Renal Acidification Defects in Patients with Recurrent Calcium Nephrolithiasis
- 1 January 1985
- journal article
- research article
- Published by S. Karger AG in Nephron
- Vol. 41 (4) , 325-332
- https://doi.org/10.1159/000183609
Abstract
The frequency of renal tubular acidosis was evaluated in 28 adult patients with recurrent calcium nephrolithiasis (19 with ‘renal’ hypercalciuria, 9 with normocalciuria and no metabolic abnormality) and no evidence of obstruction or infection of the urinary tract. Eight patients with hypercalciuria (42%) had a defective renal reabsorption of bicarbonate, based on a fractional excretion of bicarbonate higher than 7% and a TmHCO3/GFR lower than 2.2 mEq/dl; 2 of them had an associated distal defect of acidification, as judged by a U-B pCO2 lower than 18 mm Hg in maximally alkaline urine. One patient with hypercalciuria had distal tubular acidosis, based on a urine pH higher than 5.3 during acidosis. Only 1 patient with normocalciuria had associated proximal and distal acidification defects. The remaining 8 patients displayed a normal renal acidifying capacity. The bicarbonate wastage was independent of serum PTH levels, vitamin D status and hypercalciuria and was associated with a defective tubular reabsorption of phosphate, increased random urinary pH and more active nephrolithiasis, with a prevalence of mixed calcium oxalate and phosphate stones. Our study shows a high incidence of defective tubular reabsorption of bicarbonate in patients with calcium nephrolithiasis and ‘renal’ hypercalciuria and suggests that the proximal acidification defect plays a pathogenetic role in promoting calcium nephrolithiasis.Keywords
This publication has 13 references indexed in Scilit:
- Ambulatory evaluation of nephrolithiasisThe American Journal of Medicine, 1980
- Responses to Hydrochlorothiazide and Acetazolamide in Patients with Calcium StonesNew England Journal of Medicine, 1980
- Incidence and Clinical Importance of Renal Tubular Defects in Recurrent Renal Stone FormersNephron, 1980
- Renal Handling of Water and Sodium in Children with Proximal and Distal Renal Tubular AcidosisNephron, 1980
- Familial absorptive hypercalciuria and renal tubular acidosisThe American Journal of Medicine, 1979
- Renal Acidifying Ability in Subjects with Recurrent Stone FormationJournal of Urology, 1977
- On the pathogenesis of so-called idiopathic hypercalciuriaThe American Journal of Medicine, 1977
- Familial proximal renal tubular acidosisThe American Journal of Medicine, 1977
- Reduced renal acid excretion in malnutrition: a result of phosphate depletionThe American Journal of Clinical Nutrition, 1977
- Modified Reagents for Determination of Urea and AmmoniaClinical Chemistry, 1962