AI Article Synopsis

  • - The study identifies two phenotypes of calcium oxalate kidney stones based on endoscopic and biopsy findings: one with normal renal papillae and mineral deposition (Randall's plaque) and another with collecting duct plugging and more significant renal tissue loss.
  • - The Randall's plaque phenotype leads to minor nephron damage due to small calcified patches detaching during stone formation, while the plugging phenotype causes major nephron degeneration due to large mineral obstructions.
  • - New visualization techniques show different immune cell responses in each phenotype, with the Randall's plaque type exhibiting macrophage accumulation and the plugging type showing T-lymphocyte infiltration; this suggests that the plugging phenotype may have a greater long-term risk for renal function loss.

Article Abstract

Endoscopic and biopsy findings have identified two distinct phenotypes among individuals with calcium oxalate (CaOx) kidney stones. The first type has normal renal papillae but shows interstitial mineral deposition, known as Randall's plaque. The other phenotype presents with collecting duct plugging and a higher incidence of loss of papilla tissue mass. With Randall's plaque, renal papilla injury involves the loss of small patches of calcified tissue (Randall's plaque detaching with the stone), which likely results in damage to only a few nephrons. In contrast, collecting duct mineral plugs are very large, causing obstruction to tubular flow. Since each terminal collecting duct drains thousands of nephrons, ductal plugs could lead to the degeneration of many nephrons and a significant loss of renal glomeruli. New visualization techniques for immune cells in papillary biopsies have revealed that the Randall's plaque phenotype is marked by the accumulation of macrophages around the plaque regions. In contrast, preliminary data on the plugging phenotype shows collecting duct damage with mineral plugs and increased T-lymphocytes throughout the papilla. These regions also show tubulitis, i.e., T-cell infiltration into nearby collecting duct epithelium. This suggests that while some CaOx stone formers may have some papillary inflammation but with minimal damage to nephrons, others suffer from obstruction to flow for many nephrons that may also include destructive inflammation in the renal tissue. We propose that CaOx stone formers with the plugging phenotype will have a higher long-term risk for loss of renal function.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11449262PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s00240-024-01631-xDOI Listing

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