Author:
Kowalczyk Nicholas S.,Prochaska Megan L.,Worcester Elaine M.
Abstract
Purpose of review
Kidney stone disease is caused by supersaturation of urine with certain metabolites and minerals. The urine composition of stone formers has been measured to prevent stone recurrence, specifically calcium, uric acid, oxalate, ammonia, citrate. However, these minerals and metabolites have proven to be unreliable in predicting stone recurrence. Metabolomics using high throughput technologies in well defined patient cohorts can identify metabolites that may provide insight into the pathogenesis of stones as well as offer possibilities in therapeutics.
Recent findings
Techniques including 1H-NMR, and liquid chromatography paired with tandem mass spectroscopy have identified multiple possible metabolites involved in stone formation. Compared to formers of calcium oxalate stones, healthy controls had higher levels of hippuric acid as well as metabolites involved in caffeine metabolism. Both the gut and urine microbiome may contribute to the altered metabolome of stone formers.
Summary
Although metabolomics has offered several potential metabolites that may be protective against or promote stone formation, the mechanisms behind these metabolomic profiles and their clinical significance requires further investigation.
Publisher
Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health)
Subject
Nephrology,Internal Medicine
Cited by
1 articles.
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