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Query: UMLS:C0020438 (
hypercalciuria
)
2,502
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
A congenital hypokalemic tubular disorder is described with many features resembling Bartter syndrome. Additional features include prenatal onset with polyhydramnios and premature labor; failure to thrive; episodes of fever, vomiting, diarrhea, and renal electrolyte and
water
wastage;
hypercalciuria
; nephrocalcinosis; and osteopenia. Unlike Bartter syndrome, there is no defect in tubular reabsorption of chloride. Urinary levels of prostaglandin E2 and 7 alpha-hydroxy-5,11-diketotetranorprosta-1,16-dioic acid are selectively elevated, indicating marked stimulation of renal and systemic PGE2 production. Chronic suppression of PGE2 activity by indomethacin corrects most of the abnormalities, and there is an immediate decompensation of the disease on indomethacin withdrawal. We conclude that these preterm infants have a distinct variety of hypokalemic tubular disorders rather than a variant of Bartter syndrome, because renal and systemic hyperprostaglandinism ranks high in the pathogenic chain of events, and the suppression of PGE2 hyperactivity is associated with significant improvement in the development (and probably in the prognosis) of the affected children.
...
PMID:Congenital hypokalemia with hypercalciuria in preterm infants: a hyperprostaglandinuric tubular syndrome different from Bartter syndrome. 386 6
In 59 out of 80 patients with recurrent renal calcium stones studied between 1977 and 1982 and followed up for 4,5 to 7 years, an index has been used to determine the activity of the disease, before and after treatment with diet, high
water
intake, thiazide and/or allopurinol. As estimated by variations of the "activity index", the treatment was effective in all groups studied: patients with idiopathic
hypercalciuria
were prescribed a low purine and oxalate diet and a large
water
intake associated or not with thiazide; hyperuricosuric patients were treated by the same diet and allopurinol; patients with no metabolic abnormality were submitted to diet and/or thiazide and/or allopurinol. The association of thiazide and allopurinol seems to be a more effective therapy in recurrent stone formers with primary hyperoxaluria than high diuresis and succinimide.
...
PMID:[Preventive medical treatment of recurrent urinary calcium calculi]. 396 Feb 61
The effects of a 2 Gm oral phosphorus load in a family with idiopathic
hypercalciuria
(IH) consisting of 3 symptomatic (DT, CS, DS) and 2 asymptomatic (MS, PD) members were compared with 12 normal control subjects. Biochemical parameters measured included: total and ionized calcium, phosphorus, intact and carboxyl-terminal parathyroid hormone, urinary calcium, phosphorus, and sodium.
Water
loading had no effect on these parameters. After the phosphorus load, serum phosphorus rose 1.60 mg/dl in the control subjects but only 1.34 mg/dl in the IH family at the end of one hour. Basal tubular reabsorption of phosphate (TRP) were comparable in the control subjects and the IH family. After the phosphorus load, the TRP in the control subjects fell (average 9.2%) accompanied by a significant (P less than 0.02) rise in the carboxyl-terminal parathyroid hormone. Except for DT who had been taking hydrochlorothiazide, the TRP fell dramatically in the rest of the IH family (DS 25%, CS 12%, PD 26%, MS 50%) in the absence of any perturbations in either the intact or carboxyl-terminal parathyroid hormone. A hypocalciuric effect was observed in the IH family but not in the control subjects after phosphorus loading. The oral phosphorus challenge unmasked a parathyroid hormone independent renal phosphate leak in both symptomatic and asymptomatic members in a family with idiopathic
hypercalciuria
.
...
PMID:Oral phosphate load unmasks underlying renal phosphate leak in symptomatic and asymptomatic members of family with idiopathic hypercalciuria. 401 72
As calcium oxalate stones are the most important component in urolithiasis, an experimental model has to be designed to clarify the pathogenesis and aid in their prevention. Hyperoxaluria as well as
hypercalciuria
were produced in rats by administering ethylene glycol (0.5%, in drinking
water
administered ad libitum) and 1-alpha (OH) D3 (0.5 micrograms/rat given every other day), respectively, for three to four weeks. Neither drug alone produced stones efficiently as did the combination regimen of these two compounds. The occurrence of stones was 77.3%, and with only a moderate degree of renal functional impairment. Biochemical and histological data were obtained using this model.
...
PMID:[Experimental and clinical studies on calcium urolithiasis: (I) Animal model for calcium oxalate urolithiasis using ethylene glycol and 1-alpha (OH) D3]. 403 34
Urine specimens were collected from 26 normal subjects, 10 patients with proven primary hyperparathyroidism, and eight patients with hypercalcaemia due to other causes. After overnight urine concentration, an oral
water
load was given to induce a diuresis and provide urine specimens with a relatively wide range of creatinine concentration for each subject. In normal subjects the urinary calcium/creatinine ratio was found to be independent of urine concentration. In eight out of 10 patients with primary hyperparathyroidism and in two out of eight patients with hyper-calcaemia due to other causes, the urinary calcium/creatinine ratio was found to be high when the creatinine concentration was low, but usually normal when the creatinine concentration was high. The results suggest that if the urinary calcium/creatinine ratio of random urine specimens is used as a ;screening' procedure to detect
hypercalciuria
the latter cannot be excluded if the urinary creatinine concentration is more than 40 mg per 100 ml.
...
