Renal tubular cell damage and oxidative stress in renal stone patients and the effect of potassium citrate treatment

Tungsanga, K; Sriboonlue, P; Futrakul, P; Yachantha, C; Tosukhowong, P

HERO ID

5090577

Reference Type

Journal Article

Year

2005

Language

English

PMID

15565439

HERO ID 5090577
In Press No
Year 2005
Title Renal tubular cell damage and oxidative stress in renal stone patients and the effect of potassium citrate treatment
Authors Tungsanga, K; Sriboonlue, P; Futrakul, P; Yachantha, C; Tosukhowong, P
Journal Urological Research
Volume 33
Issue 1
Page Numbers 65-69
Abstract Our objective was to evaluate the oxidative stress and renal tubular cell damage in patients who have renal stones compared to normal subjects. The patients were re-evaluated after 1-months supplementation with potassium citrate. We recruited 30 patients (11 males and 19 females) diagnosed with kidney stones and scheduled for surgical stone removal the following month, and 30 healthy non-stone formers (14 males and 16 females). Two 24-h urine samples and one heparinized blood sample were collected from each subject. Plasma was separated from the erythrocytes and assayed for creatinine, potassium, sodium, calcium, magnesium, phosphate, malondialdehyde (MDA, a lipid peroxidation product) (P-MDA), protein thiol as an indicator of protein oxidation, and vitamin E. Erythrocytes were analysed for MDA (E-MDA), reduced glutathione (GSH) and cellular glutathione peroxidase (cGPx) activity. The urine was analyzed for pH, creatinine, potassium, sodium, calcium, magnesium, phosphate, oxalate, citrate, MDA (U-MDA), total protein (U-protein) and N-acetyl-beta-glucosaminidase (NAG) activity. For the stone patients, urine and blood samples were re-evaluated after supplementation with potassium citrate (60 mEq/day) for 1 month. Renal stone patients had higher plasma creatinine and lower plasma potassium, urinary pH, potassium, magnesium, phosphate and citrate than the controls. The patients had higher P-MDA, E-MDA, U-MDA, U-protein and NAG activity, but lower GSH, cGPx activity, protein thiol and vitamin E, when compared with controls. After potassium citrate supplementation, P-MDA and E-MDA decreased while plasma vitamin E, urinary NAG activity and citrate increased. Renal stone disease is associated with high oxidative stress and damage to renal tubular cells. These abnormalities are coincident with an increase in blood lipid peroxidation products and a decrease in antioxidant status. Although supplementation with potassium citrate improved urinary citrate levels and oxidative stress, it neither reduced urinary lipid peroxidation products nor remedied the damage to renal tubular cells, probably due to the existence of kidney stones.
Doi 10.1007/s00240-004-0444-4
Pmid 15565439
Wosid WOS:000227736400010
Is Certified Translation No
Dupe Override No
Is Public Yes
Language Text English