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)

Urinary excretion of sodium and calcium was examined in hypertensive (n = 8) and normotensive (n = 7) subjects following infusion of 2% saline at a rate of 11 mL/min for 90 min. The urinary sodium excretion was 204 +/- 38 (mean +/- SEM) muEq/min in normotensives and 233 +/- 28 muEq/min in hypertensives before infusion of saline and increased maximally to 499 +/- 114 muEq/min (P less than .05) and to 928 +/- 68 muEq/min (P less than .01), respectively, after saline infusion. In normotensives, urinary calcium excretion did not change significantly; however, in hypertensives excretion increased markedly (P less than .01) from 6.1 +/- 0.7 muEq/min to 12.3 +/- 1.6 muEq/min. Plasma atrial natriuretic peptide (ANP) levels increased significantly (P less than .05) in both groups. Serum ionized calcium and plasma parathyroid hormone (PTH) levels did not change significantly. The increments of urinary sodium and calcium and of plasma ANP, as well as the preinfusion plasma PTH level, were significantly (P less than .05) higher in hypertensives than in normotensives. The present study showed that exaggerated natriuresis was accompanied by hypercalcinuria and an enhanced rise in plasma ANP in hypertensives. Basal levels of plasma PTH were elevated in hypertensives. The calcium deficiency may be attributable to a close relationship between urinary sodium and calcium, and causally related to the disturbance of sodium and volume homeostasis in hypertension, which results in exaggerated natriuresis.
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PMID:Effect of saline infusion on urinary calcium excretion in essential hypertension. 182 96

The case of a 7-year-old boy with the normotensive form of "chloride-shunt" syndrome is described. An unusual feature was the clinical presentation with lithiasis, caused by marked hypercalciuria of renal origin. The present studies were carried out to investigate the nature of the renal tubular defect. Indices for proximal and distal sodium chloride reabsorption were increased during hypotonic saline diuresis. Baseline sodium chloride excretion was low but increased above the range of control values after acute furosemide administration. Baseline potassium excretion was low, was not modified by the infusion of sodium chloride and increased significantly during infusions of sodium sulphate or sodium bicarbonate. Calcium excretion remained unchanged during sodium chloride, sodium sulphate or sodium bicarbonate infusions, but increased after furosemide administration. Nasal insufflation of 1-desamino-8-D-arginine-vasopressin induced both an increase in potassium excretion and a decrease in calcium and magnesium excretion. Plasma atrial natriuretic peptide was increased and was not significantly modified by infusion of hypertonic saline or acute administration of furosemide. These findings indicate that the primary renal abnormality appears to be an enhanced tubular reabsorption of sodium chloride, apparently present in the proximal tubule and the ascending loop of Henle. The associated presence of hypercalciuria also suggests a transport defect in the distal tubule. Decreased potassium excretion probably depends on a voltage-shunting defect in the cortical collecting tubule, which can be reversed by increasing the delivery of non-reabsorbable anions or by enhancing the conductance of the luminal membrane.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:"Chloride-shunt" syndrome: an overlooked cause of renal hypercalciuria. 253 69

A 14-year-old boy with the syndrome of hypertension and hyperkalaemia with normal glomerular filtration rate (Gordon's syndrome) is described. The patient's clinical symptoms consisted of periodic paralysis, slight metabolic acidosis of the proximal type and hypercalciuria. Prostaglandin excretion was normal. Infusion of atrial natriuretic peptide had no effect on electrolyte excretion or glomerular function although a normal increase in cyclic guanosine monophosphate was demonstrated in plasma and urine. This lack of sensitivity to atrial natriuretic peptide offers a new pathophysiological concept in this syndrome. Treatment with hydrochlorothiazide was successful in this case.
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PMID:The syndrome of hypertension and hyperkalaemia with normal glomerular function (Gordon's syndrome). A pathophysiological study. 297 68

We studied six patients with renal stone disease, hypercalciuria, cystinuria and/or hyperuricosuria, during variations in dietary Na and Cl intake. Switching between equimolar NaCl and NaHCO3 intakes reduced urinary Ca (UCa) during the NaHCO3 phase, despite steady-state urinary Na. Switching between equimolar NaCl and KCl did not change UCa, despite a sharp fall in UNa. The results suggest a predominant role for Cl rather than Na ions during sodium-chloride-induced changes in UCa. In stone disease of mixed aetiology, where alkalinization of the urine as well as reduction in UCa may be desirable, treatment with NaHCO3 loading is not accompanied by a rise in UCa, provided that dietary Cl is maintained moderately low at 80-100 mmol/day. The mechanism whereby Cl intake influences UCa remains undefined. Plasma PTH and calcitriol levels showed no significant alteration, and atrial natriuretic peptide levels in one patient remained unchanged.
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PMID:Dietary chloride and urinary calcium in stone disease. 792 3

We measured plasma atrial natriuretic peptide (ANP) levels in 30 children with idiopathic hypercalciuria (IH) and 19 normal controls (NC). A calcium (Ca) loading test was performed in all patients to determine the type of IH. Subsequently plasma ANP, cAMP and renin activity (PRA), serum total and ionized Ca, intact parathyroid hormone, aldosterone, and 1,25-dihydroxyvitamin D as well as urine Ca, cAMP, and electrolytes were determined in all subjects. The mean (SD) plasma ANP levels were significantly lower in patients with renal hypercalciuria (RH) [21.4 (4.8) pg/ml] than in those with absorptive hypercalciuria (AH) [26.8 (7.6) pg/ml, P<0.05] and NC [27.6 (6.6) pg/ml, P<0.001]. PRA was significantly lower in AH [2.9 (1.3) ng/ml per hour] than in RH patients [7.8 (6.8) ng/ml per hour, P<0.01] and in NC [6.8 (4.6) ng/ml per hour, P<0.005]. Serum aldosterone values were significantly lower in AH [14.5 (11.4) ng/dl] than in RH patients [25.4 (14.1) ng/dl, P<0.05] and in NC [32.6 (20.5), P<0.001]. The lower plasma ANP levels in RH than in AH patients and in NC may be due to Ca depletion. The lower PRA and serum aldosterone levels in AH than in RH patients and in NC may be attributed to Ca excess.
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PMID:Atrial natriuretic peptide in children with idiopathic hypercalciuria. 1095 44