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The Role of Lithium Carbonate and Lithium Citrate in Regulating Urinary Citrate Level and Preventing Nephrolithiasis

Background and purpose: Urinary Citrate is an inhibitor of Calcium oxalate stone formation. It is reabsorbed in the proximal kidney through sodium dicarboxylate co-transporters (NaDC-1, NaDC-3) present in the renal tubular epithelium. Lithium (Li) is a known potent inhibitor of these transporters. W...

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Autores principales: Zhang, Xiaobo, Aggarwal, Piyush, Li, Xiaoming, Oakman, Crystale, Wang, Zhiping, Rodriguez, Ronald
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Master Publishing Group 2009
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3614779/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/23675140
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author Zhang, Xiaobo
Aggarwal, Piyush
Li, Xiaoming
Oakman, Crystale
Wang, Zhiping
Rodriguez, Ronald
author_facet Zhang, Xiaobo
Aggarwal, Piyush
Li, Xiaoming
Oakman, Crystale
Wang, Zhiping
Rodriguez, Ronald
author_sort Zhang, Xiaobo
collection PubMed
description Background and purpose: Urinary Citrate is an inhibitor of Calcium oxalate stone formation. It is reabsorbed in the proximal kidney through sodium dicarboxylate co-transporters (NaDC-1, NaDC-3) present in the renal tubular epithelium. Lithium (Li) is a known potent inhibitor of these transporters. We investigated the effect of lithium carbonate (LiC) and lithium citrate (LiCit) in regulating urinary citrate levels and preventing nephrolithiasis (NL) in the rat model. Experimental approach: We took 220 Wistar rats and induced nephrolithiasis in 130 of them by administering high doses of 5% ammonium oxalate (AmOx) for seven days and labeled them as Group B. Rest were labeled as Group A. Each group was then divided into 3 subgroups. First sub-group acted as control while other two were treated with either lithium carbonate (LiC) or lithium citrate (LiCit) for 21 days. Ten rats from each of the six sub-groups were randomly selected for sacrifice on 3(rd), 7(th) and 14(th) day and additional 10(th) and 21(st) day from Li treated groups. Blood and urine samples were collected and analyzed on these days. The kidneys of the sacrificed rats were dissected and studied under light microscopy for crystal deposition (left kidney) and histological changes (right kidney). Key results: Urinary citrate levels were significantly increased in response to either LiC (p<0.001) or LiCit (p<0.001). Increased urinary citrate levels resulted in the reduction of calcium oxalate (CaOx) crystal deposition, kidney tubular dilatation and infiltration of inflammatory cell in the tubulo-interstitium. Conclusions and implications: Use of lithium salts might be a potentially useful approach in the prevention of recurrent NL.
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spelling pubmed-36147792013-05-01 The Role of Lithium Carbonate and Lithium Citrate in Regulating Urinary Citrate Level and Preventing Nephrolithiasis Zhang, Xiaobo Aggarwal, Piyush Li, Xiaoming Oakman, Crystale Wang, Zhiping Rodriguez, Ronald Int J Biomed Sci Original Article Background and purpose: Urinary Citrate is an inhibitor of Calcium oxalate stone formation. It is reabsorbed in the proximal kidney through sodium dicarboxylate co-transporters (NaDC-1, NaDC-3) present in the renal tubular epithelium. Lithium (Li) is a known potent inhibitor of these transporters. We investigated the effect of lithium carbonate (LiC) and lithium citrate (LiCit) in regulating urinary citrate levels and preventing nephrolithiasis (NL) in the rat model. Experimental approach: We took 220 Wistar rats and induced nephrolithiasis in 130 of them by administering high doses of 5% ammonium oxalate (AmOx) for seven days and labeled them as Group B. Rest were labeled as Group A. Each group was then divided into 3 subgroups. First sub-group acted as control while other two were treated with either lithium carbonate (LiC) or lithium citrate (LiCit) for 21 days. Ten rats from each of the six sub-groups were randomly selected for sacrifice on 3(rd), 7(th) and 14(th) day and additional 10(th) and 21(st) day from Li treated groups. Blood and urine samples were collected and analyzed on these days. The kidneys of the sacrificed rats were dissected and studied under light microscopy for crystal deposition (left kidney) and histological changes (right kidney). Key results: Urinary citrate levels were significantly increased in response to either LiC (p<0.001) or LiCit (p<0.001). Increased urinary citrate levels resulted in the reduction of calcium oxalate (CaOx) crystal deposition, kidney tubular dilatation and infiltration of inflammatory cell in the tubulo-interstitium. Conclusions and implications: Use of lithium salts might be a potentially useful approach in the prevention of recurrent NL. Master Publishing Group 2009-09 /pmc/articles/PMC3614779/ /pubmed/23675140 Text en © Xiangbo Zhang et al. Licensee Master Publishing Group http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.5/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.5/), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
spellingShingle Original Article
Zhang, Xiaobo
Aggarwal, Piyush
Li, Xiaoming
Oakman, Crystale
Wang, Zhiping
Rodriguez, Ronald
The Role of Lithium Carbonate and Lithium Citrate in Regulating Urinary Citrate Level and Preventing Nephrolithiasis
title The Role of Lithium Carbonate and Lithium Citrate in Regulating Urinary Citrate Level and Preventing Nephrolithiasis
title_full The Role of Lithium Carbonate and Lithium Citrate in Regulating Urinary Citrate Level and Preventing Nephrolithiasis
title_fullStr The Role of Lithium Carbonate and Lithium Citrate in Regulating Urinary Citrate Level and Preventing Nephrolithiasis
title_full_unstemmed The Role of Lithium Carbonate and Lithium Citrate in Regulating Urinary Citrate Level and Preventing Nephrolithiasis
title_short The Role of Lithium Carbonate and Lithium Citrate in Regulating Urinary Citrate Level and Preventing Nephrolithiasis
title_sort role of lithium carbonate and lithium citrate in regulating urinary citrate level and preventing nephrolithiasis
topic Original Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3614779/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/23675140
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