Comparison of Semi-Empirical and Computer Derived Methods for Estimating Urinary Saturation of Brushite
Abstract
Purpose:
The Equil 2 computer program has been questioned by the new Joint Expert Speciation System program (Mayhem Unit Trust and Council for Scientific and Industrial Research, Pretoria, South Africa) for estimating the urinary saturation of stone forming salts to gauge the propensity for stone formation. To attempt resolution the supersaturation index according to the Joint Expert Speciation System and the relative saturation ratio according to Equil 2 were compared with the semi-empirically derived concentration-to-product ratio.
Materials and Methods:
Data were obtained from a recent article in The Journal of Urology®, in which pH, calcium and citrate were varied over a wide range in 72 urine samples. We calculated the relative saturation ratio and the supersaturation index of brushite, and compared them with the available concentration-to-product ratio derived from the growth or dissolution of synthetic brushite.
Results:
The mean concentration-to-product ratio did not differ from the supersaturation index but the concentration-to-product ratio and the supersaturation index were significantly lower than the relative saturation ratio (p <0.004). On the saturation value and urinary variable plot the relative saturation ratio could be readily distinguished from the concentration-to-product ratio because it was consistently and significantly higher. While the supersaturation index pattern was similar to the concentration-to-product ratio, the supersaturation index was slightly lower at high urinary pH and calcium, and slightly higher at lower urinary pH and calcium (p <0.001). When the Ca2H2(PO4)2 complex was deleted from the Joint Expert Speciation System, the corrected supersaturation index was not significantly different from the relative saturation ratio determined by Equil 2.
Conclusions:
The relative saturation ratio overestimates brushite saturation by about 80%. The supersaturation index yields a good approximation of brushite saturation at modest degrees of saturation but it overestimates saturation at low pH or calcium (low saturation) and underestimates it at high pH or calcium (high saturation).
References
- 1 : Correspondence between stone composition and urine supersaturation in nephrolithiasis. Kidney Int1997; 51: 894. Google Scholar
- 2 : Activity products in stone-forming and non-stone-forming urine. Clin Sci1968; 34: 579. Google Scholar
- 3 : Physicochemical basis for the formation of renal stones of calcium phosphate origin: calculation of the degree of saturation of urine with respect to brushite. J Clin Invest1969; 48: 1914. Google Scholar
- 4 : EQUIL 2: a basic computer program for the calculation of urinary saturation. J Urol1985; 134: 1242. Link, Google Scholar
- 5 : Diphosphonates inhibit formation of calcium phosphate crystals in vitro and pathological calcifications in vivo. Science1969; 165: 899. Google Scholar
- 6 : Prevention of recurrent calcium stone formation with potassium citrate therapy in patients with distal renal tubular acidosis. J Urol1985; 134: 20. Link, Google Scholar
- 7 : Hyperoxaluria in kidney stone formers treated with modern bariatric surgery. J Urol2007; 177: 565. Link, Google Scholar
- 8 : Effect of orange juice consumption on urinary stone risk factors. J Urol1996; 149: 1405. Google Scholar
- 9 : Clinical implications of abundant calcium phosphate in routinely analyzed kidney stones. Kidney Int2004; 66: 777. Google Scholar
- 10 : Therapeutic action of citrate in urolithiasis explained by chemical speciation: increase in pH is the dominant factor. Nephrol Dial Transplant2006; 21: 361. Google Scholar
- 11 : New methods for assessing crystal growth and saturation of brushite in whole urine: effect of pH, calcium and citrate. J Urol2008; 180: 1532. Link, Google Scholar
- 12 : SAS for Mixed Models. Cary, North Carolina: SAS Institute2006. Google Scholar
Center for Mineral Metabolism and Clinical Research, University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center, Dallas, Texas

