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Query: UMLS:C0020438 (
hypercalciuria
)
2,502
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The neonatal Bartter syndrome (NBS) is associated with a complex disorder of mineral metabolism in children, including
hypercalciuria
, nephrocalcinosis, and diminished bone mineral density. Although
cyclooxygenase
inhibition usually brings about improvement in these findings, there is a variable component which is resistant to such therapy in many children. The factor mediating this disorder has not been identified. Blood and urine from 12 children with NBS were examined. When compared with samples from normal children and adults, all (NBS) sera reduced bone calcium uptake in a bone disc bioassay. This effect persisted in the presence of parathyroid hormone (PTH) antibody and PTH receptor blockade, indicating that neither PTH nor PTH related peptide was responsible. It was eliminated by indomethacin, suggesting that prostanoid generation was essential. Protamine was also inhibitory, as was the addition of ecteola, an anion binder. Activity could be recovered from ecteola by elution with hypertonic buffer. Urine samples from children with NBS had the same calcitropic effect. The agent was removed by ecteola and recovered by hypertonic elution. Activity was eliminated by protamine and by heparinase, but not by trypsin digestion. Size exclusion centrifugation showed that the activity was associated with a material between 10 and 30 kilodaltons. Finally, urine ecteola eluates from NBS patients raised serum concentrations of calcium after intraperitoneal injection in rats. These data suggest that children with NBS have a calcitropic substance in their serum and urine which is not found in normal individuals. The substance is heparin like, and mediates its effects through prostanoid production. These studies provide additional evidence against a direct renal cause of the urinary calcium disturbance characteristic of the disorder.
...
PMID:Humoral factor in children with neonatal Bartter syndrome reduces bone calcium uptake in vitro. 968 54
Epidemiological, clinical and experimental evidence suggests that fatty acids may have an effect (due to their chemical structure) on calcium metabolism in animals and man. Fatty acid deficiency in animals can lead to a loss of bone calcium and matrix, resulting in marked bone demineralization, and treatment with a mixture of omega-3 and omega-6 polyunsaturated fatty acids can induce significant reduction in some biochemical markers of bone reabsorption. A relationship, between phospholipid fatty acid content, calcium-regulating hormones and intestinal, renal, and bone calcium metabolism alterations, has been reported in patients with renal stones and
hypercalciuria
. Recent studies have shown specific effects of fatty acids on the gene expression of some bone cytokines. Fatty acids might be involved in calcium metabolism influencing cellular calcium ion transport directly, as second messengers, or generating, through the
cyclooxygenase
pathway, potential biological mediators which have complex effects on bone remodeling. Experimental and clinical documentation of the specific and indirect effects of fatty acids on calcium and bone metabolism could open up new and interesting clinical prospects.
...
PMID:Fatty acids, calcium and bone metabolism. 1249 71