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Vascular Calcification and Bone Mineral Density in Recurrent Kidney Stone Formers
- Source :
- Clinical Journal of the American Society of Nephrology. 10:278-285
- Publication Year :
- 2015
- Publisher :
- Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health), 2015.
-
Abstract
- Recent epidemiologic studies have provided evidence for an association between nephrolithiasis and cardiovascular disease, although the underlying mechanism is still unclear. Vascular calcification (VC) is a strong predictor of cardiovascular morbidity and the hypothesis explored in this study is that VC is more prevalent in calcium kidney stone formers (KSFs). The aims of this study were to determine (1) whether recurrent calcium KSFs have more VC and osteoporosis compared with controls and (2) whether hypercalciuria is related to VC in KSFs.This is a retrospective, matched case-control study that included KSFs attending an outpatient nephrology clinic of the Royal Free Hospital (London, UK) from 2011 to 2014. Age- and sex-matched non-stone formers were drawn from a list of potential living kidney donors from the same hospital. A total of 111 patients were investigated, of which 57 were KSFs and 54 were healthy controls. Abdominal aortic calcification (AAC) and vertebral bone mineral density (BMD) were assessed using available computed tomography (CT) imaging. The prevalence, severity, and associations of AAC and CT BMD between KSFs and non-stone formers were compared.Mean age was 47±14 years in KSFs and 47±13 in non-stone formers. Men represented 56% and 57% of KSFs and non-stone formers, respectively. The prevalence of AAC was similar in both groups (38% in KSFs versus 35% in controls, P=0.69). However, the AAC severity score (median [25th percentile, 75th percentile]) was significantly higher in KSFs compared with the control group (0 [0, 43] versus 0 [0, 10], P0.001). In addition, the average CT BMD was significantly lower in KSFs (159±53 versus 194 ±48 Hounsfield units, P0.001). A multivariate model adjusted for age, sex, high BP, diabetes, smoking status, and eGFR confirmed that KSFs have higher AAC scores and lower CT BMD compared with non-stone formers (P0.001 for both). Among stone formers, the association between AAC score and hypercalciuria was not statistically significant (P=0.86).This study demonstrates that patients with calcium kidney stones suffer from significantly higher degrees of aortic calcification than age- and sex-matched non-stone formers, suggesting that VC may be an underlying mechanism explaining reported associations between nephrolithiasis and cardiovascular disease. Moreover, bone demineralization is more prominent in KSFs. However, more data are needed to confirm the possibility of potentially common underlying mechanisms leading to extraosseous calcium deposition and osteoporosis in KSFs.
- Subjects :
- Male
Epidemiology
kidney stones
Osteoporosis
Disease
Critical Care and Intensive Care Medicine
Severity of Illness Index
Recurrence
Risk Factors
Bone Density
London
Prevalence
Settore MED/14 - NEFROLOGIA
Medicine
Hypercalciuria
Aorta, Abdominal
Tomography
Aorta
Bone mineral
cardiovascular
Medicine (all)
Middle Aged
X-Ray Computed
Nephrology
Abdominal aortic calcification
vascular calcification
Adult
Aortic Diseases
Aortography
Chi-Square Distribution
Female
Humans
Kidney Calculi
Linear Models
Multivariate Analysis
Outpatient Clinics, Hospital
Retrospective Studies
Spine
Tomography, X-Ray Computed
Vascular Calcification
Transplantation
medicine.medical_specialty
Aortic calcification
Hospital
Internal medicine
Abdominal
Outpatient Clinics
Vascular calcification
business.industry
Original Articles
medicine.disease
Surgery
Kidney stones
business
Subjects
Details
- ISSN :
- 15559041
- Volume :
- 10
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Journal :
- Clinical Journal of the American Society of Nephrology
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi.dedup.....c7f3d72a2e12f7c452331864c1e70252
- Full Text :
- https://doi.org/10.2215/cjn.06030614