Survey
* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
Nephrolithiasis . • The human skeleton is composed primarily of apatite — Ca10 (PO4) 6 (OH) 2 — and is, by far, the largest repository of calcium in the body. • Growth and pregnancy necessitate substantial absorption of dietary calcium. • Once skeletal formation is complete, nonpregnant humans must excrete any absorbed calcium in the urine; • Absorption is not precisely regulated, and it increases with egardless of need. additional dietary intake, • The ions that are most often complexed with calcium in kidney stones, oxalate and phosphate, are, respectively, an end product of metabolism and another principal component of bone whose absorption is also poorly regulated. • The need to conserve water by terrestrial humans often results in excretion of these unneeded ions (calcium, oxalate, and phosphate) in relatively small volumes of urine. • Ion excretion in scant urine leads to a substantial supersaturation Nephrolithiasis, although rarely causing kidney failure or lifethreatening illness, is responsible for substantial morbidity. • With a lifetime risk of 7% to 13%, results not only in significant morbidity but also in substantial economic costs, both directly from medical treatment and indirectly through time lost from work. • The yearly total economic cost of kidney stones has been estimated to approach $5.3 billion in the United States alone. • Stones are composed of crystals, often of several different types, in a protein matrix. The majority (>80%) of crystals are composed of calcium complexed with oxalate and or phosphate • uric acid, magnesium ammonium phosphate (struvite), or cystine, alone or in combination. Epidemiology Kidney stones are common in industrialized nations, with an annual incidence of 0.5% to 1.9% and a lifetime incident rate of approximately 13% in men and approximately 7% in women. • In the Middle East, the lifetime prevalence of stone disease has been reported to be up to 25%. • In addition to age and gender, race, geography, and body mass index (BMI) are risk factors for kidney stones. • Non- Hispanic white people have more kidney stones than do nonHispanic black people and Mexican Americans at all ages The prevalence of stones among Hispanics and Asian men was intermediate between those of white and black people. • increases from north to south and from west to east. • This regional difference is thought to be linked to the greater sunlight exposure in southern and easternareas, which leads to an increase in insensible losses through sweating, resulting in more concentrated urine. • Sun exposure enhances vitamin D production, which leads to an increase in 25-hydroxy vitamin D; • However this should not increase intestinal calcium absorption and subsequent urine calcium excretion. • A smaller urine volume does increase urine supersaturation with regard to the calciumcontaining solid phases • Obese men and women have a higher risk of kidney stones than do people of normal weight. • Individuals weighing more than (100 kg) have a significantly greater chance of forming a kidney stone than those weighing less than 150 pounds (68 kg). • A BMI higher than 30, in comparison with a BMI between 21 and 22.9, is also associated with an increased risk of stone formation, as is a weight gain of 35 pounds (16 kg) after young adulthood and an increased waist circumference. • mostly uric acid stones. . • Nephrolithiasis has been associated with chronic kidney disease (CKD) but is rarely the cause of endstage kidney disease. • Even mild CKD is associated with significant adverse cardiovascular events. • If appropriate therapy can result in a decrease in recurrent stone formation and, ideally, a reduction in the associated CKD, then stone prevention may have a significant overall health benefit in addition to controlling the pain and immediate consequences of renal colic. . Human Genetics • Specific monogenic causes of kidney stones such as distal renal tubular acidosis (RTA), primary hyperoxaluria, and cystinuria are covered in the relevant sections. . • correlative, rather than causative, relationships. Familial Aggregation • detailed description of kindreds of so-called stone formers. • Found kidney stones among significantly higher numbers of parents and siblings of the stone formers than among relatives of controls demonstrate a threefold-to-fourfold relative risk of kidney stones in people who have an affected family member. Many studies have indicated that 20% to 40% of stone formers have positive family histories of stones; • Familial aggregation transcends geographic regions and ethnicity. • For example, a study from Thailand showed a risk ratio of 3.2 for calcium stones. Inheritance Pattern • [An autosomal dominant trait]. • Because stone disease does not manifest until midlife and asymptomatic stones are not uncommon, pedigrees should be drawn with