| Literature DB >> 22935250 |
Erica Perrier1, Sébastien Vergne, Alexis Klein, Marie Poupin, Pascale Rondeau, Laurent Le Bellego, Lawrence E Armstrong, Florian Lang, Jodi Stookey, Ivan Tack.
Abstract
Little is known about the impact of habitual fluid intake on physiology. Specifically, biomarkers of hydration status and body water regulation have not been adequately explored in adults who consume different fluid volumes in everyday conditions, without prolonged exercise or environmental exposure. The purpose of the present study was to compare adults with habitually different fluid intakes with respect to biomarkers implicated in the assessment of hydration status, the regulation of total body water and the risk of kidney pathologies. In the present cross-sectional study, seventy-one adults (thirty-two men, thirty-nine women, age 25–40 years) were classified according to daily fluid intake: thirty-nine low drinkers (LD; ≤ 1·2 litres/d) and thirty-two high drinkers (HD; 2–4 litres/d). During four consecutive days, urinary parameters (first morning urine (FMU) on day 1 and subsequent 24 h urine (24hU) collections), blood parameters, and food and beverage intake were assessed. ANOVA and non-parametric comparisons revealed significant differences between the LD and HD groups in 24hU volume (1·0 (se 0·1) v. 2·4 (se 0·1) litres), specific gravity (median 1·023 v. 1·010), osmolality (767 (se 27) v. 371 (se 33) mOsm/kg) and colour (3·1 (se 0·2) v. 1·8 (se 0·2)). Similarly, in the FMU, the LD group produced a smaller amount of more concentrated urine. Plasma cortisol, creatinine and arginine vasopressin concentrations were significantly higher among the LD. Plasma osmolality was similar between the groups, suggesting physiological adaptations to preserve plasma osmolality despite low fluid intake. The long-term impact of adaptations to preserve plasma osmolality must be examined, particularly in the context of renal health.Entities:
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Year: 2012 PMID: 22935250 PMCID: PMC3638312 DOI: 10.1017/S0007114512003601
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Br J Nutr ISSN: 0007-1145 Impact factor: 3.718
Fig. 1Schematic of subject recruitment, group allocation and experimental phase. 24hU, 24 h urine; LD, low drinker; HD, high drinker; FMU, first morning urine.
Fig. 2Mean daily total fluid consumption classified by beverage class, for female and male low drinkers (LD) and high drinkers (HD). , Alcoholic beverages; , carbonated beverages; , sweetened still beverages; , hot beverages; , milk and milk products; , flavoured water; ■, water.
Characteristics of the first morning urine in the low and high drinkers (Adjusted mean values with their standard errors; medians and quartiles)
| Low drinkers ( | High drinkers ( |
| ||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Adjusted mean |
| Median | Q1–Q3 | Adjusted mean |
| Median | Q1–Q3 | Group effect | Sex effect | |
| Normal distribution: mixed ANOVA linear model | ||||||||||
| Volume (litres) | 0·233 | 0·020 | 0·301 | 0·024 | 0·035 | NS | ||||
| USG | 1·021 | 0·001 | 1·016 | 0·001 | 0·020 | NS | ||||
| Osmolality (mOsm/kg) | 794 | 40 | 590 | 47 | 0·001 | NS | ||||
| Na (mmol/l) | 116·8 | 6·5 | 76·8 | 7·7 | < 0·001 | NS | ||||
| K (mmol/l) | 42·6 | 3·5 | 31·7 | 4·1 | 0·046 | NS | ||||
| Phosphate (mmol/l) | 37·0 | 2·6 | 27·6 | 3·0 | 0·022 | NS | ||||
| Creatinine (mmol/l) | 17·5 | 1·0 | 12·5 | 1·2 | 0·003 | NS | ||||
| Uric acid (mmol/l) | 3·4 | 0·2 | 2·5 | 0·3 | 0·007 | NS | ||||
| Urea (mmol/l) | 432·6 | 24·6 | 332·0 | 29·0 | 0·010 | NS | ||||
| Mg (mmol/l) | 3·8 | 0·4 | 3·7 | 0·4 | NS | NS | ||||
| pH | 6·0 | 0·1 | 5·9 | 0·1 | NS | NS | ||||
| Tiselius CRI | 1·31 | 0·16 | 1·42 | 0·20 | NS | NS | ||||
| Normality assumption rejected: non-parametric Wilcoxon rank-sum test | ||||||||||
| Citrate (μmol/l) | 1918 | 1081–2953 | 1304 | 709–2067 | 0·026 | |||||
| Ca (mmol/l) | 4·3 | 2·6–6·4 | 2·7 | 1·7–4·8 | 0·051 | |||||
| Colour(20,21) | 3·0 | 2·0–4·0 | 2·5 | 2·0–3·0 | NS | |||||
| Cortisol (nmol/l) | 46·9 | 24·8–71·7 | 35·9 | 19·3–52·4 | NS | |||||
| Aldosterone (nmol/l) | 27 | 13–41 | 23 | 11–38 | NS | |||||
| Oxalate (μmol/l) | 266 | 177–432 | 261 | 183–438 | NS |
USG, urine specific gravity; CRI, Crystallization Risk Index.
