Startseite Crystalluria: prevalence, different types of crystals and the role of infrared spectroscopy
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Crystalluria: prevalence, different types of crystals and the role of infrared spectroscopy

  • Simona Verdesca , Giovanni B. Fogazzi EMAIL logo , Giuseppe Garigali , Piergiorgio Messa und Michel Daudon
Veröffentlicht/Copyright: 14. Dezember 2010
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Abstract

Background: Studies on the frequency of the different types of urinary crystals and the role of Fourier transform infrared microspectroscopy (FTIRM) for identification are few. We describe the results of a retrospective study on the prevalence and typology of crystalluria and on the role of FTIRM.

Methods: Urinary crystals were identified using the combined knowledge of crystal morphology, birefringence features and urine pH (combined approach). When this was inconclusive, FTIRM was performed.

Results: Crystalluria was found in 807 out of 9834 samples (8.2%). In 793, the combined approach identified “typical” crystals, while in 14 FTIRM was needed to identify “atypical” crystals. Among “typical crystals”, calcium oxalate (75.9%), uric acid (25.9%) and amorphous urates (7.9%), alone or in combination, were the most frequent. Brushite, ammonium biurate and cystine were the most rare (0.1%–0.7%). FTIRM identified 12 of 14 atypical crystals: three crystals were due to a drug (amoxicillin, indinavir, doubtful phenytoloxamine); four were due to calcium oxalate mono- or bihydrate, uric acid bihydrate or struvite; five were due to calcium carbonate, Tamm-Horsfall glycoprotein, or rare salt combinations.

Conclusions: Crystalluria is not rare and most crystals can be identified by the combined approach. Occasionally, identification of crystals will require FTIRM.


Corresponding author: Giovanni B. Fogazzi, MD, Unità Operativa di Nefrologia, Dialisi, Trapianto, Fondazione IRCCS Ca' Granda, Ospedale Maggiore-Policlinico, Via Commenda 15, Milano 20122, Italy

Received: 2010-7-2
Accepted: 2010;-8-18
Published Online: 2010-12-14
Published in Print: 2011-03-01

©2011 by Walter de Gruyter Berlin New York

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