New research in humans and several animal species has shown that there is a specific good bacterium, called Oxalobacter formigenes that lives in the intestinal tract and is involved with normal
calcium oxalate metabolism and oxalate - degradation.
Much work needs to be done regarding this bacterium and its role in
calcium oxalate metabolism.
Not exact matches
For instance, many dogs that develop
Calcium Oxalate (CaOx) stones do so because they have an inborn error in their
metabolism, and you can't fix that.