Idiopathic hypercalciuria (IH) is the commonest metabolic abnormality in patients with calcium kidney stones. It is characterized by normocalcemia, absence of diseases that cause increased urine calcium, and calcium excretion that is above 250 mg/day in women and 300 mg/day in men. Subjects with IH have a generalized increase in calcium turnover, which includes increased gut calcium absorption, decreased renal calcium reabsorption, and a tendency to lose calcium from bone. Despite the increase in intestinal calcium absorption, negative calcium balance is commonly seen in balance studies, especially on a low calcium diet. The mediator of decreased renal calcium reabsorption is not clear; it is not associated with either an increase in filtered load of calcium or altered PTH levels. There is an increased incidence of hypercalciuria in first-degree relatives of those with IH, but IH appears to be a complex polygenic trait with a large contribution from diet to expression of increased calcium excretion. Increased tissue vitamin D response may be responsible for the manifestations of IH in at least some patients.
Definition of HypercalciuriaCalcium, the most abundant cation in human beings, is an important participant in many physiologic processes, including hormonal secretion, cardiac contraction, blood clotting, and neurotransmission. In addition, growth and repair of our skeleton demands an adequate supply of calcium, and careful maintenance of extracellular calcium concentrations. For this reason, prevailing levels of intracellular and extracellular calcium are tightly regulated, by a complex system of control mechanisms. These mechanisms control calcium absorption by gut and renal tubular epithelia, as well as fluxes of calcium on and off bone, during varying dietary calcium intakes. In healthy, non-pregnant adults, whose skeleton is no longer growing, net intestinal calcium absorption is matched by renal excretion, and provides sufficient calcium for skeletal maintenance; however, under pathologic conditions, some urine calcium may derive from bone loss.Abnormalities of calcium homeostasis could result in a number of undesired consequences, including abnormally high or low serum calcium levels, or inadequate maintenance of bone mineral. Hypercalciuria might be defined as any level of urine calcium that exceeds net intestinal absorption, leading to net loss of calcium. However, in practice net intestinal absorption is seldom measured, and under the assumption that urine calcium is primarily derived from intestinal absorption, the working definition of hypercalciuria is urine calcium excretion that exceeds that found in the majority of healthy adults eating their usual diets. In practice, this is usually defined as a daily calcium excretion over 250 mg/day in women or 300Mailing address: Elaine Worcester, M.D., Nephrology Section, Suite 511 / MC 5100, University of Chicago, 5841 S. Maryland Avenue, Chicago, Illinois 60637, Phone: 773-702-7459, Fax: 773-702-5818. Publisher's Disclaimer: This is a PDF file ...