We recently reported that the addition of the protein osteopontin (OPN) resulted in an increase in the deposition of calcium oxalate (CaOx) crystals on the surface of Madin Darby canine kidney (MDCK) cells. To determine the degree to which this increased deposition is caused by OPN, we investigated the extent to which the CaOx crystal deposition produced by the expression of OPN at the cell surface was suppressed by 4 different methods prior to the determination of the level of CaOx crystal binding. MDCK cells (2 × 106 cells/well) were cultured to a confluent state, and the binding of OPN to the cellular surface was then inhibited by adding one of the following 4 substances: human OPN polyclonal antibody, thrombin, cyclic Arg-Gly-Asp (RGD) peptides and tunicamycin. The cells were cultured for 24 h. We then used a fluorescent antibody technique with an OPN polyclonal antibody to determined whether the expression of OPN at the cell surface was inhibited, and we measured the degree of CaOx crystal deposition using the isotope 45Ca. The degree of CaOx crystal deposition was inhibited by 80% or more in the antibody-treated group, by 50–80% in the thrombin-treated group, by 60–80% in the cyclic RGD-treated group, and by 50–60% in the tunicamycin-treated group. These results suggest that OPN in the extracellular matrix is the main cause of CaOx crystal deposition on the surface of MDCK cells.
Chronic intracranial hypotension is considered as a frequent complication in shunted hydrocephalus, besides obstruction and shunt-infections. In the last twenty years 32 cases of slit-ventricle were diagnosed among the more than one thousand operations on hydrocephalic children at the Paediatric Department of the National Institute of Neurosurgery, Budapest, Hungary. Most of them have been operated on in infancy. Time from the first operation to the development of slit-ventricle ranged from one to twelve years, the mean was 6.5 years. Seven patients were symptomless (22%), while 25 patients (78%) had more or less severe slit-ventricle syndrome with headache (25 cases), nausea/vomiting (23 cases), altered consciousness (21 cases), brainstem signs (12 cases), and epileptic fits (2 cases). Ten patients with moderate clinical signs improved under conservative treatment. In 15 cases an anti-siphon device (ASD) was implanted. In five of them the clinical result was good, but in the remaining 10 cases typical hypertensive signs were seen. In these cases low flow rate valves were implanted instead of the middle flow rate valve and ASD. In one case the intracranial hypertension persisted, so a middle flow rate shunt system was "reimplanted" and finally the patient improved. In this study the experiences with these 32 cases will be analysed and discussed. The authors stress the primary use of combined valves to avoid the slit-ventricle syndrome.
Using seed crystal method, whole-urine method, and scanning electron microscopy, the inhibitory effects of sialic acid and osteopontin (OPN) on aggregation/growth of CaOx crystals were investigated. Using the seed crystal method, sialic acid showed an inhibitory effect on CaOx crystal aggregation/growth in a concentration-dependent manner, but almost no effect was observed using the whole-urine method. OPN showed an inhibitory effect on aggregation/growth in both experimental systems. The inhibitory effect of asialo-OPN on aggregation/growth was approximately 20% lower than that of OPN in the experiment using the seed crystal method and approximately 15% lower in the experiment using the whole-urine method. Scanning electron microscopy showed that OPN and sialic acid inhibit the aggregation of CaOx crystals. The above findings show that sialic acid accounts for about 15–20% of the involvement of OPN in CaOx crystallization.
We report that a 27-year-old woman with bilateral severe hydronephorosis during pregnancy 20 years after antireflux surgery. The patient developed postrenal acute renal failure due to obstruction of the lower ureter. This patient could safely give birth after bilateral percutaneous nephrostomy through joint management with the obstetrics and gynecology staff. We describe that stenosis of the lower ureter is a late complication of antireflux surgery.
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