The effects of elevated phosphate on the kidney - damaging the gatekeeper
Tanecia Mitchell, Vivek Verma, Abul Fajol, Christian Faul

TL;DR
This paper explores how high phosphate levels can damage the kidneys, contributing to chronic kidney disease and kidney stones.
Contribution
The paper introduces the idea that elevated renal tubular phosphate, not just serum phosphate, drives kidney injury.
Findings
Tubular phosphate can form microcrystals that damage kidney cells and cause calcification.
Hyperphosphaturia may contribute to kidney damage in both CKD and genetic diseases.
High dietary phosphate intake could induce kidney damage even without CKD.
Abstract
The kidney is a major regulator of phosphate metabolism. The body can lower systemic phosphate levels by increasing renal phosphate excretion, and kidney injury results in elevated serum phosphate concentrations (hyperphosphatemia). Chronic kidney disease (CKD) is associated with various organ injuries, including vascular calcification and cardiovascular disease, where hyperphosphatemia acts as a pathologic driver. Here we discuss hyperphosphatemia not as a consequence of kidney disease but as a potential contributor to kidney damage. We describe how increases in renal tubular phosphate levels (hyperphosphaturia), rather than hyperphosphatemia contribute to kidney injury in CKD. Tubular phosphate can form microcrystals with calcium which damages renal epithelial cells, induces fibrosis and inflammation, and causes parenchymal calcification. Calcium phosphate microcrystals can grow and…
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Taxonomy
TopicsParathyroid Disorders and Treatments · Acute Kidney Injury Research · Biomedical Research and Pathophysiology
