Nephrolithiasis in medullary sponge kidney: evaluation of clinical and metabolic features
- PMID: 22014971
- DOI: 10.1016/j.urology.2011.07.1414
Nephrolithiasis in medullary sponge kidney: evaluation of clinical and metabolic features
Abstract
Objective: Medullary sponge kidney (MSK) is a disorder characterized by tubular dilation of renal collecting ducts and cystic dilation of medullary pyramids that has been associated with stone disease. The significance of nephrolithiasis and the mechanisms by which it occurs are incompletely understood. We describe clinical and metabolic features of nephrolithiasis in a cohort of patients with MSK.
Methods: Records were reviewed of 56 patients, all with radiographic diagnosis of medullary sponge kidney and data collected pertaining to presentation, stone events and recurrences, stone composition, and metabolic profile to perform a descriptive study with median 3.7 years follow-up.
Results: Nephrolithiasis was confirmed radiographically in 39/56 patients (69.6%). No patient without evidence of nephrolithiasis developed a stone event, whereas 13/39 (33%) of those with nephrolithiasis developed a recurrent stone event. Stones were composed of calcium oxalate monohydrate, calcium oxalate dihydrate, calcium phosphate apatite, and uric acid. Metabolic profile was obtained for 26 of 39 (67%) stone-forming patients demonstrating abnormalities in 22/26 (84.6%). These included hypercalciuria, 58% (15/26); low urine volume, 35% (9/26); hyperuricosuria, 27% (7/26); hypocitraturia, 19% (5/26); elevated urine sodium, 15% (4/26); and hyperoxaluria, 12% (3/26).
Conclusion: Many patients with MSK have no evidence of nephrolithiasis. Among those who do, recurrence is common, and metabolic profile and composition are varied as in the general stone-forming population.
Copyright © 2012 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
Comment in
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Re: McPhail et al.: Nephrolithiasis in medullary sponge kidney: evaluation of clinical and metabolic features. (Urology 2012;79:277-281).Urology. 2012 Dec;80(6):1395-6. doi: 10.1016/j.urology.2012.07.012. Urology. 2012. PMID: 23206796 No abstract available.
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