Hyperoxaluric nephrolithiasis is a complication of Roux-en-Y gastric bypass surgery
- PMID: 17377509
- DOI: 10.1038/sj.ki.5002194
Hyperoxaluric nephrolithiasis is a complication of Roux-en-Y gastric bypass surgery
Abstract
Roux-en-Y bypass surgery is the most common bariatric procedure currently performed in the United States for medically complicated obesity. Although this leads to a marked and sustained weight loss, we have identified an increasing number of patients with episodes of nephrolithiasis afterwards. We describe a case series of 60 patients seen at Mayo Clinic-Rochester that developed nephrolithiasis after Roux-en-Y gastric bypass (RYGB), including a subset of 31 patients who had undergone metabolic evaluation in the Mayo Stone Clinic. The mean body mass index of the patients before procedure was 57 kg/m(2) with a mean decrease of 20 kg/m(2) at the time of the stone event, which averaged 2.2 years post-procedure. When analyzed, calcium oxalate stones were found in 19 and mixed calcium oxalate/uric acid stones in two patients. Hyperoxaluria was a prevalent factor even in patients without a prior history of nephrolithiasis, and usually presented more than 6 months after the procedure. Calcium oxalate supersaturation, however, was equally high in patients less than 6 months post-procedure due to lower urine volumes. In a small random sampling of patients undergoing this bypass procedure, hyperoxaluria was rare preoperatively but common 12 months after surgery. We conclude that hyperoxaluria is a potential complicating factor of RYGB surgery manifested as a risk for calcium oxalate stones.
Comment in
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Bariatric surgery, hyperoxaluria, and nephrolithiasis: a plea for close postoperative management of risk factors.Kidney Int. 2007 Jul;72(1):8-10. doi: 10.1038/sj.ki.5002284. Kidney Int. 2007. PMID: 17597787
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