1. The demonstration of an inheritable anomaly of erythrocyte oxalate transport in ‘primary’ calcium nephrolithiasis suggested that this disease might be a generalized metabolic disorder characterized by a defect in cellular anion transport.

2. To determine whether this anomaly is restricted to oxalate alone, we studied erythrocyte transmembrane urate self-exchange in calcium-oxalate renal stone formers in whom urinary excretion of uric acid is frequently increased.

3. Abnormal urate self-exchange was found in 30% of the patients. The urate self-exchange rate constant was correlated with 24 h urinary excretion of uric acid; the erythrocyte anomaly was also associated with the frequency of hyperuricosuria and a more intense disease activity. Transmembrane urate self-exchange was inhibited by stilbene and heparan sulphate. Morphazinamide administration did not reduce urinary urate excretion in patients with abnormal urate erythrocyte self-exchange.

4. These findings suggest that hyperuricosuria during calcium-oxalate renal stone disease might be due to a cellular defect in urate transport, and further support the hypothesis that idiopathic nephrolithiasis is a metabolic disorder characterized by a defect in cellular anion transport.

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