Uric Acid Stones

Updated: Aug 31, 2023
  • Author: Sahar Fathallah-Shaykh, MD; Chief Editor: Craig B Langman, MD  more...
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Overview

Practice Essentials

Uric acid stones (see image below) are the most common cause of radiolucent kidney stones in children. [1] Several products of purine metabolism are relatively insoluble and can precipitate when urinary pH is low. These include 2- or 8-dihydroxyadenine, adenine, xanthine, and uric acid. The crystals of uric acid may initiate calcium oxylate precipitation in metastable urine concentrates (see Xanthinuria).

Uric acid stones. Uric acid stones.

The terms gouty nephropathy, urate nephropathy, and uric acid nephropathy are used to describe renal insufficiency due to uric acid precipitation within the renal tubules.

Uric acid urolithiasis or uric acid kidney stones refer to development of a stone or calculus composed of significant amounts of urate in the renal pelvis, ureter, or bladder.

Signs and symptoms

Renal stones, particularly in the upper urinary tract, cause pain, costovertebral angle tenderness, or both. The manifestations of pain are expressed differently in infants than in teenagers. Hematuria is most often present. Fever, nausea, and vomiting occur.

See Presentation for more detail.

Diagnosis

Laboratory studies

Any child with a stone should have a 24-hour urine sample collected for analysis of calcium, magnesium, uric acid, citrate, sodium, and urine volume. [2] A spot urine pH level should be obtained.

Serum uric acid, 24-hour acid excretion, urine uric acid, creatinine, and serum creatinine can be measured to assess uric acid production and excretion.

Blood should be obtained for measurement of blood urea nitrogen (BUN), creatinine, calcium, phosphorus, bicarbonate, uric acid, and parathyroid hormone levels.

Imaging studies

For children, renal ultrasonography and abdominal flat plate radiography are as effective as intravenous pyelography (IVP) for identifying stones and do not expose the child to the risk of contrast agents.

Noncontrast CT scanning (spiral CT scanning) is the most sensitive and specific study to search for uric acid stones.

See Workup for more detail.

Management

The overall goal of medical therapy is to dissolve formed stones and to prevent new stones from forming. The primary treatments are to alkalinize (citrate or bicarbonate) and dilute (large water intake) the urine.

Surgical treatments may include ureteroscopic stone extraction, percutaneous nephrolithotomy, open stone surgery, and extracorporal shock wave lithotripsy.

See Treatment and Medication for more detail.

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Pathophysiology

Uric acid is a weak acid, with an ionization constant of acid (pK) of 5.8. At pH levels below the pK, uric acid is predominately found in a nonionized form. The urate ion is more soluble than the nonionized molecule. Urate ions (predominate form at a pH level of 7.4) are about 5% protein bound. Urate is filtered at the glomerulus. The renal tubule can reabsorb (movement of urate from tubule lumen to peritubular fluid) or secrete (movement of urate from peritubular fluid into tubular lumen) urate. Typically, net reabsorption occurs in infants and children. The fractional excretion of urate in infants and children ranges from about 0.1-0.6 (see the table below).

Table 1. Serum Uric Acid levels and Urinary Acid Excretion in Neonates, Children, and Adults [3] (Open Table in a new window)

 

Neonates*

Children

Adults

29-33 wk

34-37 wk

38-40 wk

3-4 y

5-9 y

10-14 y

40-44 y

Male

Female

Male

Female

Male

Female

Male

Female

Serum uric acid

(mg/dL)

7.71±2.65

6.04±2.19

5.19±1.57

3.45±1.01

3.44±0.8

3.63±1.04

3.71±0.92

4.28±1.19

4.09±1.2

5.134±1.25

4.25±1.1

Uric acid excretion

(mg/dL GFR)

4.8±2.23

2.81±0.93

1.69±0.84

0.34±0.11

0.403±0.095

Uric acid excretion

(mg/kg/d)

N/A

N/A

19.6

13.5±3.75

(3 y)

11.5±3.75

(7 y)

9±3.75

(12 y)

10

Fractional excretion of uric acid

(%)

61.24±12.21

44.52±15.23

38.19±13.61

12±3.75

(3 y)

10±3

(7 y)

7.6±3.75

(12 y)

7±1.6

*Gestational ages

Glomerular filtration rate

A printable version of this table is seen below.

