Holmes R P, Goodman H O, Assimos D G
Department of Urology, Wake Forest University School of Medicine, Winston-Salem, North Carolina 27157-1094, USA.
Kidney Int. 2001 Jan;59(1):270-6. doi: 10.1046/j.1523-1755.2001.00488.x.
The amount of oxalate excreted in urine has a significant impact on calcium oxalate supersaturation and stone formation. Dietary oxalate is believed to make only a minor (10 to 20%) contribution to the amount of oxalate excreted in urine, but the validity of the experimental observations that support this conclusion can be questioned. An understanding of the actual contribution of dietary oxalate to urinary oxalate excretion is important, as it is potentially modifiable.
We varied the amount of dietary oxalate consumed by a group of adult individuals using formula diets and controlled, solid-food diets with a known oxalate content, determined by a recently developed analytical procedure. Controlled solid-food diets were consumed containing 10, 50, and 250 mg of oxalate/2500 kcal, as well as formula diets containing 0 and 180 mg oxalate/2500 kcal. Changes in the content of oxalate and other ions were assessed in 24-hour urine collections.
Urinary oxalate excretion increased as dietary oxalate intake increased. With oxalate-containing diets, the mean contribution of dietary oxalate to urinary oxalate excretion ranged from 24.4 +/- 15.5% on the 10 mg/2500 kcal/day diet to 41.5 +/- 9.1% on the 250 mg/2500 kcal/day diet, much higher than previously estimated. When the calcium content of a diet containing 250 mg of oxalate was reduced from 1002 mg to 391 mg, urinary oxalate excretion increased by a mean of 28.2 +/- 4.8%, and the mean dietary contribution increased to 52.6 +/- 8.6%.
These results suggest that dietary oxalate makes a much greater contribution to urinary oxalate excretion than previously recognized, that dietary calcium influences the bioavailability of ingested oxalate, and that the absorption of dietary oxalate may be an important factor in calcium oxalate stone formation.
尿液中草酸的排泄量对草酸钙过饱和度和结石形成有重大影响。膳食草酸被认为仅对尿液中草酸的排泄量有较小(10%至20%)的贡献,但支持这一结论的实验观察结果的有效性可能受到质疑。了解膳食草酸对尿草酸排泄的实际贡献很重要,因为它具有潜在的可调节性。
我们通过配方饮食和已知草酸含量的固体食物饮食,让一组成年人食用不同量的膳食草酸,草酸含量由最近开发的分析程序确定。食用的固体食物饮食中草酸含量分别为10、50和250毫克/2500千卡,以及草酸含量为0和180毫克/2500千卡的配方饮食。通过收集24小时尿液评估草酸和其他离子含量的变化。
随着膳食草酸摄入量的增加,尿草酸排泄量增加。在含草酸的饮食中,膳食草酸对尿草酸排泄的平均贡献范围从10毫克/2500千卡/天饮食的24.4±15.5%到250毫克/2500千卡/天饮食的41.5±9.1%,远高于先前的估计。当含250毫克草酸的饮食中钙含量从1002毫克降至391毫克时,尿草酸排泄量平均增加28.2±4.8%,膳食平均贡献增加至52.6±8.6%。
这些结果表明,膳食草酸对尿草酸排泄的贡献比先前认识的要大得多,膳食钙会影响摄入草酸的生物利用度,并且膳食草酸的吸收可能是草酸钙结石形成的一个重要因素。