caution. • The most acceptable notion is that nephrolithiasis is a complex trait with polygenic contribution (determined by many genes), loci heterogeneity (stones formers with different genetic backgrounds are affected penetrance by different (positive genes), genotype but incomplete negative phenotype), and extensive phenocopy (nongenetic causes of the same phenotype). Twin Studies • For the discordant twin pairs, the sparing effect in the unaffected twin may be attributed partly to dietary factors. • Genes along the vitamin D axis, Despite the positive associations, no definitive biologic relationship between the vitamin D axis and the genetic basis of kidney stones. • The CaSR gene contains missense single-nucleotide polymorphisms in the intracellular carboxy-terminal domain. • calcium channel TRPPV6 • The data supporting genetic influence in nephrolithiasis is strong, with up to a 50% contribution to the phenotype. • Nephrolithiasis as a phenotype is a complex trait with polygenic influence, loci heterogeneity, and incomplete penetrance and is strongly amenable to environmental modification. Pathogenesis • Consider a flask of water containing an ample amount of calcium oxalate crystals, which is well mixed and at a stable temperature. • A solubility product with lower free ion activity would cause the crystals to dissolve; such a solution is called undersaturated. • A solubility product with higher free ion activity would cause the crystals to grow. [Formation product upper limit of metastability (ULM). At] Factors Influencing Saturation • Renal excretion phosphate, and of calcium, water are oxalate, primary determinants of saturation. • Hypercalciuria, oxaluria, hypocitraturia, unduly alkaline urine, and chronic dehydration all seem to increase the risk of calcium stone formation, but their presence alone does not ensure that stones will form. • APR is an estimate of the degree of saturation. • A ratio higher than 1 connotes lower than 1, undersaturation. Observed Urine Saturation • Urine from stone formers is more supersaturated than urine from people who do not form stones. • Stone formers — even those who are hypercalciuric, have no detectable metabolic disorder (idiopathic), or are hyperparathyroid — had higher average values of urine saturation than. • This fact is visible: added crystals grow in urine from most normal persons. • Urine supersaturation with brushite is more variable, being highly dependent on urine pH and calcium. Limits of Metastability • Urine APR indicates whether preexistent crystal, once formed, will grow or shrink while suspended in urine; • However, the APR gives incomplete information about the ability of that urine to produce new crystals Nucleation • • • • • Homogeneous nucleation, the spontaneous formation of new crystal nuclei in a supersaturated solution, is uncommon. particles of dust or debris in solution, irregularities on the surface of the container, or other crystals furnish a surface on which crystal nuclei begin to form at a lower APR than is required for homogeneous nucleation. The free energy change needed to create new nuclei is greater than that needed to enlarge preformed nuclei. The very existence of the metastable zone reflects this greater change; thus, any surface that can serve as a substrate on which ions in solution can organize may act as a heterogeneous nucleus, abridge the costly process of creating a de novo solid phase, and lower the apparent ULM. epitaxis, Crystal Growth and Aggregation • Once present, crystal nuclei will grow if suspended in urine with an APR higher than 1. • In metastable solutions, at 37° C, growth rates of calcium oxalate and the stone-forming calcium phosphate crystal are rapid; appreciable changes in macroscopic dimensions occur over hours to days. • Growth rate increases with the extent of . oversaturation and tends be most rapid in urine with the highest values of APR. • increase particle size, which results in a crystal that can lodge in the urinary tract. • The urine of stone formers contains larger crystal aggregates than does urine from people who do not form stones. Cell-Crystal Interactions • • • • • crystals cannot grow or aggregate fast enough to anchor in the urinary tract during the normal transit time through the nephron. Therefore, to grow large enough to be of clinical significance, crystals must anchor to the renal tubule epithelium or urothelium: This is the fixed particle theory.. The adherence and uptake of crystals appear to be crystal-specific: greater for calcium oxalate than calcium phosphate. . . • The crystals bind to anionic sites on the cell membrane in a stereospecific manner. • Cells may even act as nucleating sites for crystal formation. • The binding of crystals to the cells can be inhibited by a variety of anionic compounds normally found in urine, which may be part of the normal defense against kidney stones. The End