Medullary sponge kidney: state of the art
- PMID: 23229933
- DOI: 10.1093/ndt/gfs505
Medullary sponge kidney: state of the art
Abstract
Medullary sponge kidney (MSK) is a kidney malformation that generally manifests with nephrocalcinosis and recurrent renal stones; other signs may be renal acidification and concentration defects, and pre-calyceal duct ectasias. MSK is generally considered a sporadic disorder, but an apparently autosomal dominant inheritance has also been observed. As MSK reveals abnormalities in both the lower and the upper nephron and is often associated with urinary tract developmental anomalies, its pathogenesis should probably be sought in one of the numerous steps characterizing renal morphogenesis. Given the key role of the GDNF-RET interaction in kidney and urinary tract development and nephrogenesis, anomalies in these molecules are reasonable candidates for explaining a disorder such as MSK. As a matter of fact, we detected two, hitherto unknown, rare variants of the GDNF gene in MSK patients. We surmise that a defective distal acidification has a central role in MSK and is followed by a chain of events including defective bone mineralization, hypercalciuria, hypocitraturia and stone formation.
Keywords: GDNF; medullary sponge kidney; nephrolithiasis; renal malformation; renal tubular acidosis.
Comment in
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  Re: medullary sponge kidney: state of the art.J Urol. 2013 May;189(5):1770. doi: 10.1016/j.juro.2013.02.045. Epub 2013 Feb 22. J Urol. 2013. PMID: 23594644 No abstract available.
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