Probiotic Treament for Kidney Stones

Treating patients with bacteria may be an effective way of reducing their risk of repeatedly developing painful kidney stones, a study suggests. People naturally carrying the bacterium Oxalobacter formigenes were found to be 70% less likely to have problems.

kidney stone

Formigenes breaks down oxalate in the intestinal tract and is present in a large proportion of the normal adult population. Researchers at Boston University, in the US, are now investigating the possibility of using the bacteria as a probiotic treatment. The study features in the Journal of the American Society of Nephrology.

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The Boston team compared 247 patients with recurrent calcium oxalate kidney stones with 259 people with no history of the condition. They found just 17% of the kidney stones group were colonized with O. formigenes, compared with 38% of healthy group.

Researcher Professor David Kaufman: "Our findings are of potential clinical importance.
The possibility of using the bacterium as a probiotic is currently in the early stages of investigation."

Promising Avenue
Derek Machin, clinical director of urology at University Hospital, Aintree, said that an effective treatment for recurrent kidney stones would be a significant step forward.

He said bigger kidney stones were currently treated by using shock waves to break them up, but this was not always completely effective. Passing a stone in the urine intact can be extremely painful, and even getting rid of the smaller pieces created by shock treatment could cause significant pain.

"For some people kidney stones can be an on-going lifelong problem," he said. And in some cases a stone can destroy kidney function before it is even identified."

However, Machin warned that there was much work to be done before clinical trials of a probiotic could be considered. He said kidney stones had been linked to dehydration and were more common in countries such as Saudi Arabia where the climate is hot and dry.

In instances they may be linked to an unusually high rate of calcium excretion. "However," he said, "in many cases there was no obvious cause for the condition. It is a particular problem for airline pilots, who are not allowed to fly if they have a stone."

Reference:
Source: BBC NEWS, March 09, 2008
Article Name: Probiotic hope for kidney stones