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Phophate-induced renal calcification in the rat

Authors :
A. J. W. Hitchman
Cherk S. Tam
S. A. Hasany
Joan E. Harrison
A. Hitchman
Source :
Canadian journal of physiology and pharmacology. 57(1)
Publication Year :
1979

Abstract

Studies were done to investigate nephrocalcinosis produced in weanling female Wistar rats fed pelleted, semisynthetic diets. The rats were fed diets varying in concentrations of Ca and P supplied as inorganic salts for periods of 4–6 weeks and results compared with control rats fed laboratory rodent chow for the same period of time. Measurement of renal Ca and P concentrations showed that nephrocalcinosis was produced by semisynthetic diets with inorganic phosphate concentrations as low as 0.5% on a weight basis; in contrast, rats fed regular laboratory chow (P = 0.72%) showed no evidence of nephrocalcinosis. The severity of the lesion was proportional to dietary phosphate concentrations from 0.5 to 1.0% but other dietary factors modified the severity of the lesion. With the lower dietary phosphate of 0.5%, increasing dietary Ca from 0.5 to 1.0% decreased the severity of the renal calcification. Decreasing protein concentrations from 25 to 15% casein increased the severity of the renal lesions. Other dietary factors also appear to modify the phosphate-induced nephrocalcinosis since no lesions occurred in rats on laboratory chow. It is suggested that the availability of dietary phosphate may be a factor. The phosphate in the semisynthetic diets was totally inorganic while the natural foods of laboratory chow contain, at least in part, organic phosphate.

Details

ISSN :
00084212
Volume :
57
Issue :
1
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Canadian journal of physiology and pharmacology
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....8cb9f206ab20e262c36cd236153bf816