The genesis and growth of calculi are imprinted in their structure, so the pathogenesis of lithiasis could potentially be read via proper analytical techniques. In this study, electron microscopy with energy-dispersive X-ray spectroscopy (SEM-EDX) is used to obtain a description of the morphology and compositional structure of a single bladder stone. This technique establishes the chemical and crystalline architecture of the urolith to assess the effect of the chemical environment on its growth. Scanning electron microscopy-backscattered electrons (SEM-BSE) images clearly show that the stone has a multilayered structure. These layers and Liesegang ring-like structures are characterized by one predominant chemical component but also by slighter compositional changes. The mean crystalline components are determined by X-ray diffraction (DRX), infrared spectroscopy (FT-IR), and Raman analysis (RMN). Elemental analysis along a radial trajectory of the calculus by EDX linear scanning (EDX-LS) also reveals the compositional structure of the layers and the spatial distribution of the main chemical components. EDX-LS data processing reveals concentration profiles that clearly show morpho-compositional growth bands, which correspond to precipitation waves and urinary concentration peaks. The width of the growth bands is independent of the radial position, layer, and element analyzed. We conclude that the bands observed are a consequence of slight changes in the biochemical composition of the urine and consequently reflect a short-term biological cycle of the renal system. This non-specific growth rate suggests that stone formation is a kinetically controlled phenomenon in which promoters of crystal cluster aggregation may have played a key role.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s00775-020-01793-0DOI Listing

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