PMID:The urinary calcium-creatinine ratio as a measure of urinary calcium excretion. 578 80
1. Urine calcium concentrations were determined in intact and ultimobranchialectomized bullfrog tadpoles kept in tap
water
(Ca: 8.5 and 19.7 mg/100 ml), urine calcium levels did not show significant increases. 3. In ultimobranchialectomized tadpoles,
hypercalciuria
concomitant with the rise in serum calcium levels in recognized under both conditions of high calcium
water
and tap
water
. 4. It was suggested that in bullfrog tadpoles ultimobranchial glands do not exert effective influences on the renal handling of calcium.
...
PMID:Urine calcium concentrations in bullfrog tadpoles kept in tap water or high calcium environment, with special reference to ultimobranchialectomy. 612 54
Proximal tubular function was studied with maximal
water
clearance studies in 15 controls (C), 22 Ca stone formers with idiopathic
hypercalciuria
(IH) and 10 normocalciuric Ca stone formers (NC). Distal delivery of glomerular filtrate (ClDD) and Na excretion were higher in IH and NC than in C; NaCl loading (6 g/day) for seven days in C increased Na excretion and ClDD to similar levels as in IH and NC; the distribution of ClDD for any level of Na excretion was similar in C, NC and IH. NaCl loading in C slightly reduced renal phosphate threshold, which still remained higher than in IH on a free diet. It appears that reduced tubular reabsorption of glomerular filtrate in Ca stone formers is related to habitual high Na intake and is not peculiar to hypercalciuric patients. Habitual high Na intake is unlikely to be responsible for all the metabolic spectrum of idiopathic
hypercalciuria
.
...
PMID:Relationship between sodium intake, proximal tubular function and calcium excretion in normal subjects and in idiopathic hypercalciuria. 665 68
Mild hypocalcemia was observed in 6 out of 12 patients with SIADH associated hyponatremia, this was in fact related to low albumin levels resulting partly from body fluid dilution. In the 7 SIADH patients where it was measured, we observed an increased fractional calcium excretion (3.2 +/- 1.7%) as long as the patients were hyponatremic. This was corrected by
water
restriction (0.73 +/- 0.4%, p less than 0.01). We suggest that volume expansion was responsible for the increased calcium clearance, and not hyponatremia by itself, since in volume depletion hyponatremia, calcium clearance was within the normal range. Mild hypocalcemia and
hypercalciuria
is a common finding in SIADH-associated hyponatremia.
...
PMID:Hypercalciuria in the syndrome of inappropriate secretion of antidiuretic hormone. 716 85
Endothelin 1-21 belongs to a family of locally produced regulatory peptides with potent vasoconstrictor activity and profound renal effects. To study the biological significance of endothelin in children with renal diseases, we measured urinary endothelin-like immunoreactivity (ETir) excretion in children and adolescents (60 normal controls and 57 patients with renal disease). ETir excretion was constant during childhood and adolescence (4-18 years). Compared to these normal controls elevated urinary excretions of ETir were found in children with chronic renal failure, following renal transplantation and with idiopathic
hypercalciuria
(all groups p < 0.001). However, ETir excretion was unchanged in children with idiopathic steroid sensitive nephrotic syndrome, with stable chronic glomerulonephritis and in 4 patients with hemolytic uremic syndrome. Urinary ETir concentrations were similar in controls and in various patient groups. ETir excretion correlated positively with urine flow rate in normal controls (r = 0.71) and in all patients studied (r = 0.91). Fractional excretion of ETir correlated negatively with glomerular filtration rate. Eight healthy volunteers (23-27 years old, 4 female, 4 male) were studied before and after oral
water
load (20 ml/kg) to investigated the effect of ETir excretion on urine flow rate. Urine flow rose tenfold in response to
water
load and urine concentration of ETir fell only by factor 3 and urinary ETir excretion rose fivefold. These results indicate that urinary ETir excretion is related to and depends at least in part on urine flow rate. ETir excretion may so reflect a role of ETir in renal disease, especially in the diuretic state.
...
PMID:Elevated urinary excretion of endothelin-like immunoreactivity in children with renal disease is related to urine flow rate. 807 35
In order to better understand the role of diet in etiology of urolithiasis, 84 oxalo-phospho-calcic-lithiasic patients (52 men, 32 women) have been studied by a nutritional week-interview and by urinary and blood testing. Diet data were compared to an ideal standard. Total caloric intake was 2428 +/- 651 calories/d; this intake is high in 7% women and 40% men. 79% out of patients are fat. Protidic intake is 87 +/- 21 g/d higher than 1 g/kg/d in 84.5% of patients. Lipids are high in 38.9 +/- 7%, glucid are low in 45.3 +/- 7%. Calcium intake is 934 +/- 406 mg/d, sodium intake is 12.9 + 3 g/d.
Water
intake is 2305 +/- 759 ml/d. Different groups of patients are studied: a) 21 patients with mean age of 43 +/- 12 years have recurrent lithiasis (R). This group is compared to 48 patients with 37 +/- 44 years who have a single lithiasis. Half of (R) patients have
hypercalciuria
, hyperphosphaturia and hyperoxaluria. Diet study is no different between these two groups. b) Other groups are studied: 21 have hyperophosphaturia (HPU) without hypophosphoremia and they have
hypercalciuria
, hyperuraturia and high urinary urea; diet shows higher glucicid and potassium intake than group with normal phosphaturia; 23 have
hypercalciuria
(HCU) and high uraturia and phosphaturia: diet study shows no difference with a group with normal calciuria. 21 have hyperoxaluria (HOU): diet study of a normal oxaluric group shows higher lipid intake, lower glucidic and calcium intake; 22 have hyperuraturia (HAU) and higher urinary urea, sodium and potassium than normouraturia group: in this group potassium intake is higher.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:[Results of dietary evaluation during calcium oxalate and calcium phosphate lithiasis]. 814 88
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