P. Kaul et al., STUDY OF URINARY CALCIUM EXCRETION AFTER ORAL CALCIUM LOAD IN STONE FORMERS, THEIR SPOUSES AND 1ST-DEGREE BLOOD RELATIVES, Urologia internationalis, 52(2), 1994, pp. 93-97
Hypercalciuria has long been considered a common abnormality in stone
formers, and familial predisposition to renal stone formation has also
been reported. Renal stone formers, their spouses and first-degree bl
ood relatives (the latter two groups of subjects had no previous or pr
esent history of stone disease) were investigated for their response t
o an oral load of 2 g calcium (as di-calcium phosphate). Serum calcium
, phosphorus, uric acid, creatinine and urea were within the normal ra
nge in all the subjects initially as well as 4 h after the load. After
the oral calcium load, 66.6% of the stone formers, 25% of the first-d
egree relatives and none of the spouses were hypercalciuric. Administr
ation of 2 g calcium produced a significantly greater urinary excretio
n of calcium in stone formers (123.8 +/- 43 mg/8 h, p < 0.001) and the
ir first-degree blood relatives (89.8 +/- 26 mg/8 h, p < 0.01) as comp
ared to the spouses of stone formers (65.5 +/- 12.8 mg/8 h). A signifi
cant increase in urinary calcium excretion after calcium loading was a
lso found among the stone formers (p < 0.01) as compared to their firs
t-degree blood relatives. A significantly higher mean rise in calcium
excretion (over the basal excretion) in calcium stone formers (p < 0.0
01) and their first-degree blood relatives (p < 0.01), as compared to
the spouses of stone formers suggests a greater predisposition to rena
l stone disease in first-degree blood relatives than the spouses of th
e stone patients.