Effect of hyperprotidic diet associated or not with hypercalcic diet on calcium oxalate stone formation in rat

被引:2
|
作者
Sakly, R
Bardaoui, M
Neffati, F
Moussa, A
Zakhama, A
Najjar, MF
Hammami, M
机构
[1] Fac Med, UR 0839, Monastir, Tunisia
[2] Fac Med, Lab Biochim CHU, Monastir, Tunisia
[3] Fac Med, Anat Pathol Lab, Monastir, Tunisia
关键词
experimental lithiasis; calcium oxalate stone formation; rats; protein supplementation; calcium supplementation;
D O I
10.1159/000085537
中图分类号
R5 [内科学];
学科分类号
1002 ; 100201 ;
摘要
The aim of this study was to determine whether protein, administered alone or simultaneously with a hypercalcic diet, was able to aggravate calcium oxalate stone formation in rats. Thirty-two male Wistar rats were randomly divided into four groups of 8 rats each and assigned a calcium oxalate lithogenic diet added to their drinking water for 3 weeks. One group, used as reference, received a standard diet prepared in our laboratory. The second was assigned the same diet but supplemented with 7.5 g animal proteins/100 g diet. The third received a diet containing 500 mg calcium more than the standard group. The diet given to the last group was supplemented with calcium and protein at the same doses indicated previously. One day before the end of treatment, each animal was placed in a metabolic cage to collect 24-hour urine samples and determine urinary creatinine, urea, calcium, magnesium, phosphate, uric acid, citric acid and oxalate levels. Immediately thereafter, aortic blood was collected to determine the same parameters as in urine. The kidneys were also removed to determine calcium oxalate deposits. Our results showed an increased 24-hour urinary excretion of calcium, oxalate and uric acid and decreased urinary citric acid excretion only in groups that received protein supplementation. At the same time, calcium oxalate deposits were found significantly higher in hyperprotidic diets than reference or calcium-supplemented groups. According to these findings, glomerular filtration, fractional excretion of urea and reabsorption of water, calcium and magnesium were found significantly lower in hyperprotidic diets compared to other groups. These results demonstrate that proteins could seriously aggravate calcium oxalate stones and cause renal disturbances. Copyright (C) 2005 S. Karger AG, Basel.
引用
收藏
页码:132 / 138
页数:7
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [41] Drivers of calcium oxalate stone formation in the octogenarian population
    Raymond Khargi
    Ryan M. Blake
    Alan J. Yaghoubian
    Caroline Canning
    Alexander Fang
    Christopher Connors
    Blair Gallante
    Anna Ricapito
    Johnathan A. Khusid
    William M. Atallah
    Mantu Gupta
    World Journal of Urology, 2023, 41 : 3713 - 3721
  • [42] THE ROLE OF URATE IN CALCIUM-OXALATE STONE FORMATION
    RYALL, RL
    MARSHALL, VR
    BRITISH JOURNAL OF UROLOGY, 1983, 55 (01): : 110 - 110
  • [43] Drivers of calcium oxalate stone formation in the octogenarian population
    Khargi, Raymond
    Blake, Ryan M.
    Yaghoubian, Alan J.
    Canning, Caroline
    Fang, Alexander
    Connors, Christopher
    Gallante, Blair
    Ricapito, Anna
    Khusid, Johnathan A.
    Atallah, William M.
    Gupta, Mantu
    WORLD JOURNAL OF UROLOGY, 2023, 41 (12) : 3713 - 3721
  • [44] Novel porcine model for calcium oxalate stone formation
    Brandon P. Trojan
    Sara J. Trojan
    Andrew Navetta
    Bryce Staches
    Bryan Sutton
    Stephanie Filleur
    Thomas Nelius
    International Urology and Nephrology, 2017, 49 : 1751 - 1761
  • [45] INFLUENCE OF VARIOUS CALCIUM INTAKES ON CALCIUM-OXALATE CRYSTALLURIA IN RATS ON SODIUM OXALATE DIET
    DASILVA, SL
    HENNEQUIN, C
    DROZ, D
    BADER, C
    DAUDON, M
    DRUEKE, T
    LACOUR, B
    NEPHROLOGY DIALYSIS TRANSPLANTATION, 1994, 9 (08) : 1090 - 1096
  • [46] Time-restricted feeding inhibits calcium oxalate stone formation in high-fat diet mice: Biological markers, pathways and validation
    Wang, J.
    Yin, S.
    Bai, Y.
    Cui, J.
    EUROPEAN UROLOGY, 2022, 81 : S1354 - S1354
  • [47] Urinary Risk Profile, Impact of Diet, and Risk of Calcium Oxalate Urolithiasis in Idiopathic Uric Acid Stone Disease
    Siener, Roswitha
    Loehr, Patricia
    Hesse, Albrecht
    NUTRIENTS, 2023, 15 (03)
  • [48] Diet and stone formation: a brief review of the literature
    Kotsiris, Dimitrios
    Adamou, Konstantinos
    Kallidonis, Panagiotis
    CURRENT OPINION IN UROLOGY, 2018, 28 (05) : 408 - 413
  • [49] Effects of high-sodium diet on lithogenesis in a rat experimental model of calcium oxalate stones
    Hong, Yang
    Zhang, Zaixian
    Ye, Haiyun
    An, Lizhe
    Huang, Xiaobo
    Xu, Qingquan
    TRANSLATIONAL ANDROLOGY AND UROLOGY, 2021, 10 (02) : 636 - 642
  • [50] Role of the diet in urinary stone formation and prevalence
    Szendroi Attila
    Torde Akos
    Vargha Judit
    Banfi Gergely
    Horvath Andras
    Horvath Csaba
    Nyirady Peter
    ORVOSI HETILAP, 2017, 158 (22) : 851 - 855