Sentences with phrase «increased urinary calcium»

Increased urinary calcium may also lead to kidney stones, a condition in which hard calcium masses form in the kidneys.
Dr. Davis also cites a University of Toronto study that showed increased gluten intake increased urinary calcium loss by 63 %, along with increased markers for bone weakening.
Her professors or instructors are saying that high dietary protein increases urinary calcium excretion, and then they make the assumption that, therefore, it's bad for bone health, but that's only part of the puzzle, and they're not understanding the increase in intestinal absorption of calcium that animal protein and protein in general leads to.
An acidic diet may not affect the blood pH much, but can decrease urinary magnesium levels, urinary citrate and pH, while increasing urinary calcium, undissociated uric acid, and phosphate.
Calcitonin inhibits PTH secretion, decreases both bone resorption and intestinal calcium absorption, and increases urinary calcium excretion (Figure 1).

Not exact matches

a) increased protein intake from animal sources (milk and meat) lead to significant increases in urinary calcium excretion.
Conversely, individuals who've already experienced a urinary tract stone might avoid calcium to help avoid a subsequent stone and inadvertently increase their osteoporosis risk, the researchers write.
A beneficial juice for individuals prone to recurrent kidney stones is cranberry juice, which has been shown to reduce the amount of ionized calcium in urine by about 50 percent in patients with kidney stones (high urinary calcium levels greatly increase the risk of developing a kidney stone).
When combined with high levels of urinary calcium, there is an increased risk of calcium oxalate kidney stone formation.»
It has been shown that small amounts of aluminum - containing antacids increase the urinary and fecal excretion of calcium, inhibit absorption of fluoride, and inhibit absorption of phosphorus, creating a negative calcium balance.
However, an increase of the risk of calcium phosphate stone formation was observed in patients with multiepisodic CaOx - urolithiasis» however they conclude that bicarbonate water can be recommended for helping calcium oxalate and uric acid urinary stones.
A study published in the British Journal of Nutrition found that when women drank 1/2 to 1 liter of grapefruit, apple or orange juice daily, their urinary pH value and citric acid excretion increased, significantly dropping their risk of forming calcium oxalate stones.
The old thinking would predict that then there would be no calcium loss since there is no excess acid to buffer, but no, even though the acid load was neutralized there was still the excess urinary calcium, consistent with the radioactive isotope study, «challenging the long - standing dogma that animal protein consumption results in an acidosis that promotes the increased excretion of calcium....
Unexpected observations were a prominent reduction in urinary calcium excretion from the run - in to the intervention phase with the fruits - and - vegetables diet and no increase in calcium excretion with the combination diet.
This pattern of findings can potentially be explained by the high fiber content of these two diets, which may have impeded calcium absorption.22 Nonetheless, the substantial increase in urinary phosphorus excretion with the combination diet suggests that the subjects in this group did consume more dairy products than the other participants.
These increase calcium absorption and deposition, while reducing urinary calcium excretion.
Increasing dietary protein intake enhances intestinal calcium absorption, as well as urinary calcium excretion (9).
It was initially thought that high - protein diets may result in a negative calcium balance (when the sum of urinary and fecal calcium excretion becomes greater than calcium intake) and thus increase bone loss (11).
In the kidneys, PTH stimulates the conversion of vitamin D into its active form (1,25 - dihydroxyvitamin D; calcitriol), which rapidly decreases urinary excretion of calcium but increases urinary excretion of phosphorus.
Excessive calcium supplementation is associated with the development of canine hip dysplasia and may increase the risk of calcium oxalate stone development in the urinary tract.
There are a number of causes and risk factors that may contribute to their development; eg: the oversaturation of stone - forming materials in the dog's urine or increased levels of calcium in the urine and blood, and diets that produce high pH (alkaline) urine, and recurrent urinary tract infections.
Because of the increased calcium excretion brought on by furosemide (i.e. an increase in urinary calcium levels), there could be a problem using this medication in patients with a history of calcium oxalate bladder stone formation.
Urinary Tract Health Formulated to increase the urine volume and help in the management of both struvite and calcium oxalate crystals through the use of Relative Supersaturation (RSS) methodology.
After 1 month on the treatment diet, intakes of moisture, sodium and fat were increased, and potassium and calcium intakes were decreased, and urinary calcium and oxalate concentrations and calcium oxalate RSS were decreased (Stevenson et al. 2004).
I believe that the dramatic increase in the rate of calcium oxalate urinary stones is likely only one of them.
Urinary oxalate increased, although inconsistently, with dietary oxalic acid only when the dietary calcium content was low (Stevenson et al. 2003a).
The cascade of events leading to calcium oxalate stone formation is largely unknown, but there is some indication that normal increases in urinary calcium concentration after feeding could be involved in stone formation.
They can cause a host of adverse effects including increased appetite, increased water consumption, personality change, panting, pacing, urinary accidents, bleeding ulcers, diarrhea, thinning of the skin, calcium deposition in the skin, heart disease, diabetes, liver disease, seizures, and suppression of other glands such as the thyroid, pituitary and adrenal glands.
I believe that the dramatic increase in the rate of calcium oxalate urinary stones is likely one of them.
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