Guest guest Posted September 23, 2010 Report Share Posted September 23, 2010 Kay, Oxalate is more often measured in urine, but that level may not agree with the level that is in the blood because the kidneys have their own regulation of secretion of oxalate. It is probably easier to get urine tested. The blood plasma test right now (I think Mayo is the lab which does this test no matter where you order it), is generally reserved for people who are in kidney failure so that their urine output is not normal. Another issue is that red blood cells carry oxalate, and there are medical conditions where they carry a larger percentage of blood oxalate than normally. Nobody I know of tests whole blood oxalate or RBC oxalate. Even so, in autism, since oxalate issues may develop because of differences in kidney management of oxalate and sulfate that could be genetic, it would be good to have a plasma test done so you have a better feel for what could be absorbed by your body's cells. The big issue there is likely insurance coverage. The main lab the research scientists use for their patients in measuring urine oxalate is Litholink, but they have a requirement that the patient has a kidney related diagnosis. Your doctor might have more success at Quest or Labcorp, and I doubt it would be easy to get a plasma test covered by insurance. Great Plains includes oxalic acid on their organic acid test, but the problem with that is that the way the sample is prepared is designed for the benefit of measuring all the organic acids on their test, and it is not the optimal way to measure oxalate in urine. If you split a sample and sent one for the organic acid test and another to a lab that measures oxalate by itself, the results might not match. Also, Great Plains has recently changed their reference ranges and they are way different from what studies of healthy controls has determined. Some one told me that they heard these new ranges were based on testing siblings of children with autism. If so, the familial (genetic) issues in areas that affect oxalate may have been what skewed their reference ranges. I have put a slide that reports pediatric ranges in normal healthy controls on our site at Trying_Low_Oxalates. Our project has found that the better and cheaper way to approach the problem is first to evaluate how much oxalate is in the diet by looking at the food charts, and have your doctor do an assessment of the leaky gut: either the lactulose/mannitol test, or an IgG food test. The other thing we learned by experience, is that for most people, when they reduce oxalate in the diet significantly, the body will shift gears very quickly (within days) from absorbing oxalate to secreting oxalate that was stored in cells. Even a fast might bring this on unintentionally. We called this process " dumping " because often in autistic children, this involved diarrhea or sandy stools. This process generally starts within a few days of when most people start the diet. That is often preceded by a day or two of new skills and other improvements that were so welcomed that we began to label those days " the honeymoon " . We've seen the same phenomenon outside autism, too, in people with other issues related to oxalate. But, you will have to get your doctor to order the lab tests, and the oxalate levels should be higher when you are " dumping " than before you start the diet. I don't think this period of active oxalate secretion we call " dumping " is restricted to those on LOD. This process may occur from time to time anyway as the body gets a chance to shift the direction from absorption of oxalate to secretion. There may be a certain extent to which it would happen daily or often. We just don't know. For instance, we heard of children with autism having sandy stools for years before I started the Autism Oxalate Project, but it was not until our project started that we found a situation where the sandy stools were happening frequently and in some, kind of regularly. Sometimes these stools included black specks, too. Hatch and Freel have done some study of the process of intestinal secretion of oxalate in rats or mice and how it seems to be regulated by some of the same hormones that regulate the renin-angiotensin system that controls your appetite for salt and water. There is no " normal " data on stool oxalate in humans to amount to anything, so no one in research is interested in testing the oxalate in those sandy stools for comparison. It is maybe possible that when oxalate is being secreted to the intestines that the urine oxalate wouldn't be high. This will have to be ironed out in studies. Some people may not dump because a higher percentage of their oxalate is made in their own bodies compared to being absorbed from food. This can happen in vitamin B6, thiamine, or magnesium deficiency, and it can also happen because of polymorphisms or mutations in the oxalate-related genes. I'm working at finding a way to do some pilot studies to make it easier to get testing to find out when these other issues are relevant. Bottom line is this: trying the diet for even just a week or two is a LOT easier than getting testing, but if you've been extremely high oxalate, you HAVE to ease into the diet, or you might end up having a miserable first detox! I hope that is helpful. > > Thanks . This is helpful & could be a potential reason. > Do you know if there are tests that doctors to do affirm this? Is levels of > Oxalate in serum an indicator? > > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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