Characteristics of 24 h urine in the low and high drinkers (Adjusted mean values with their standard errors; medians and quartiles)
| Low drinkers ( | High drinkers ( |
| ||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Adjusted mean |
| Median | Q1–Q3 | Adjusted mean |
| Median | Q1–Q3 | Group effect | Sex effect | |
| Normal distribution: mixed ANOVA linear model | ||||||||||
| Volume (litres) | 1·011 | 0·081 | 2·387 | 0·097 | < 0·001 | 0·002 | ||||
| Colour | 3·1 | 0·2 | 1·8 | 0·2 | < 0·001 | NS | ||||
| Osmolality (mOsm/kg) | 767 | 27 | 371 | 33 | < 0·001 | NS | ||||
| Na (mmol/24h) | 110·1 | 6·2 | 140·1 | 7·5 | 0·003 | < 0·001 | ||||
| K (mmol/24h) | 55·9 | 2·8 | 64·0 | 3·4 | NS | < 0·001 | ||||
| Mg (mmol/24h) | 3·0 | 0·1 | 3·3 | 0·2 | NS | < 0·001 | ||||
| Ca (mmol/24h) | 4·5 | 0·3 | 4·7 | 0·4 | NS | < 0·001 | ||||
| Phosphate (mmol/24h) | 25·4 | 1·1 | 24·4 | 1·3 | NS | < 0·001 | ||||
| Creatinine (mmol/24h) | 13·6 | 0·4 | 12·5 | 0·5 | NS | < 0·001 | ||||
| CrCl (ml/min) | 116·8 | 3·7 | 116·0 | 4·4 | NS | < 0·001 | ||||
| Uric acid (mmol/24h) | 3·1 | 0·1 | 3·3 | 0·2 | NS | < 0·001 | ||||
| Urea (mmol/24h) | 347·3 | 16·4 | 357·8 | 19·6 | NS | < 0·001 | ||||
| pH | 6·2 | 0·1 | 6·2 | 0·1 | NS | NS | ||||
| Normality assumption rejected: non-parametric Wilcoxon rank-sum test | ||||||||||
| USG | 1·023 | 1·018–1·027 | 1·010 | 1·008–1·011 | < 0·001 (all visits) | |||||
| Cortisol (nmol/24h) | 74 | 47–104 | 103 | 85–126 | < 0·05 (V4, V5) | |||||
| Oxalate (μmol/24h) | 266 | 188–388 | 482 | 266–666 | < 0·05 (all visits) | |||||
| Tiselius CRI | 1·3 | 1·1–1·9 | 0·8 | 0·5–1·4 | < 0·05 (all visits) | |||||
| Aldosterone (nmol/24h) | 33 | 22–49 | 30 | 24–49 | NS | |||||
| Citrate (μmol/24h) | 2342 | 1253–2688 | 2069 | 1700–3349 | NS |
CrCl, creatinine clearance; USG, urine specific gravity; CRI, Crystallization Risk Index.
P values were significantly higher than those for females.
Fig. 3Distribution of 24 h urine osmolality measurements among the low drinkers () and high drinkers ().
Characteristics of fasting blood samples in the low and high drinkers (Adjusted mean values with their standard errors; medians and quartiles)
| Low drinkers ( | High drinkers ( |
| ||||||||
| Adjusted mean |
| Median | Q1–Q3 | Adjusted mean |
| Median | Q1–Q3 | Group effect | Sex effect | |
| Normal distribution: mixed ANOVA linear model | ||||||||||
| Cortisol (nmol/l) | 545·0 | 21·6 | 459·2 | 25·5 | 0·012 | < 0·001 | ||||
| Creatinine (μmol/l) | 80·1 | 1·4 | 74·5 | 1·7 | 0·013 | < 0·001 | ||||
| Haematocrit | 0·412 | 0·003 | 0·408 | 0·004 | NS | < 0·001 | ||||
| Normality assumption rejected: non-parametric Wilcoxon rank-sum test | ||||||||||
| AVP (pmol/l) | 2·4 | 1·8–3·4 | 1·5 | 1·1–1·9 | < 0·001 (all visits) | |||||
| Renin (pg/ml) | 18·5 | 13·1–33·7 | 20·9 | 17·3–27·2 | NS | |||||
| Aldosterone (pmol/l) | 406 | 277–604 | 477 | 296–699 | NS | |||||
| Posm (mOsm/kg) | 289 | 284–294 | 288 | 284–293 | NS |
AVP, arginine vasopressin; Posm, plasma osmolality.
P values in males were significantly higher than those in females.
P values in females were significantly higher than those in males.