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Research Article Free access | 10.1172/JCI105940

Metabolic and calcium kinetic studies in idiopathic hypercalciuria

U. A. Liberman, O. Sperling, A. Atsmon, M. Frank, M. Modan, and A. De Vries

Metabolic Unit, Department of Medicine D, Tel-Aviv University Medical School, Beilinson Hospital, Petah Tikva, Israel

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Metabolic Unit, Department of Medicine D, Tel-Aviv University Medical School, Beilinson Hospital, Petah Tikva, Israel

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Metabolic Unit, Department of Medicine D, Tel-Aviv University Medical School, Beilinson Hospital, Petah Tikva, Israel

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Metabolic Unit, Department of Medicine D, Tel-Aviv University Medical School, Beilinson Hospital, Petah Tikva, Israel

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Metabolic Unit, Department of Medicine D, Tel-Aviv University Medical School, Beilinson Hospital, Petah Tikva, Israel

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Metabolic Unit, Department of Medicine D, Tel-Aviv University Medical School, Beilinson Hospital, Petah Tikva, Israel

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Published December 1, 1968 - More info

Published in Volume 47, Issue 12 on December 1, 1968
J Clin Invest. 1968;47(12):2580–2590. https://doi.org/10.1172/JCI105940.
© 1968 The American Society for Clinical Investigation
Published December 1, 1968 - Version history
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Abstract

Calcium balances and calcium kinetic studies using 47Ca were performed in nine male patients with idiopathic hypercalciuria and in three normal male subjects. A sharp reduction in calcium intake in eight patients with idiopathic hypercalciuria caused a decrease in urinary calcium excretion, the latter remaining elevated above that reported for normal subjects on a low calcium diet. The hypercalciuric patients had an enlarged miscible calcium pool size, an increased calcium turnover rate, increased bone formation and bone resorption rates, and an elevated true intestinal calcium absorption rate, the increase of the latter three parameters being proportional to the increase of the turnover rate. The fraction of the calcium turnover rate excreted in the urine was elevated whereas that constituted by the endogenous fecal calcium excretion was decreased. Arguments are presented for the concept that the primary abnormality in idiopathic hypercalciuria is neither renal calcium hyperexcretion nor intestinal calcium hyperreabsorption, but a more fundamental disturbance in calcium metabolism of as yet unknown cause, leading to a high calcium turnover.

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