Little is known about the epidemiology of renal stones, in spite of the relative frequency of this painful condition. This population-based study examined reported renal stone diagnosis in 1,309 women aged 20-92 years to determine whether renal stones are associated with 1) food or water exposures or 2) lower bone mineral density and an increased likelihood of fractures. Results indicated a renal stone prevalence of 3.4%. The average age at diagnosis was 42 years. Renal stone formation was not associated with community of residence, hypertension, bone mineral density, fractures, high-oxalate food consumption, or ascorbic acid from food supplements. Women with renal stones consumed almost 250 mg/day less dietary calcium (p < 0.01) than did women without stones and had a lower energy intake (p < 0.04). The authors' findings do not support the hypothesis that increased dietary calcium is associated with a greater prevalence of renal stones, nor do they identify renal stones as a risk factor for low bone mineral density. Furthermore, lack of other identifiable environmental correlates and the relatively young age at initial diagnosis suggest that genetic components of renal stone formation need further study.
Background:
With the increasing focus of metabolomic methods on obesityrelated
diseases, it is important to consider how sample handling may need to be adapted for
the high compositions of lipids that can occur in such subjects.
Introduction:
High-lipid (cloudy, milky appearances; a.k.a. lipemic) biofluids are common
in very high BMI subjects. Organic extractions of biofluids are useful for removing protein
backgrounds, inactivating capsid viruses, and yielding relatively stable samples with excellent
spectroscopic characteristics. This work considered how acetonitrile extractions, which
are widely used, perform on lipemic sera.
Results:
In this technical note, we report the observation and remediation of a liquid-liquid
phase separation in acetonitrile extractions of many lipemic sera. This unexpected behavior
can be challenging to identify, especially if working with small volumes. The liquid-liquid
separation shows a high miscibility of proteins in both liquid phases that impairs NMR data
quality. We also report a simple temperature-based adaption of the acetonitrile extraction
procedure that consistently results in a single aqueous phase and eliminates unwanted constituents.
Conclusion:
A robust approach to achieving reproducible, high quality samples of aqueous
metabolites from lipemic sera from very high BMI subjects should be of utility in expanding
metabolomics applications to lipemic biofluids.
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