Printer friendly version of the table. Printer friendly version of the table.

The fractional excretion of urate can exceed 1, indicating net urate secretion.

When the concentration of uric acid in urine exceeds its solubility at the urine pH, uric acid changes from a compound dissolved in solution to an insoluble precipitate. Urate stones are formed by 1 of 3 general mechanisms: overproduction, increased tubular secretion, or decreased tubular reabsorption.

Uric acid results as a relatively insoluble end-product of purine metabolism. The concentration of uric acid in plasma depends on dietary ingestion, de novo purine synthesis, and uric acid elimination by the kidneys and intestine. Normal uric acid excretion is shown in the table above.

Diseases that produce uric acid nephropathy or pure uric acid stones in children are rare. They may be considered in 5 basic groups. The evaluation should be directed at identifying one of the following:

  • Group 1: The patient may have deficiencies in hypoxanthine-guanine phosphoribosyltransferase (HGPRT), adenine phosphoribosyltransferase, or xanthine dehydrogenase enzymes. Mutations for these gene products occur as autosomal recessive, spontaneous, or X-linked. Assess for a history of deficiency of these enzymes, family history of gout at a young age, renal stones with uric acid in other family members, or glycogen-storage disease. A previous history of painful gross hematuria is requested in the proband.

  • Group 2: The patient may have tissue breakdown, which can produce large amounts of uric acid that precipitate in the nephron. This group includes children with primary leukemia and lymphoma. Other malignancies may produce uric acid nephropathy such as lung cancer, breast cancer, and pancreatic cancer; however, these conditions are very rare in children. Rotavirus-associated gastroenteritis can result in uric acid stones. This is thought to be mainly due to the hyperuricemia caused by tissue breakdown in the infected GI tract of the infants who are vulnerable to human rotavirus and to dehydration. [4, 5]

  • Group 3: These children have genetic defects in renal tubular urate reabsorption. The defects are X-linked or sporadic, and these patients have hyperuricosuria with hypouricemia. The high urinary urate concentration in the scenario of low urine volume and low urine pH tends to promote crystallization. Uricosuric drugs (eg, cellulose sodium phosphate, colchicine, probenecid, sulfinpyrazone) inhibit renal tubular urate reabsorption, producing hyperuricosuria.

  • Group 4: These children have hyperuricemia and hypouricosuria secondary to decreased renal excretion. This is due to decreased tubular secretion of uric acid rather than decreased filtered load. Children with familial juvenile gouty nephropathy are in this group. This condition is inherited in an autosomal dominant fashion. Several other children with similar pathology, which occurs in an isolated sporadic fashion, are reported. Glycogen-storage disease type I is also in this category.

  • Group 5: These children develop hyperuricosuria with or without hyperuricemia secondary to oral purine intake. Although unusual, this may occur with a diet rich in purines (eg, children with cystic fibrosis who take enzymes rich in purines). It may occur in children on ketogenic diets because the increase in ketoacids probably competes with uric acid via organic anion secretory transporters. Several drugs, such as hydrochlorothiazide (HCTZ), inhibit uric acid excretion in a similar manner.

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Etiology

Uric acid stones are produced when the urinary uric acid concentration is increased secondary to overproduction, increased renal tubular urinary uric acid secretion, decreased renal tubular urinary uric acid reabsorption, decreased urinary water content, or increased hydrogen ion concentration.

Specific causes include the following purine enzyme defects, which lead to overproduction and increased urinary uric acid concentration:

  • HGPRT deficiency

  • PRPP synthetase overactivity

  • Glucose-6-phosphatase deficiency

Other causes include increased nucleotide turnover secondary to cell death.

