From crystalluria to kidney stones, some physicochemical aspects of calcium nephrolithiasis.

World J Nephrol

Johannes M Baumann, Beat Affolter, Stone Research Center Viollier, CH-2502 Biel, Switzerland.

Published: November 2014

Nephrolithiasis seems to be the result of crystal formation, aggregation and retention in the kidney during crystalluria. These processes have to occur within the short urinary transit time through the kidney being in the order of few minutes. Recently much work was done on rather qualitative aspects of nephrolithiasis like genetics, metabolism and morphology. In this review we try to provide some quantitative information on urinary supersaturation with respect to stone minerals, especially Ca oxalate (CaOx), on the formation and aggregation of CaOx crystals and on crystal retention in the kidney. The paper is centered on idiopathic Ca nephrolithiasis being the most frequent stone disease with only partially known pathogenesis. New aspects of the role of urinary macromolecules in stone formation and of the mechanism of crystal aggregation are provided.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4220359PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.5527/wjn.v3.i4.256DOI Listing

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