Literature DB >> 20576202

Twenty-four-hour urinary water-soluble vitamin levels correlate with their intakes in free-living Japanese schoolchildren.

Tomiko Tsuji1, Tsutomu Fukuwatari, Satoshi Sasaki, Katsumi Shibata.   

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: To examine the association between 24 h urinary water-soluble vitamin levels and their intakes in free-living Japanese schoolchildren.
DESIGN: All foods consumed for four consecutive days were recorded accurately by a weighed food record. A single 24 h urine sample was collected on the fourth day, and the urinary levels of water-soluble vitamins were measured.
SETTING: An elementary school in Inazawa City, Japan.
SUBJECTS: A total of 114 healthy, free-living, Japanese elementary-school children aged 10-12 years.
RESULTS: The urinary level of each water-soluble vitamin was correlated positively to its mean intake in the past 2-4 d (vitamin B1: r = 0·42, P < 0·001; vitamin B2: r = 0·43, P < 0·001; vitamin B6: r = 0·49, P < 0·001; niacin: r = 0·32, P < 0·001; niacin equivalents: r = 0·32, P < 0·001; pantothenic acid: r = 0·32, P < 0·001; folic acid: r = 0·27, P < 0·01; vitamin C: r = 0·39, P < 0.001), except for vitamin B12 (r = 0·10, P = NS). Estimated mean intakes of water-soluble vitamins calculated using urinary levels and recovery rates were 97-102 % of their 3 d mean intake, except for vitamin B12 (79 %).
CONCLUSIONS: The results show that urinary levels of water-soluble vitamins, except for vitamin B12, reflected their recent intakes in free-living Japanese schoolchildren and could be used as a potential biomarker to estimate mean vitamin intake.

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Year:  2010        PMID: 20576202     DOI: 10.1017/S1368980010001904

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Public Health Nutr        ISSN: 1368-9800            Impact factor:   4.022


  7 in total

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