The macromolecular fraction of urine with a molecular weight above 3,000 was isolated by dialysis. In the dialysed urine the rate of calcium oxalate (CaOx) crystallization was reduced both in the presence and absence of CaOx seed crystals. There was a clear relationship between crystallization and t
Inhibition of calcium oxalate crystallization by urinary macromolecules
β Scribed by Bek-Jensen, H. ;Tiselius, H. -G.
- Publisher
- Springer
- Year
- 1991
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 417 KB
- Volume
- 19
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0300-5623
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β¦ Synopsis
The crystallization of calcium oxalate (CaOx) was determined in dialyzed urine samples collected between 0600 and 1000 hours from 18 normal men, 10 normal women and 13 men and 10 women with CaOx stone disease. Each urine samples was supersaturated by the addition of calcium chloride and sodium oxalate, and CaOx crystallization was followed by quantification of the [14C]-oxalate remaining in solution for 30 min after supersaturation of the sample. The rate of crystallization was compared with that in physiological saline. The surface area delimited by the urine and saline curves was used to express the inhibition of CaOx crystallization by urinary macromolecules (IUMM). The IUMM was significantly higher in urine from normal women than in that from stone-forming women (P less than 0.05), normal men (P less than 0.005), and stone-forming men (P less than 0.02). However, there were no significant differences between stone-forming men and stone-forming women, nor was IUMM higher in normal men than in stone-forming men. A high concentration of inhibitors might protect women from CaOx stone formation and be one factor explaining the lower stone-formation rate in women. Although low values were more predominate in normal men than in normal women, there were no significant differences between the groups when the inhibition was corrected for differences in urinary volumes.
π SIMILAR VOLUMES
The nucleation-promoting and growth-inhibiting activities of urinary macromolecules on the crystallization of calcium oxalate endogenous in urine of stoneformers and normal controls were studied by freezing the ultrafiltrate and retenate fractions of concentrated whole urine (pH 5.3, 1,250 mosmol/kg
In order to study the effect of urinary crystal surface binding substances (CSBS), we extracted the naturally existing CSBS from urine from healthy individuals by conducting homogeneous crystallization of calcium oxalate. CSBS proved not to be promoters but rather strong inhibitors of calcium oxalat