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Influence of Dietary Heritage in a Restricted Geographic Area and Role of Food Additives on Risk of Recurrent Kidney Stone. | LitMetric

Influence of Dietary Heritage in a Restricted Geographic Area and Role of Food Additives on Risk of Recurrent Kidney Stone.

Nutrients

Department of Biostatistics, Consortium for Biological and Pharmacological Evaluations (CVBF), 27100 Pavia, Italy.

Published: September 2024

AI Article Synopsis

  • Dietary factors play a significant role in the development of kidney stones, necessitating careful monitoring of food intake among patients to identify potential causes.
  • A study involving 50 frequent kidney stone formers in Sardinia utilized meticulous food diaries and analyzed various dietary components and their effects on urine output over a three-year period.
  • Results indicated specific correlations between nutritional intake and urine composition, revealing issues such as low citrate levels and high concentrations of oxalates and calcium, which could influence kidney stone formation.

Article Abstract

Dietary factors may be implicated in the formation of kidney stones and should be closely monitored. To achieve this aim, patients are routinely assessed by means of generic dietary recall, a tool widely used by authors in a range of extensive patient populations to record food intake; the findings obtained, however, may be skewed due to dietary variations and underestimation of the effect of food additives. Fifty Frequent Kidney Stone Formers (FKSFs, mean age: 54.3 ± 13.9 years) with normal kidney function, absence of comorbidities, and reliable compliance were selected from a total of 68 patients' resident in Sardinia, an Italian island where genetic admixtures have been relatively rare for generations. The study, conducted from 1 January 2020 to 31 December 2023, was aimed at assessing nutritional values based on the meticulous recording of food quantities, quality, and potential modifications related to food preparation. Patients were selected during an initial clinical check-up and all efforts made to ensure they were capable of reliably recording all food and drinks consumed. A seven-day food diary was provided in which food and drink intake and their impact on 24 h urine output was recorded. The following parameters were measured in both foods and urine output: citrates, oxalates, calcium, phosphorous, uric acid, proteins and nitrogen compounds, magnesium, sulfates, potassium, carbohydrates, free fatty acids. Study outcomes established the presence of hypocitraturia, hyperoxaluria, hypercalciuria, and moderately high levels of nitrogen compounds. Univariate analysis followed by multivariate analysis for further confirmation were performed and the following observations made. Citrate intake correlated with citraturia but did not promote oxaluria; calcium intake promoted onset of sulfaturia, azoturia, and ammoniuria, whilst magnesium correlated with magnesiuria but not with oxaluria, calciuria, phosphaturia, and azoturia; sulfate intake elicited onset of azoturia but not kaliuresis; potassium intake promoted oxaluria and protein intake resulted in onset of ammoniuria and azoturia. (A) The chemical composition of urine based on dietary intake is hard to predict without taking into account the presence of dietary and urinary interferents; (B) the geographic isolation of patients studied underlines the importance of epigenetics in maintaining a traditional dietary heritage. (C) Moreover, the widespread use of food additives should consistently be taken into account to ensure a correct diagnosis of FKSF and set up a valid treatment plan.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11396994PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/nu16172984DOI Listing

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