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Postgraduate Medical Journal 1995;71:561-562; doi:10.1136/pgmj.71.839.561
© 1995 BMJ Publishing Group Ltd and The Fellowship of Postgraduate Medicine.

Renal calculi in primary hyperaldosteronism.

U. M. Kabadi

Medical Service, VA Medical Center, Phoenix, AZ 85012, USA.

Increased urinary calcium (Ca++) excretion and the presence of negative Ca++ balance is well documented in primary hyperaldosteronism. However, renal calculi as a major manifestation of this disorder has not previously been described. This report describes a patient who presented with renal calculi in association with primary hyperaldosteronism. We believe that primary hyperaldosteronism was a major pathogenetic factor in the formation of renal calculi since the increased urinary excretion of Ca++ and uric acid noted at onset declined following a short-term spironolactone administration and remission from renal calculi has persisted following initial nephrolithotomy and continued spironolactone therapy, which also corrected hypertension and hypokalemia, a hallmark of this disorder.


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