Renal oxalate excretion following oral oxalate loads in patients with ileal disease and with renal and absorptive hypercalciurias. Effect of calcium and magnesium.
Publication/Presentation Date
4-1-1978
Abstract
Intestinal absorption of oxalate was assessed indirectly from the increase in renal oxalate excretion following the oral administration of 5 mmol of stable oxalate. When sodium oxalate alone was given without divalent cations to patients in the fasting state, the urinary oxalate increased promptly (within 2 hours). The increase was more prominent and sustained in those with ileal disease (ileal resection or jujunoileal bypass); thus, 35 per cent of the orally administered oxalate eventually appeared in the urine in the group with ileal disease, 8 per cent in the group with stones (renal and absorptive hypercalciurias) and 9 per cent in the control group. This hyperexcretion of oxalate could be largely, but not totally, ameliorated by the concurrent oral administration of divalent cations. Although urinary oxalate decreased significantly following the oral administration of calcium or magnesium, hyperoxaluria persisted in most patients. The results suggested that the hyperabsorption of oxalate in ileal disease cannot be accounted for solely by an increased absorbable oxalate pool associated with calcium-fatty acid complexation. Moreover, although urinary oxalate decreased, urinary calcium increased concurrently when either calcium or magnesium was given. Thus, there was no significant change or increase in the urinary state of saturation with respect to calcium oxalate.
Volume
64
Issue
4
First Page
579
Last Page
585
ISSN
0002-9343
Published In/Presented At
Barilla, D. E., Notz, C., Kennedy, D., & Pak, C. Y. (1978). Renal oxalate excretion following oral oxalate loads in patients with ileal disease and with renal and absorptive hypercalciurias. Effect of calcium and magnesium. The American journal of medicine, 64(4), 579–585. https://doi.org/10.1016/0002-9343(78)90576-4
Disciplines
Medicine and Health Sciences
PubMedID
645724
Department(s)
Department of Medicine
Document Type
Article