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Critical Reappraisal of Methods for Measuring Urine Saturation with Calcium Salts

Background: Metabolic and physicochemical evaluation is recommended to manage the condition of patients with nephrolithiasis. The estimation of the saturation state (β values) is often included in the diagnostic work-up, and it is preferably performed through calculations. The free concentrations of...

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Autores principales: Berto, Silvia, Marangella, Martino, De Stefano, Concetta, Milea, Demetrio, Daniele, Pier Giuseppe
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: MDPI 2021
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8197498/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/34070425
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/molecules26113149
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author Berto, Silvia
Marangella, Martino
De Stefano, Concetta
Milea, Demetrio
Daniele, Pier Giuseppe
author_facet Berto, Silvia
Marangella, Martino
De Stefano, Concetta
Milea, Demetrio
Daniele, Pier Giuseppe
author_sort Berto, Silvia
collection PubMed
description Background: Metabolic and physicochemical evaluation is recommended to manage the condition of patients with nephrolithiasis. The estimation of the saturation state (β values) is often included in the diagnostic work-up, and it is preferably performed through calculations. The free concentrations of constituent ions are estimated by considering the main ionic soluble complexes. It is contended that this approach is liable to an overestimation of β values because some complexes may be overlooked. A recent report found that β values could be significantly lowered upon the addition of new and so far neglected complexes, [Ca(PO(4))Cit](4−) and [Ca(2)H(2)(PO(4))(2)]. The aim of this work was to assess whether these complexes can be relevant to explaining the chemistry of urine. Methods: The Ca–phosphate–citrate aqueous system was investigated by potentiometric titrations. The stability constants of the parent binary complexes [Cacit](−) and [CaPO(4)](−), and the coordination tendency of PO(4)(3−) toward [Ca(cit)](−) to form the ternary complex, were estimated. β(CaOx) and β(CaHPO4) were then calculated on 5 natural urines by chemical models, including or not including the [CaPO(4)](−) and [Ca(PO(4))cit](4−) species. Results: Species distribution diagrams show that the [Ca(PO(4))cit](4−) species was only noticeable at pH > 8.5 and below 10% of the total calcium. β values estimated on natural urine were slightly lowered by the formation of [CaPO(4)](−) species, whereas [Ca(PO(4))cit](4−) results were irrelevant. Conclusions: While [CaPO(4)](−) species have an impact on saturation levels at higher pHs, the existence of ternary complex and of the dimer is rejected.
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spelling pubmed-81974982021-06-13 Critical Reappraisal of Methods for Measuring Urine Saturation with Calcium Salts Berto, Silvia Marangella, Martino De Stefano, Concetta Milea, Demetrio Daniele, Pier Giuseppe Molecules Article Background: Metabolic and physicochemical evaluation is recommended to manage the condition of patients with nephrolithiasis. The estimation of the saturation state (β values) is often included in the diagnostic work-up, and it is preferably performed through calculations. The free concentrations of constituent ions are estimated by considering the main ionic soluble complexes. It is contended that this approach is liable to an overestimation of β values because some complexes may be overlooked. A recent report found that β values could be significantly lowered upon the addition of new and so far neglected complexes, [Ca(PO(4))Cit](4−) and [Ca(2)H(2)(PO(4))(2)]. The aim of this work was to assess whether these complexes can be relevant to explaining the chemistry of urine. Methods: The Ca–phosphate–citrate aqueous system was investigated by potentiometric titrations. The stability constants of the parent binary complexes [Cacit](−) and [CaPO(4)](−), and the coordination tendency of PO(4)(3−) toward [Ca(cit)](−) to form the ternary complex, were estimated. β(CaOx) and β(CaHPO4) were then calculated on 5 natural urines by chemical models, including or not including the [CaPO(4)](−) and [Ca(PO(4))cit](4−) species. Results: Species distribution diagrams show that the [Ca(PO(4))cit](4−) species was only noticeable at pH > 8.5 and below 10% of the total calcium. β values estimated on natural urine were slightly lowered by the formation of [CaPO(4)](−) species, whereas [Ca(PO(4))cit](4−) results were irrelevant. Conclusions: While [CaPO(4)](−) species have an impact on saturation levels at higher pHs, the existence of ternary complex and of the dimer is rejected. MDPI 2021-05-25 /pmc/articles/PMC8197498/ /pubmed/34070425 http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/molecules26113149 Text en © 2021 by the authors. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Article
Berto, Silvia
Marangella, Martino
De Stefano, Concetta
Milea, Demetrio
Daniele, Pier Giuseppe
Critical Reappraisal of Methods for Measuring Urine Saturation with Calcium Salts
title Critical Reappraisal of Methods for Measuring Urine Saturation with Calcium Salts
title_full Critical Reappraisal of Methods for Measuring Urine Saturation with Calcium Salts
title_fullStr Critical Reappraisal of Methods for Measuring Urine Saturation with Calcium Salts
title_full_unstemmed Critical Reappraisal of Methods for Measuring Urine Saturation with Calcium Salts
title_short Critical Reappraisal of Methods for Measuring Urine Saturation with Calcium Salts
title_sort critical reappraisal of methods for measuring urine saturation with calcium salts
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8197498/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/34070425
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/molecules26113149
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