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The effect of inositol-hexakisphosphate (phytate) on urinary risk factors for calcium oxalate urolithiasis in South African population groups with different kidney stone risk profiles : theoretical modelling, in vitro crystallisation experiments and in vivo human studies

The principal aims of this thesis were to establish whether soluble calcium-phytate complexes inhibit calcium oxalate crystallisation and whether a higher dietary intake of phytate in South African black subjects compared to white subjects may contribute to the relative rarity of urolithiasis in thi...

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Main Author: Fakier, Saajidah
Other Authors: Rodgers, Allen
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: Department of Chemistry 2016
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access_status_str Open Access
author Fakier, Saajidah
author2 Rodgers, Allen
author_browse Fakier, Saajidah
Rodgers, Allen
author_facet Rodgers, Allen
Fakier, Saajidah
author_sort Fakier, Saajidah
collection Thesis
description The principal aims of this thesis were to establish whether soluble calcium-phytate complexes inhibit calcium oxalate crystallisation and whether a higher dietary intake of phytate in South African black subjects compared to white subjects may contribute to the relative rarity of urolithiasis in this group. Potentiometric titrations were conducted to determine thermodynamic binding constants of soluble calcium-phytate complexes. Binding constants of seven complexes were identified. These were included in the data base of the Joint Experts Speciation System computer program to model the effect of phytate on the urinary supersaturation of calcium salts. Physiological concentrations of phytate failed to decrease ionized calcium and hence the urinary supersaturation of calcium salts. These theoretical predictions were then tested in an in vitro model. Calcium oxalate crystallisation experiments were conducted in simple salt solutions, artificial urine and real urine of the respective groups. The following parameters were measured: ionized calcium; calcium oxalate metastable limit; calcium oxalate particle volume-size distribution; calcium oxalate crystal nucleation, aggregation and growth kinetics. Deposited crystals were examined by scanning electron microscopy. The results confirmed those of the theoretical modelling. Furthermore, the results demonstrated that the inhibitory capacity of phytate is of a kinetic nature rather than a thermodynamic one. Phytate inhibited calcium oxalate crystal aggregation and the inhibition of calcium oxalate crystal growth was found to be independent of the physiological concentration of phytate. In vivo studies were conducted in which phytate-deficient, phytate-rich diets and a phytate supplement were administered in healthy black and white male volunteers. The baseline intake of phytate was assessed using food frequency questionnaires; urinary phytate was determined using a novel assay; biochemical and physiochemical urinary risk factors were measured. The black group had a significantly higher baseline intake of phytate culminating in a significantly higher urinary phytate excretion. No significant difference in urinary crystallisation kinetics was observed as being due to phytate per se. The findings of this thesis contribute to the pool of knowledge on urolithiasis and provide insight on the relative rarity of this disease in South Africa's black population.
