| Literature DB >> 16843938 |
J M Hibbert1, A A Jackson, C Persaud.
Abstract
Urea kinetics (urea-N production-P, excretion-E, hydrolysis-H, recycling-R and retention-S) were measured in 7 healthy adults consuming a standard diet compared with 4 fasted for 24 and/or 96 h, using primed/intermittent doses of [(15)N (15)N]-urea and mass spectrometry. Standard values were P = 196, E = 132, H = 65, R = 13 and S = 51, mgN/kg/day. After 24 h fasting all urea kinetics were reduced, and P and H were significantly reduced compared with the standard diet (p < 0.01 and < 0.05 respectively). After 96 h fasting, urea kinetics returned to standard values (P = 187, E = 136, H = 51, R =13 and S = 38, mgN/kg/day), although nitrogen intake was significantly lower (p < 0.001). Relative urea excretion (E/P) was 67%, standard diet, and 75% after fasting. Consequently H/P was slightly reduced from 33 to 25%. S/P was 26%, standard diet, 15% after 24 h and 20% after 96 h fasting, suggesting increased urea-N retention with prolonged fasting. These results imply a slight temporary shift towards increased nitrogen excretion at 24 h and subsequent return to the kinetics of the fed state after 96 h. Urea-N retention increases with prolonged fasting.Entities:
Year: 1995 PMID: 16843938 DOI: 10.1016/s0261-5614(95)80006-9
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Clin Nutr ISSN: 0261-5614 Impact factor: 7.324