Influence of Body Mass Index on Quantitative 24-Hour Urine Chemistry Studies in Children With Nephrolithiasis

被引:33
|
作者
Eisner, Brian H. [1 ]
Eisenberg, Michael L. [1 ]
Stoller, Marshall L. [1 ]
机构
[1] Univ Calif San Francisco, Dept Urol, San Francisco, CA 94143 USA
来源
JOURNAL OF UROLOGY | 2009年 / 182卷 / 03期
关键词
body mass index; nephrolithiasis; pediatrics; RISK-FACTORS; PEDIATRIC UROLITHIASIS; STONE FORMERS; WEIGHT; OBESITY; SIZE;
D O I
10.1016/j.juro.2009.05.052
中图分类号
R5 [内科学]; R69 [泌尿科学(泌尿生殖系疾病)];
学科分类号
1002 ; 100201 ;
摘要
Purpose: A high body mass index increases the risk of nephrolithiasis in adults. Despite the growing problem of pediatric obesity, little is known about the relationship between body mass index and risk of nephrolithiasis in children. We examined the association between body mass index and 24-hour urine chemistry studies in children with a history of nephrolithiasis. Materials and Methods: A total of 43 children were included in the study. We retrospectively reviewed a database of 24-hour urine chemistry studies. We calculated body mass index for each individual and cases were then stratified by percentile. The 24-hour urine chemistry studies were adjusted for daily creatinine excretion, urine volume was adjusted for age, and pH and urine supersaturations were unadjusted. Results: Body mass index percentile was below the 25th percentile in 8 cases, 25th to 49th percentile in 7, 50th to 74th percentile in 5 and 75th percentile or above in 14. On multivariate analysis the only 24-hour urine parameters with a significant relationship to body mass index were urine oxalate (negative relationship) and supersaturation of calcium phosphate (positive). As body mass index increased, urine oxalate excretion decreased and supersaturation of calcium phosphate increased. Conclusions: A high body mass index is associated with decreased urine oxalate and increased supersaturation of calcium phosphate. Given the increasing prevalence of obesity in younger patients, our findings have important clinical implications. Pediatricians and pediatric subspecialists should be aware of these findings when evaluating children with nephrolithiasis.
引用
收藏
页码:1142 / 1145
页数:4
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [21] Relationship Between Serum Vitamin D and 24-Hour Urine Calcium in Patients With Nephrolithiasis
    Eisner, Brian H.
    Thavaseelan, Simone
    Sheth, Sonali
    Haleblian, George
    Pareek, Gyan
    UROLOGY, 2012, 80 (05) : 1007 - 1010
  • [22] The impact of gender, age, and body mass index on the 24-hour efficacy of antihypertensive therapy
    White, WB
    Elliott, WJ
    Johnson, MF
    Anders, RJ
    Black, HR
    JOURNAL OF THE AMERICAN COLLEGE OF CARDIOLOGY, 2000, 35 (02) : 249A - 249A
  • [23] URINE VOLUME AND BODY WEIGHT ARE INDEPENDENT PREDICTORS OF 24-HOUR URINE COMPONENTS
    Lambert, Jack, III
    Fabrizio, Michael
    Miller, Nicole
    Sawyer, Mark
    JOURNAL OF UROLOGY, 2014, 191 (04): : E200 - E200
  • [24] Age, Body Mass Index, and Gender Predict 24-Hour Urine Parameters in Recurrent Idiopathic Calcium Oxalate Stone Formers
    Otto, Brandon J.
    Bozorgmehri, Shahab
    Kuo, Jennifer
    Canales, Muna
    Bird, Vincent G.
    Canales, Benjamin
    JOURNAL OF ENDOUROLOGY, 2017, 31 (12) : 1335 - 1341
  • [25] Analyte variations in consecutive 24-hour urine collections in children
    Ellison, Jonathan S.
    Hollingsworth, John M.
    Langman, Craig B.
    Asplin, John R.
    Schwaderer, Andrew L.
    Yan, Phyllis
    Bierlein, Maggie
    Barraza, Mark A.
    Defoor, William R.
    Figueroa, T. Ernesto
    Jackson, Elizabeth C.
    Jayanthi, Venkata R.
    Johnson, Emilie K.
    Joseph, David B.
    Shnorhavorian, Margarett
    JOURNAL OF PEDIATRIC UROLOGY, 2017, 13 (06) : 632.e1 - 632.e7
  • [26] Influence of urinary stones on the composition of a 24-hour urine sample
    Laube, N
    Pullmann, M
    Hergarten, S
    Hesse, A
    CLINICAL CHEMISTRY, 2003, 49 (02) : 281 - 285
  • [27] VARIABILITY IN 24-HOUR URINE SODIUM-EXCRETION IN CHILDREN
    LIU, K
    COOPER, R
    SOLTERO, I
    STAMLER, J
    HYPERTENSION, 1979, 1 (06) : 631 - 636
  • [28] VARIATION IN CONSECUTIVE 24-HOUR URINE STUDIES IN PEDIATRIC PATIENTS
    Ellison, Jonathan
    Hollingsworth, John
    Yan, Phyllis
    Asplin, John
    Bierlein, Maggie
    Barraza, Mark
    Defoor, William
    Figueroa, T. Ernesto
    Jackson, Elizabeth
    Jayanthi, Rama
    Johnson, Emilie
    Joseph, David
    Langman, Craig
    Schwaderer, Andrew
    Shnorhavorian, Margarett
    JOURNAL OF UROLOGY, 2016, 195 (04): : E580 - E580
  • [29] Children's dietary reporting accuracy over multiple 24-hour recalls varies by body mass index category
    Baxter, Suzanne Domel
    Smith, Albert F.
    Nichols, Michele D.
    Guinn, Caroline H.
    Hardin, James W.
    NUTRITION RESEARCH, 2006, 26 (06) : 241 - 248
  • [30] URINARY CREATININE EXCRETION AS AN INDEX OF COMPLETENESS OF 24-HOUR URINE COLLECTIONS
    EDWARDS, OM
    BAYLISS, RIS
    MILLEN, S
    LANCET, 1969, 2 (7631): : 1165 - &