format Thesis
id oai:open.uct.ac.za:11427/19975
institution University of Cape Town (South Africa)
language eng
last_indexed 2026-06-10T12:32:50.328Z
license_str Not specified — see source repository
provenance_str_mv Harvested via OAI-PMH from UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
publishDate 2016
publishDateRange 2016
publishDateSort 2016
publisher Department of Chemistry
publisherStr Department of Chemistry
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source_str UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
spelling oai:open.uct.ac.za:11427/19975 The effect of inositol-hexakisphosphate (phytate) on urinary risk factors for calcium oxalate urolithiasis in South African population groups with different kidney stone risk profiles : theoretical modelling, in vitro crystallisation experiments and in vivo human studies Fakier, Saajidah Rodgers, Allen Jackson, Graham Ellis Chemistry The principal aims of this thesis were to establish whether soluble calcium-phytate complexes inhibit calcium oxalate crystallisation and whether a higher dietary intake of phytate in South African black subjects compared to white subjects may contribute to the relative rarity of urolithiasis in this group. Potentiometric titrations were conducted to determine thermodynamic binding constants of soluble calcium-phytate complexes. Binding constants of seven complexes were identified. These were included in the data base of the Joint Experts Speciation System computer program to model the effect of phytate on the urinary supersaturation of calcium salts. Physiological concentrations of phytate failed to decrease ionized calcium and hence the urinary supersaturation of calcium salts. These theoretical predictions were then tested in an in vitro model. Calcium oxalate crystallisation experiments were conducted in simple salt solutions, artificial urine and real urine of the respective groups. The following parameters were measured: ionized calcium; calcium oxalate metastable limit; calcium oxalate particle volume-size distribution; calcium oxalate crystal nucleation, aggregation and growth kinetics. Deposited crystals were examined by scanning electron microscopy. The results confirmed those of the theoretical modelling. Furthermore, the results demonstrated that the inhibitory capacity of phytate is of a kinetic nature rather than a thermodynamic one. Phytate inhibited calcium oxalate crystal aggregation and the inhibition of calcium oxalate crystal growth was found to be independent of the physiological concentration of phytate. In vivo studies were conducted in which phytate-deficient, phytate-rich diets and a phytate supplement were administered in healthy black and white male volunteers. The baseline intake of phytate was assessed using food frequency questionnaires; urinary phytate was determined using a novel assay; biochemical and physiochemical urinary risk factors were measured. The black group had a significantly higher baseline intake of phytate culminating in a significantly higher urinary phytate excretion. No significant difference in urinary crystallisation kinetics was observed as being due to phytate per se. The findings of this thesis contribute to the pool of knowledge on urolithiasis and provide insight on the relative rarity of this disease in South Africa's black population. 2016-06-09T11:20:02Z 2016-06-09T11:20:02Z 2015 Doctoral Thesis Doctoral PhD http://hdl.handle.net/11427/19975 eng application/pdf Department of Chemistry Faculty of Science University of Cape Town
spellingShingle Chemistry
Fakier, Saajidah
The effect of inositol-hexakisphosphate (phytate) on urinary risk factors for calcium oxalate urolithiasis in South African population groups with different kidney stone risk profiles : theoretical modelling, in vitro crystallisation experiments and in vivo human studies
thesis_degree_str Doctoral
title The effect of inositol-hexakisphosphate (phytate) on urinary risk factors for calcium oxalate urolithiasis in South African population groups with different kidney stone risk profiles : theoretical modelling, in vitro crystallisation experiments and in vivo human studies
title_full The effect of inositol-hexakisphosphate (phytate) on urinary risk factors for calcium oxalate urolithiasis in South African population groups with different kidney stone risk profiles : theoretical modelling, in vitro crystallisation experiments and in vivo human studies
title_fullStr The effect of inositol-hexakisphosphate (phytate) on urinary risk factors for calcium oxalate urolithiasis in South African population groups with different kidney stone risk profiles : theoretical modelling, in vitro crystallisation experiments and in vivo human studies
title_full_unstemmed The effect of inositol-hexakisphosphate (phytate) on urinary risk factors for calcium oxalate urolithiasis in South African population groups with different kidney stone risk profiles : theoretical modelling, in vitro crystallisation experiments and in vivo human studies
title_short The effect of inositol-hexakisphosphate (phytate) on urinary risk factors for calcium oxalate urolithiasis in South African population groups with different kidney stone risk profiles : theoretical modelling, in vitro crystallisation experiments and in vivo human studies
title_sort effect of inositol hexakisphosphate phytate on urinary risk factors for calcium oxalate urolithiasis in south african population groups with different kidney stone risk profiles theoretical modelling in vitro crystallisation experiments and in vivo human studies
topic Chemistry
url http://hdl.handle.net/11427/19975
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AT fakiersaajidah effectofinositolhexakisphosphatephytateonurinaryriskfactorsforcalciumoxalateurolithiasisinsouthafricanpopulationgroupswithdifferentkidneystoneriskprofilestheoreticalmodellinginvitrocrystallisationexperimentsandinvivohumanstudies