| Literature DB >> 25758212 |
Abstract
For policy goal setting, efficacy evaluations, and the development of related programs for reducing sodium intake, it is essential to accurately identify the amount of sodium intake in South Korea and constantly monitor its trends. The present study aimed to identify the status of sodium intake in South Korea and to review the methods and their validity for estimating sodium intake in each country; through this, we aim to determine more accurate methods for determining sodium intake and to monitor the trend in sodium intake for Korean citizens in the future. Using 24-hour dietary recall data from the 2012 Korea National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey (KNHANES) to estimate daily sodium intake, the average daily sodium intake among Koreans was 4,546 mg (men, 5,212 mg; women, 3,868 mg). In addition to the nutrition survey that uses the 24-hour dietary recall method, sodium intake can also be calculated from the amount of sodium excreted in 24-hour urine, 8-hour overnight urine, and spot urine samples. Although KNHANES uses the 24-hour dietary recall method to estimate the sodium intake, the 24-hour dietary recall method has the disadvantage of not being able to accurately determine the amount of sodium intake owing to its unique characteristics of the research method and in the processing of data. Although measuring the amount of sodium excreted in 24-hour urine is known to be the most accurate method, because collecting 24-hour urine from the general population is difficult, using spot urine samples to estimate sodium intake has been suggested to be useful for examining the trend of sodium intake in the general population. Therefore, we planned to conduct a study for estimating of 24-hour sodium excretion from spot urine and 8-hour overnight urine samples and testing the validity among subsamples in the KNHANES. Based on this result, we will adopt the most appropriate urine collection method for estimating population sodium intake in South Korea.Entities:
Keywords: Dietary Reference Intake; Korea National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey; Nutrition assessment; Sodium; Urine; Validity
Year: 2014 PMID: 25758212 PMCID: PMC4371387 DOI: 10.4178/epih/e2014033
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Epidemiol Health ISSN: 2092-7193
Figure 1.Trend in mean daily intake of sodium among Koreans above 1 year of age, Korea National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey (1998-2012). The age-standardized mean was calculated using an estimated population, based on the 2005 census of the Korean population. Since 2007, a revised food composition table was used to calculate the sodium intake.
Figure 2.Prevalence of excessive sodium intake compared to the Korean Dietary Reference Intake among Koreans above 9 years of age, the 2012 Korea National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey. Values are presented as percentages and confidence intervals. The goal for sodium intake of Korean Dietary Reference Intake was established at 2,000 mg/d for those above 9 years of age. The age-standardized prevalence according to the area of residence and household income was calculated using an estimated population, based on the 2005 census of the Korean population.
Studies that compared the 24-hour dietary recall method with the 24-hour urine collection method for the estimation of sodium intake in a healthy population
| Authors (published year) [Ref] | Country | Population | Sample size (age) | No. of days of 24-hour recall | No. of days of 24-hour urine | Correlation coefficient between dietary sodium intake and 24-hour urinary sodium |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Espeland et al. (2001) [ | US | Elderly cohort participants | M: 181, F: 160 (60-79 yr) | 5 | 5 | r = 0.30 |
| Sasaki et al. (2003) [ | Japan | Cohort participants | M: 32, F: 57 | 28 | 2 | r = 0.38 for men |
| r=0.47 for women | ||||||
| Reinivuo et al. (2006) [ | Finland | Random population | M: 410, F: 469 (25-64 yr) | 2 | 1 | r = 0.3 |
| Shin et al. (2010) [ | South Korea | Healthy volunteers | F: 236 ( ≥ 20 yr) | 3 | 1 | r = 0.11 |
| Rhodes et al. (2013) [ | US | Healthy volunteers | M: 232, F: 233 (30-69 yr) | 1-2 | 1-2 | r = 0.18-0.43 according to the body mass index |
Ref, reference; M, male; F, female.
Studies that compared spot or overnight urine samples with the 24-hour urine samples for the estimation of sodium intake in a healthy population
| Authors (published year) [Ref] | Country | Population | Sample size (age) | Type of urine sample | Correlation coefficient between spot or overnight urinary sodium and 24-hour urinary sodium |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Spot urine samples | |||||
| Kawasaki et al. (1982) [ | Japan | Healthy volunteers | M: 91, F: 151 (20-63 yr) | Spot urine | r = 0.47 for 1 d |
| r = 0.73 for 1 d after discarding outliers | |||||
| r = 0.62 for 3 d | |||||
| Kawasaki et al. (1993) [ | Japan | Healthy free-living individuals | Adults: 159 (20-79 yr) | Spot urine (second morning urine) | r = 0.728 |
| r = 0.51 for 1 d to 0.82 for 3 d | |||||
| Costa et al. (1994) [ | Brazil | Healthy individuals | Adults: 611 (20-74 yr) | Spot urine | r = 0.28 |
| Tanaka et al. (2002) [ | Japan | INTERSALT participants | M: 295, F: 296 (20-59 yr) | Spot urine | r = 0.54 |
| Mann & Gerber (2010) [ | US | Unselected volunteers | M: 81 (21-82 yr) | Spot urine | r = 0.17 |
| Morning urine | r = 0.31 | ||||
| Evening urine | r = 0.86 | ||||
| Brown et al. (2013) [ | Europe | INTERSALT participants (29 populations) | M: 1,369, F: 1,376 (20-59 yr) | Spot urine (individual level) | r = 0.50 for men |
| Spot urine (population level) | r = 0.51 for women | ||||
| r = 0.79 for men | |||||
| r = 0.71 for women | |||||
| Overnight urine samples | |||||
| Watson & Langford (1970) [ | US | Students | F: 52 (20-22 yr) | Overnight urine | r = 0.76 |
| Liu et al. (1979) [ | US | Volunteers | M: 116 (30-44 yr) | Overnight urine | r = 0.72 |
| Kamata & Tochikubo (2002) [ | Japan | Healthy individuals | M: 71. F: 78 (35-49 yr) | Overnight urine | r = 0.73 for men |
| r = 0.78 for women | |||||
Ref, reference; M, male; F, female.