Abstract

Emotional stress is associated with e.g. increased hormone release, high blood-sugar level and blood pressure. Stress clearly affects metabolism. Whether chronic stress exposure leads to altered urinary compositions with increased risk of CaOx; urolithiasis was examined by investigating the relation between stress burden and urine composition. 29 controls (CG), 29 CaOx stone formers (SF), and 28 patients with chronic inflammatory bowel diseases (CIBD) were advised to avoid unfavorable aliment. Any urolithiasis-related medications were stopped. At day 5, a 24-h urine was collected and comprehensive urinalysis performed. AP (CaOx) index was calculated. Subjects completed a questionnaire designed to measure perceived stress ("Trier-Inventory-of-Chronic-Stress"). Mean AP (CaOx) in CG, SF and CIBD amount to 0.8 (+/-0.3), 1.2 (+/-0.7), and 1.9 (+/-1.2), respectively. Increased AP (CaOx) in SF is mainly attributed to an increased effect of calcium and oxalate, whereas in CIBD this is additionally caused by a reduced effect of citrate, magnesium and volume. Stress dimensions are correlated to any investigated urinary parameter with an absolute value of r < or = 0.600; some correlations are statistically significant: whereas in SF only one combination, "lack of social recognition" versus calcium, shows significance, in CIBD various combinations are significantly related. In particular, sodium excretion increases with stress. In CG, some stress dimensions are directly related to citrate; with increasing stress, protection against CaOx crystallization tends to increase. It could be shown that stress load and urinary composition are related by statistical means. The observed metabolic stress response patterns in urinary compositions are different for the distinct groups, thereby, reflecting a conclusive picture. This is in particular in CIBD, for which a link between stress and inflammatory activity and between inflammatory activity and altered urinary composition is well established.

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