Abstract

Urinary uric acid excretion was assessed in 38 children to determine whether hyperuricuria was a risk factor in children with urolithiasis. Uric acid excretion (measured per deciliter glomerular filtration rate), and fractional excretion of uric acid were similar in 27 children with hypercalciuria and calcium oxalate urinary stones, in six children with idiopathic calcium oxalate urolithiasis, and in five with uric acid urolithiasis, of whom four were white boys and one was an Asian girl. One boy with a urate stone had cystinosis. Serum uric acid concentrations exceeded 6.0 mg/dl (360 mumol/L) in two children with hypercalciuria and in two patients with idiopathic calcium oxalate urolithiasis. None of the children with calcium urolithiasis had excessive urinary excretion of uric acid. In children with hypercalciuria, uric acid excretion did not change significantly when dietary sodium was increased from 1.0 to 5.0 gm/1.73 m2. We conclude that excessive urinary uric acid excretion is seldom an additional risk factor in children with calcium urolithiasis and that dietary sodium chloride does not have a strong influence on urinary excretion of uric acid in children with hypercalciuria.

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