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NEPHROLITHIASIS Etiology, stone composition, medical management, and prevention Urology Division, Surgery Department Medical Faculty, University of Sumatera Utara
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NEPHROLITHIASISEtiology, stone composition, medical management, and prevention

Urology Division, Surgery DepartmentMedical Faculty, University of Sumatera Utara

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Epidemiology

Prevalence 2-3%, maybe in mountainous, desert & tropical areas

: = 3 : 1 25% stone formers have a family history Uric acid and Ca stones more frequent

in, infectious stones more common in The most common kinds of stones are

calcium oxalate, uric acid, struvite and cysteine

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Composition of renal stones

Calcium oxalate 36 – 70% Calcium phosphate (hydroxyapatite) 6 –

20% Mixed Ca oxalate & Ca phosphate 11 – 31% Magnesium ammonium phosphate (struvite)

6 – 20% Uric acid 6 – 17% Cystine 0.5 – 3% Miscellaneous (xanthine, silicates & drug

metabolites) 1 – 4%

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Factors influencing stone formation Genetics 1. Idiopathic hypercalciuria 2. Cystinuria 3. Primary hyperoxaluria, type 1 & 2 4. Lesch-Nyhan syndrome is an X-linked disease causing hyperuricemia 5. Familial renal tubular acidosis , Ehlres-

Danlos syndrome, Marfan’s syndrome, Wilson’s

disease

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Environmental 1. Dietary factors - >> protein & sodium intake risk Ca

stone - >> purine diets urine pH

hyperuricosuria - B6 deficiency formation & excretion

oxalate - dehydration, inadequate fluid intake, vit C

excess, Ca supplements, Ca-containing antacids

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2. Geographical factors - higher during summer months - higher in southeast United States

and lower in Mid-Atlantic and Northwest

regions

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Stone formation

Crystallization - stone salts that precipitate out of urine

- the point of saturation of a salt in solution is called the

solubility product (Ksp)

- when the product of the components of a salt (e.g. calcium and oxalate) exceeds Ksp, salt crystals will

precipitate out of solution - crystallization is based on Ksp, pH, and the presence

of stone inhibitors and promoters

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Nucleation - is the process by which stones form around a core, or nucleus - homogeneous stone nuclei form in solution - heterogeneous stone nuclei form around existing structures, such as cellular debris Aggregation - crystals join together to form larger clumps

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TYPES OF STONE

CALCIUM OXALATE Recommended treatment : - absorptive : Ca restriction, sodium

cellulose phosphate, thiazides, fluid intake - other types : thiazide & fluid intake

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URIC ACID STONES

5-10% of all stone Urine pH < 5.5 Associated with uric acid in urine, not

necessarily associated with hyperuricemia Secondary causes : gout (20%), chemoth/ for

myeloproliferative cancer Most common radioluscent

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Th/ : dissolve : - fluids, alkali (citrate th/), allopurinol, protein

restriction - aim urine output > 2500 ml/day - potassium citrate or sodium bicarbonate achieve urine pH 6.5-7.0 avoid pH >7.0 can precipitate ca phosphate - if hyperuricemic or hyperuricosuric allupurinol

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STRUVITE STONES

Composed of Mg ammonium phosphate crystals

= infection stones or triple phosphate stone Staghorn calculi are typically struvite stone Caused by infection with urease-producing

bacteria : - proteus id the most common

- urease hydrolized urea to form ammonia alkalinizes the urine, pH and allows

crystals to form

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Urine pH will be >7.2 Th/ : - surgery - AB to prevent infection / stone

recurrence - irrigation with acidic solution successful but requires lengthy,

complicated treatment and costs danger : risk of sepsis, hypermagnesemia

- acetohydroxamic acid : inhibit urease; 20-70% severe side effect

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CYSTINE STONES

1% of all stones Congenital disorders, autosomal recessive Caused by a defect in cystine reabsorption

in the proximal tubule Cystine poorly soluble at normal pH (pKa

8.3) Crystal form benzene ring on

microscopy

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Th/ : - low methionine / sodium diet - hydrate to 3 L urine output/day - alkalinize urine : potassium citrate complex cystine - ESWL not effective

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CALCIUM PHOSPHATE STONE

- urine pH > 5.5 - hypocitraturia - 70% of adults with type 1 Renal

Tubular Acidosis have stones - 80% are women - associated with renal cyst

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Inhibitors of CaPO4 crystallization : - Mg - pyrophosphate - citrate - nephrocalcin Th / : - potassium bicarbonate or potassium citrate correct acidosis & urine citrate - fluids - thiazides if hypercalciuric

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OTHER STONES

Dihydroxyadenine radioluscent Xanthine radioluscent Matrix radioluscent Ammonium acid urate Triamterene Indinavir radioluscent

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MEDICAL MANAGEMENT

DIETARY PREVENTION - fluids : urine output stone formation if possible maintain >2.5 L urine/day - coffee, tea, beer, wine stone risk - lemon juice urinary citrate risk - grapefruit juice risk

PROTEIN - dietary protein urine Ca/uric acid/oxalate & urine citrate low/moderate protein intake is desirable

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CALCIURIA - except in case of absorptive hypercalciuria, Ca binds intestinal oxalate prevent its

absorption - unless absorptive hypercalciuria maintain adequate calcium intake

SODIUM - dietary sodium urinary sodium

has not been proven to stone risk sodium in moderation

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ASCORBIC ACID (VITAMIN C) - metabolized to oxalate - vit C intake urinary oxalate - advice : vitamin C in moderation

OXALATE - tea, instant coffee, spinach, chocolate, nuts

oxalate (+) increase urinary oxalate - high-oxalate foods in moderation for Ca oxalate

stone former

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PHARMACOLOGICAL PREVENTION

THIAZIDES - HCT 25-50 mg or chlorthalidone

12.5-25 mg (up to 100mg) - start with small dose, titrate as needed

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CITRATE - Inhibits Ca oxalate crystallization

- effective for hypocitraturic stone disease - potassium citrate 10-20 mEq w/meals - side effects : GI intolerance

ALLOPURINOL - inhibits xanthine oxidase & uric acid prod

- use in uric acid & hyperuricosuric Ca oxalate stone

- 300 mg/o, max 800 mg - dose in renal failure

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PHOSPHATE (ORTHOPHSOPHATE) - vit D level urinary Ca excretion - urine pyrophosphate & citrate - clinical benefits are uncertain

MAGNESIUM - urinary citrate - clinical benefits uncertain

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SODIUM CELLULOSE PHOSPHATE - binds Ca in the gut and inhibits absorption - indicated for use in absorptive

hypercalciuria - 5 g with meals

ANTIBIOTICS - long-term prophylaxis for struvite stone

after surgical treatment - drug should be culture specific

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SUMMARY

The most common type is calcium oxalate. Uric acid stones form at pH <5.5. Uric acid stones form at pH <5.5. Primary

treatment and prevention is to alkalinize to alkalinize the urinethe urine; surgery is also an option

Struvite stone are composed of magnesium ammonium phosphate crystals. They are classically caused by infection with a urease-producing infection with a urease-producing bacteriumbacterium. Urinary pH is >7.2. treatment is surgery & antibioticssurgery & antibiotics

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Cystine stones caused by a congenital autosomal recessive disorder.

Treatment : urinary alkalinization urinary alkalinization Calcium phosphate stones associated

with type 1 RTA Dietary interventions to prevent stones

include fluid intake, protein intake and sodium intake

Pharmacological interventions to prevent stones include thiazides, citrate, allopurinol, sodium cellulose phosphate

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