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Crystalline pathologies in the human body: first steps of pathogenesis Volume 78, issue 4, Juillet-Août 2020

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Authors
1 Institut de chimie physique, Université Paris XI, Orsay, France
2 Inserm, UMRS 1155, UPMC, Hôpital Tenon, Paris, France
3 Service d’explorations fonctionnelles, Hôpital Tenon, AP-HP, France
* Correspondance

The prevalence of crystalline pathologies including urolithiasis, gallstones, vascular calcifications and crystalline arthritis, is very high in the general population beyond 60 years old. Characterization of microcrystals in tissue at the micrometer and at the nanometer scale through physico-chemical techniques constitutes a new opportunity for the physician to decipher the early stage of the pathogenesis of these biological entities. In this review, such description indicates a wide variety of the chemical process associated to the nucleation process directly from supersaturated solution or from organic support such as DNA or elastin. We will also discuss the case of vesicles which play a major role in the case of ectopic calcification situated in kidney tissue, namely the Randall's plaque. All this research focused on the very first steps of the genesis of pathological calcifications constitute a major step to develop specific therapy able to avoid the formation of these abnormal deposits in tissues. As already underlined, crystals may be the consequence of various pathologies, but they are also involved in the dysfunction of the tissues.

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