Unlike creatinine, serum cystatin C reflects renal function in children independent of age, gender, height, and body composition.
A defect in intracellular uptake of carnitine has been identified in patients with severe carnitine deficiency. To define the clinical manifestations of this disorder, the presenting features of 15 affected infants and children were examined. Progressive cardiomyopathy, with or without chronic muscle weakness, was the most common presentation (median age of onset, 3 years). Other patients presented with episodes of fasting hypoglycemia during the first 2 years of life before cardiomyopathy had become apparent. A defect in carnitine uptake was demonstrable in fibroblasts and leukocytes from patients. The defect also appears to be expressed in muscle and kidney. Concentrations of plasma carnitine and rates of carnitine uptake in parents were intermediate between affected patients and normal control subjects, consistent with recessive inheritance. Early recognition and treatment with high doses of oral carnitine may be life-saving in this disorder of fatty acid oxidation.
We have established normal values for calcium/creatinine (Ca/Cr) and oxalate/creatinine (Ox/Cr) ratios in 25 infants (aged 1-7 days) and 391 children (aged 1 month to 14.5 years) and compared these with values obtained in 137 children with post-glomerular haematuria and 27 with nephrolithiasis. Oxalate was measured by ion chromatography. Nomograms of Marshall and Robertson were used to calculate urine saturation to calcium oxalate. The Ca/Cr ratio was normally distributed whereas the Ox/Cr ratio had a log-normal distribution. The molar ratio of Ca/Cr was the lowest in the first days of life and the highest between 7 month and 1.5 years (mean +/- SD = 0.39 +/- 0.28 mmol/mmol). Following a slight decrease it stabilised by the age of 6 years (0.34 +/- 0.19 mmol/mmol). The highest Ox/Cr values were measured during the 1st month of life [geometric mean 133 (range 61-280) mumol/mmol], followed by a gradual decrease until 11 years of age [mean 24 (range 6-82) mumol/mmol]. Thirty-six haematuric children had hypercalciuria (26%), 23 had absorptive hypercalciuria, 13 renal type. Children with absorptive hypercalciuria on a calcium-restricted diet had significantly higher oxalate excretion than those with renal hypercalciuria and the control group [38 (range 28-49) vs. 22 (range 16-29) and 23 (range 22-27) mumol/mol respectively, P < 0.01]. Calcium oxalate urine saturation of stone patients was higher than that of patients with haematuria and the normal population (1.18 +/- 0.05 vs. 1.06 +/- 0.03, P < 0.03 and 0.84 +/- 0.03, P < 0.001 respectively).(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
Oxalate elimination and oxalate dialysance via hemodialysis (HD) or peritoneal dialysis (CAPD) has not been studied in detail in pediatric patients. We studied plasma oxalate, oxalate elimination, and oxalate dialysance in 15 infants and children undergoing CAPD (9 female, 6 male, aged 9 months to 18 years) and in 10 children on HD (4 female, 6 male, aged 7-18 years). Two children in each group had primary hyperoxaluria (PH). The mean duration of dialysis prior to examination was 12 +/- 11 months in CAPD and 31 +/- 23 months in HD patients. Bicarbonate HD was performed 5 h three times a week, CAPD consisted of five daily exchanges in 5 patients and four changes in the remaining 10 children (dwell volume 40 ml/kg body weight, 2.3 g/l glucose). Although oxalate dialysance was significantly higher in HD (mean 115.6 ml/ min per 1.73 m2 in HD versus 7.14 ml/min in CAPD), mean oxalate elimination per week was not different between both renal replacement therapies (3,478 mumol/1.73 m2 surface area/week in CAPD versus 3,915 mumol/1.73 m2 per week in HD). Oxalate elimination in patients with PH was between 6,650 and 9,900 mumol/week. Plasma oxalate remained elevated in both procedures [28-84 mumol/l in CAPD (92/148 in PH) and 33-101 mumol/l in HD (70/93 in PH)]. Oxalate elimination can be increased by a more frequent hemodialysis regimen.
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