  • Myeloproliferative and lymphoproliferative disorders

  • Hemolytic anemia

  • Cytotoxic drugs

Other causes include the following:

  • Excessive dietary purine intake producing increased urinary uric acid concentration

  • Hyperuricemia related to rotavirus gastroenteritis likely caused by tissue breakdown in the infected GI tract and dehydration in infants. [4, 5]

  • Decreased glomerular filtration, renal tubular uric acid reabsorption, or both producing increased uric acid concentration in urine (eg, renal failure, acidosis, drugs, lead nephropathy)

  • Dehydration produces decreased urine water content (ie, increased urine solute concentration) and increases urinary uric acid concentration.

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Epidemiology

United States statistics

The formation of uric acid stones in US children is infrequent. Studies suggest that fewer than 5% of renal stones detected in children are composed of uric acid. [6] No population-based studies are available. A review of several reports shows the incidence of uric acid stones to be between 4 per 100 children and 4 per 1000 children with renal stones presenting to academic medical centers. [7]

International statistics

The incidence of uric acid stones in most parts of the world is not known. Uric acid stones tend to be more frequently reported in urban societies than rural societies. Persons with higher dietary protein intake are more likely to develop uric acid stones. Variation in incidence among different parts of the world is likely.

In countries with a hot climate such as Pakistan, poor nutritionn and diarrheal diseases are the major causative factors of kidney stones and uric acid stones are present in 3-6% of stone formers. [8]

Race-, sex-, and age-related demographics

Race

Uric acid stones are more common in White children.

Sex

Uric acid stones are more frequent in boys than in girls.

Age

With Lesch-Nyhan syndrome, the HGPRT defect is greater than 95%. A severe disease occurs. Numerous individuals have been reported with 20-50% of normal HGPRT function who develop uric acid stones as their primary manifestation.

  • Uric acid nephropathy (precipitation of urate crystals in renal tubules) and uric acid stones develop in people of any age (even infants or children). Occasionally, acute renal failure occurs secondary to crystal nephropathy in infants or children with inherited abnormalities of purine salvage enzymes. Renal failure produced by uric acid also occurs in children with leukemia and lymphoma as a component of tumor lysis disease. Children with Lesch-Nyhan disease may develop uric acid stones or nephropathy.

  • Remember that prepubertal children have relatively high uric acid clearance; therefore, hyperuricosuria rather than hyperuricemia may be the primary manifestation of uric acid overproduction in high-risk children.

  • Specific enzyme defects (ie, xanthine oxidase, phosphoribosyl pyrophosphate [PRPP] synthetase, adenine phosphoribosyltransferase, HGPRT) should be suspected if gout develops at an early age, if a family history of early gout is present, and if uric acid lithiasis is the first sign of excessive uric acid production.

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Prognosis

The prognosis depends on the primary disease process. Children with cancer and Lesch-Nyhan syndrome tend to do worse than children with isolated HGPRT defects.

Morbidity/mortality

Complications of renal stone diseases include renal failure, infection, pain, urinary tract obstruction, renal colic, gross hematuria, pallor, vomiting, sweating, nausea, and insomnia. In addition, if surgical intervention is necessary, surgical complications may occur.

Mortality and morbidity are not increased with uric acid stones compared with other stones; however, the process that leads to excess uric acid production (eg, malignancy, Lesch-Nyhan syndrome) may cause death.

Children may experience frequent bouts of pain and gross hematuria due to frequent uric acid stones.

Complications

Complications of renal stone disease include the following:

  • Bleeding

  • Obstruction

  • Infection

  • Pain

  • Complications of acute renal failure (ie, hypertensionhyperkalemia, pulmonary edema)

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Patient Education

Inform patients about the specific disease process when possible.

Discuss the importance of diet, medication, and fluid intake in preventing new stone formation.

Indicate the importance of physician reevaluation if the child develops fever, pain, vomiting, dehydration, renal colic, or gross hematuria.

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