OBJECTIVE: Bacterial imprints are always observed on highly carbonated apatite kidney stones but not struvite kidney stones. Struvite and carbonated apatite stones with a high CO(3)(2-)/PO(4)(3-) rate are believed to develop from infections, but their structural differences at the mesoscopic scale lack explanation.
METHODS: We investigated 17 urinary calculi composed mainly of struvite or carbonated apatite by Fourier transform infrared, scanning electron microscopy, and powder neutron diffraction techniques.
RESULTS: Carbonated apatite but not struvite stones showed bacterial imprints. If the same stone contained both carbonated apatite and struvite components, bacterial imprints were observed on the carbonated apatite but not the struvite part. Moreover, neutron powder diffraction experiments revealed the crystal size of struvite stones were larger than that of carbonated apatite stones (250 ± 50 vs 50 nm).
CONCLUSION: Bacterial imprints may appear more easily on kidney stones with small nanocrystals, such as carbonated apatite than with large nanocrystals, such as struvite. This approach may help identify bacteria contributing to stone formation, perhaps with negative results of urine culture.
Written by:
Bazin D, André G, Weil R, Matzen G, Emmanuel V, Carpentier X, Daudon M Are you the author?
Laboratoire de Physique des Solides, Université Paris XI, Orsay, France.
Reference: Urology. 2012 Apr;79(4):786-90
doi:10.1016/j.urology.2011.08.054
PubMed Abstract
PMID: 22112288