Role of urinary supersaturation in the evaluation of children with urolithiasis
- 17 February 2005
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Springer Nature in Pediatric Nephrology
- Vol. 20 (4), 491-494
- https://doi.org/10.1007/s00467-004-1779-3
Abstract
Timed urine collections are a standard part of the evaluation for predisposition to stone formation in children with urolithiasis. Supersaturation is defined as the ratio of the concentration of dissolved salt to its solubility in urine. The purpose of the present study was to determine if adding supersaturation to the standard timed urine collection increased the ability to detect a metabolic predisposition to stone formation. Thirty-two children with urolithiasis had 24-hour urine measurements of calcium, oxalate, citrate, uric acid, and cystine (the "traditional" evaluation), as well as supersaturation for calcium oxalate, calcium phosphate, and uric acid, on the same urine sample. Nine (28%) of the 32 were hypercalciuric, 2 (6%) hyperoxaluric, and 4 (12%) hypocitraturic. In total, 14 (44%) had a metabolic predisposition that was detected by the traditional evaluation. Supersaturation was elevated in 18 (56%), including nine who did not have metabolic predisposition detected by traditional evaluation. Urine volume was low in 17 (53%) of 32 children, including eight of nine children with abnormal supersaturation but normal traditional evaluation. Only one child with normal traditional evaluation and normal urine volume had elevated supersaturation. These results show that the benefit of adding supersaturation to the traditional evaluation was largely negated by consideration of urine volume.Keywords
This publication has 15 references indexed in Scilit:
- Evaluation and treatment of pediatric idiopathic urolithiasis?revisitedPediatric Nephrology, 2004
- Childhood stonesEndocrinology and Metabolism Clinics of North America, 2002
- Metabolic Evaluation of Children with Urolithiasis: Are Adult References for Supersaturation Appropriate?Journal of Urology, 2002
- Anthropometry-based reference values for 24-h urinary creatinine excretion during growth and their use in endocrine and nutritional researchThe American Journal of Clinical Nutrition, 2002
- Proportional reduction of urine supersaturation during nephrolithiasis treatment.2001
- PROPORTIONAL REDUCTION OF URINE SUPERSATURATION DURING NEPHROLITHIASIS TREATMENTJournal of Urology, 2001
- DIVERGENCE BETWEEN STONE COMPOSITION AND URINE SUPERSATURATION: CLINICAL AND LABORATORY IMPLICATIONSJournal of Urology, 1999
- Renal Stone Disease in ChildrenClinical Pediatrics, 1998
- Urinary Calcium Oxalate Saturation in Healthy Infants and ChildrenJournal of Urology, 1997
- Urolithiasis in Pediatric PatientsMayo Clinic Proceedings, 1993