Pak et al., was found in 15 patients. An abnormally high increment in urinary calcium during third and fourth hours post-calcium load, suggestive of enhanced calcium absorption by the criteria of Broadus et al., was encountered in 14 patients. However, an exaggerated urinary total calcium following calcium load was found in all 7 patients with renal hypercalciuria, whereas only 4 were shown to have an enhanced increment in calcium excretion. It is concluded that both methods are equally reliable in the detection of increased calcium absorption in absorptive hypercalciuria. However, the technique of Broadus et al. is probably superior to that of Pak et al. in the disclosure of increased calcium absorption in renal hypercalciuria.
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PMID:Critical appraisal of oral calcium load test for indirect assessment of intestinal calcium absorption. 48 99

Tubular proteinuria is generally accepted as the critical effect following long-term, low-level exposure to cadmium as seen in an industrial environment. This effect may not be of immediate importance to the health of the individual, but the significance, in terms of long-term morbidity and mortality, of the renal tubular defect of which it is an indicator is not fully understood, and certain sequelae may have remained unrecognized due to inadequate follow-up.Follow-up studies have been performed in nine of 12 workers who were initially investigated in 1962. In six of the men exposures ranged from 28 to 45 years to cadmium sulfide dust and for shorter periods in the earlier years to cadmium oxide fume and dust. These six men had tubular proteinuria when first seen, and this has persisted in the five survivors. All six men had hypercalciuria, and two of them became recurrent stone formers. One man whose urinary calcium excretion later fell to a low level more recently developed vitamin D resistant osteomalacia. In addition, each of the six men had exhibited some, but not all, of a variety of biochemical abnormalities related to other proximal renal tubular defects, and the worker who developed osteomalacia had additional evidence of a distal tubular defect. The five survivors also have evidence of slowly progressive deterioration in glomerular function.Follow-up of this small group has shown that renal tubular dysfunction in cadmium workers may continue symptom-free for long intervals, but in a proportion of cases serious clinical effects may develop after a number of years.
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PMID:Renal tubular dysfunction and abnormalities of calcium metabolism in cadmium workers. 48 32

The safety and effectiveness of sodium cellulose phosphate (SCP) in the treatment of calcium urolithiasis of absorptive hypercalciuria was explored. Eighteen patients with absorptive hypercalciuria with intestinal hyperabsorption of calcium, normal or suppressed parathyroid function, and active stone disease received 10 to 15 Gm SCP daily (2.5 to 5 Gm with meals) and 2 to 3 Gm magnesium gluconate daily (1 to 1.5 Gm twice daily orally separately from SCP) for eight to 54 months, while maintained on a moderate calcium and oxalate restriction. During treatment, serum calcium, immunoreactive parathyroid hormone, and urinary cyclic AMP remained within the normal range. Serum alkaline phosphatase and bone density (measured by photon absorptiometry) did not change significantly or remained within normal limits. Serum concentrations of magnesium, copper, zinc, and iron and blood hematocrit were not significantly altered by therapy. However, urinary calcium returned toward normal, and incidence of renal stone formation markedly decreased. The results suggest that SCP is a safe and an effective drug for absorptive hypercalciuria.
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PMID:Clinical pharmacology of sodium cellulose phosphate. 48 64

Administration of gallium nitrate to rats resulted in the formation of renal precipitates which occluded tubular lumina. When analyzed with a combination of scanning electron microscopy and x-ray energy spectrometry, these precipitates were found to contain gallium complexed with calcium and phosphate. Injection of gallium nitrate also resulted in hypercalciuria, although serum calcium levels remained unaltered. Administration of an osmotic diuretic, isosorbide, prior to gallium treatment resulted in the formation of fewer renal precipitates and histopathologic changes than in the nondiuresed animals. Diuresis did not alter gallium serum pharmacokinetics, the 24 hour cumulative renal excretion of gallium or the extent of the drug-induced hypercalciuria. However, isosorbide pretreatment significantly reduced the urinary concentrations of both gallium and calcium. The data presented indicate that diuresis reduces the severity of gallium-induced renal lithiasis and subsequent renal accumulation of gallium by diluting the urinary concentration of gallium and calcium thereby lowering the incidence of interaction of these two elements within the kidney tubule.
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PMID:Gallium nitrate (NSC-15200) induced toxicity in the rat: a pharmacologic, histopathologic and microanalytical investigation. 49 44


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