The majority of these drugs crystallize in an acid media often around a pH of 5,0. Drugs of the sulfamides group (sulfamethoxazole, acetylsulfadiazine, sulfadiazine) are the most frequently observed.
Name | Characteristics | General aspect | Comments |
Acetylsulfadiazine, sulfadiazine | Yellow brown crystals of variable
shape
Asymetric rosette Birefringent |
Not to be confused with urates and
uric acid. Rarely used today. |
|
Sulfamethoxazole (Septra, Bactrim) |
Brown spheres thin plates and rosette |
Seen in overdosage | |
Ampicilline | Fine needles, uncolored | Rare, seen only at very high dose | |
Contrast agent Renografin Hypaque |
Uncolored plates Strongly birefringent Mimics cholesterol |
Seen in pale specimen with a density >1,040 |
Indinavir
Indinavir, a protease inhibitor (antiviral agent) widely used, to treat patients with HIV infection, has been associated with nephrolithiasis. Indinavir is insoluble at physiological pH so that, 20% of the person receiving Indinavir have characteristic crystal in their urine. The crystal are seen as plate-like rectangles exibiting rosette formationThe crystal are birefringent under polarized light with a color dispersion as seen with uric acid. Indinavir crystal, unlike uric acid, are seen at a neutral (6,5 7,5) while uric acid crystals are seen at a more acidic pH (5,0 - 5,5)