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Query: UMLS:C0020500 (hyperoxaluria)
912 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Intestinal absorption of oxalate was assessed indirectly from the increase in renal oxalate excretion following the oral administration of 5 mmol of stable oxalate. When sodium oxalate alone was given without divalent cations to patients in the fasting state, the urinary oxalate increased promptly (within 2 hours). The increase was more prominent and sustained in those with ileal disease (ileal resection or jujunoileal bypass); thus, 35 per cent of the orally administered oxalate eventually appeared in the urine in the group with ileal disease, 8 per cent in the group with stones (renal and absorptive hypercalciurias) and 9 per cent in the control group. This hyperexcretion of oxalate could be largely, but not totally, ameliorated by the concurrent oral administration of divalent cations. Although urinary oxalate decreased significantly following the oral administration of calcium or magnesium, hyperoxaluria persisted in most patients. The results suggested that the hyperabsorption of oxalate in ileal disease cannot be accounted for solely by an increased absorbable oxalate pool associated with calcium-fatty acid complexation. Moreover, although urinary oxalate decreased, urinary calcium increased concurrently when either calcium or magnesium was given. Thus, there was no significant change or increase in the urinary state of saturation with respect to calcium oxalate.
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PMID:Renal oxalate excretion following oral oxalate loads in patients with ileal disease and with renal and absorptive hypercalciurias. Effect of calcium and magnesium. 64 24

There were 22 patients in whom oxalate stones formed and who had absorptive hyperoxaluria treated with diethylaminoethanol-cellulose. In more than 2 years this form of treatment did not seem to have any serious side effects. It achieved a decrease of urinary oxalate values in all patients in whom oxalate hyperabsorption had been found. Diethylaminoethanol-cellulose is an anionic exchanger capable of retaining oxalate in vitro and in vivo.
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PMID:Diethylaminoethanol-cellulose in the treatment of absorptive hyperoxaluria. 66 Jul 34

143 patients (70 patients with Crohn's disease, 11 with ulcerative colitis, 40 with an intestinal by-pass operation, 9 with non-tropical sprue, 10 with short bowel syndrome, and 3 with other gastrointestinal disease) were studied during a metabolic regime including a fixed oral supply of 70 g fat, 800 mg calcium, and 200 mg oxalate. Faecal fat, 47Ca-absorption, 14C-oxalate absorption, and renal oxalate excretion were measured, and in the majority of patients a 14C-glyco-cholic acid breath test was also performed. 14Ca-absorption was practically identical (r = 0.92), whether determined by whole-body counting or from the accumulation of absorbed 47Ca in the skeleton of the underarm. 14C-oxalate absorption and renal oxalate excretion agreed well (r = 0.85). Steatorrhoea correlated weakly with renal oxalate excretion (r = 0.63, p less than 0.001), whereas no correlation was present between faecal fat and calcium absorption or between oxalate and calcium absorption under the constant conditions prevailing during the study. It is recommended that a "trifixed" regime with absorption studies of fat, calcium, and oxalate be undertaken previous to therapy that aims at a reduction of steatorrhoea or hyperoxaluria or an improvement of calcium absorption in chronic malabsorption syndromes, not least because therapy of these categories of patients most often continues for years.
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PMID:Standardized ("trifixed") diet in the study of chronic malabsorption syndromes. 67 51

Urinary oxalate excretion was studied in healthy subjects and before and after surgery in patients with Crohn's disease. Urinary oxalate excretion in relation to the length of diseased or resected ileal segment in patients subjected to restorative and colectomy procedures, as well as in relation to faecal excretion of fat and bile salts and to urinary excretion of vitamin B12 and calcium, was also studied. The studies were performed in patients on a free diet or standard hospital diet and on a high-oxalate and/or high-fat diet. When patients subjected to ileal resection in conjunction with minor colonic resection were studied on a high-oxalate diet, urinary oxalate excretion increased with length of ileum resected and correlated with faecal fat excretion and urinary excretion of vitamin B12 but not with faecal excretion of bile salts. Increasing the dietary fat intake in these patients further increased urinary oxalate excretion. Although urinary oxalate excretion increased somewhat in colectomized patients on a high-oxalate diet, indicating an increased absorption of dietary oxalate, this increase showed no correlation either to faecal fat or bile salt excretion, or to urinary excretion of vitamin B12. The result are consistent with the "solubility theory". A diet low in fat and oxalate and high in calcium is recommended in patients with hyperoxaluria.
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PMID:Urinary oxalate excretion related to ileocolic surgery in patients with Crohn's disease. 67 58

Oxalate-urolithiasis and hyperoxalaria have been reported to be a frequent complication in patients with small bowel disease, especially in patients with ileal resection due to Crohn's disease. Hyperabsorption of oxalate seems to be the main patholgenetic factor for "enteric" hyperoxalaria. Intestinal absorption and urinary excretion of oxalate was measured in patients with various gastrointestinal diseases after oral or rectal administration of 14C-oxalate. Kinetic data suggest that 14C-oxalate is absorbed in the small, the large bowel and the rectum as well. Oxalate absorption was decreased in patients with a colectomy and in active ulcerative colitis, but increased in patients with ileal resection, chronic liver disease, and steatorrhea due to chronic pancratitis or sprue. There existed a positive correlation between 14C-oxalate absorption and the amount of fecal fat excretion. The data suggest that hyperoxaluria and hyperabsorption of oxalate are not a specific finding in patients with bile acid malabsorption, but may occur too, in steatorrhea without alteration of bile acid metabolism.
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PMID:[Enteric hyperoxaluria. I. Intestinal oxalate absorption in gastrointestinal diseases (author's transl)]. 68 26

The importance of intestinal resection, exclusion of the colon, and steatorrhoea for secondary hyperoxaluria was studied in 81 patients with Crohn's disease and 12 patients with ileostomy after colectomy for ulcerative colitis during a metabolic regime including a fixed oral supply of fat, calcium, and oxalate. Hyperoxaluria (greater than 48 mg (greater than 0.5 mmol) per 24 h) was present in 21 patients with Crohn's disease. All but one half or more of the colon preserved. Renal oxalate excretion was related to the amount of ileum resected. 14C-oxalate absorption was significantly higher in patients with ileal resection and the whole colon preserved than in patients with ileal resection plus hemicolectomy, despite the fact that the latter group had the most extensive ileal resections. Faecal fat and oxalate excretion agreed well in patients without ileostomy (r = 0.76, p less than 0.001), and renal oxalate excretion was significantly higher in patients with steatorrhea and the colon preserved than in patients without steatorrhoea. In all 93 patients 14C-oxalate absorption and renal oxalate excretion was positively correlated with a coefficient of correlation of 0.76 (p less than 0.001). No correlation was present between 47Ca- and 14C-oxalate absorption. The study confirm that a preserved colon is necessary for secondary hyperoxaluria and stresses the importance of ileal resection and steatorrhoea.
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PMID:Enteric hyperoxaluria: dependence on small intestinal resection, colectomy, and steatorrhoea in chronic inflammatory bowel disease. 70 53

Renal function and biopsies were studied in 18 patients, 7 to 108 months after intestinal bypass. Enteropathy was found in 12 and hyperoxaluria in 16. Every biopsy showed a type of focal interstitial nephritis, tubular atrophy, fibrosis, and glomerular hyalinization. Damage ranged from minimal to extensive and renal function from normal to end-stage failure. Tubular injury had resulted partly from oxalate deposits. However, in 10 patients no oxalate crystals were seen. In eight others, most of the damaged areas were remote from crystal deposits. Immunoglobulin M and C3 deposits, found in glomerular capillaries and the messangium in six of 11 specimens, and the presence of circulating immune complexes in five of 10 patients, in addition to the extraintestinal organ involvement, suggested immune complex mesangial injury as one factor in bypass nephropathy. With progressive impairment of renal function, a biopsy appears justified. If damage is significant, the bypass should be dismantled.
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PMID:Renal damage with intestinal bypass. 71 26

To investigate the role of the colon in increased oxalate absorption, we measured urinary oxalate and fecal fat excretion in 26 patients with gastrointestinal disease. Eight patients with steatorrhea of various causes (Crohn's disease [two], chronic pancreatitis [four], jejunoileal bypass [one] and extrahepatic biliary obstruction [one]) had hyperoxaluria (greater than 45 mg per 24 hours). All these patients had intact colons. In contrast, none of five patients with ileostomies and steatorrhea secondary to ileal resection had hyperoxaluria. Absorption of 14C-oxalate was increased in three patients with steatorrhea and intact colons but not in three patients with steatorrhea and an ileostomy. Thus, the colon is both the site of and required for increased oxalate absorption in enteric hyperoxaluria. The lack of a direct relation between fecal fat excretion and urinary oxalate excretion in the patients with hyperoxaluria and steatorrhea suggests that steatorrhea, although important, is not the only determinant in the pathogenesis of hyperoxaluria.
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PMID:Importance of the colon in enteric hyperoxaluria. 83 Nov 27

A 45-year-old man underwent a jejunoileal shunt procedure for obesity. Twenty months later he developed severe oxalosis and chronic renal failure, which required maintenance hemodialysis. The sequential observation of two biopsy specimens and the necropsy (over a span of 39 months) suggests that oxalate deposition caused tubular obstruction and destruction with subsequent atrophy of nephrons. This indicates that patients undergoing intestinal bypass are at risk for developing irreversible renal failure due to enteric hyperoxaluria.
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PMID:Oxalosis and chronic renal failure after intestinal bypass. 83 9

A perfusion technique has been used to study the effect of sodium chenodeoxycholate (5 mmol 1-1) on absorption of oxalate (2 mmol 1-1) from the surgically excluded colon in two patients with chronic liver disease. Colonic absorption of oxalate increased at least fivefold when sodium chenodeoxycholate was incorporated in the perfusion solutions. This observation may explain enteric hyperoxaluria after ileal resection and in some other gastrointestinal disorders.
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PMID:Effect of sodium chenodeoxycholate on oxalate absorption from the excluded human colon--a mechanism for 'enteric' hyperoxaluria. 85 53


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