Literature DB >> 29525305

Evaluation of creatinine as a urine marker and factors affecting urinary excretion of magnesium by dairy cows.

A W Tebbe1, W P Weiss2.   

Abstract

Nutrient balance studies require measuring urine volume, and urinary excretion can be used to assess Mg bioavailability. A less laborious method than total collection of urine could make balance studies more feasible and expand the utility of using urinary Mg as an index of bioavailability, but the method needs to be accurate and sensitive. Sampling interval can affect accuracy because excretion must be at steady state. Two experiments were conducted to (1) determine whether urinary creatinine could be used to accurately estimate urinary output of nutrients markedly excreted via urine (N, K, Na, S, and Mg; experiment 1) and (2) determine the appropriate sampling schedule to evaluate Mg excretion after abrupt diet changes (experiment 2). Experiment 1 was originally designed to evaluate the interaction of monensin [0 vs. 14 mg of monensin/kg of dry matter (DM)] and Mg source (MgO vs. MgSO4; total diet Mg: 0.36% of DM) under antagonism from increased dietary K (2.11% of DM) on urinary Mg excretion. Experiment 2 evaluated the interaction of Mg concentration (basal vs. supplemental MgO; total diet Mg: 0.20 vs. 0.42% of DM) and K (basal vs. supplemental K2CO3; total diet K: 1.60 vs. 2.57% of DM) on urinary Mg excretion over time. Using 4-d composite samples from total collection of urine (n = 34 cow-periods), the average daily excretion of creatinine was similar to previous estimates (29.0 ± 1.16 mg of creatinine/kg of body weight) but was variable among cows (root mean squared error = 2,980 mg/d; 14% of mean). Treatment-average estimated excretion of urine and urinary N, K, Na, S, and Mg were similar to actual values; however, differences between actual and estimated values could be substantial for individual cows. Using the mean creatinine excretion per kilogram of body weight for all cows to estimate urine eliminates the lack of fit variance resulting in artificially low within-treatment variation for estimated urine volume. The standard error of the mean for estimated urine volume was 23% less (1.93 vs. 2.51) than that for actual urine production. This inflated the type I error rate, and, consequently, statistical inferences on N and K excretion differed when urine output was estimated rather than measured. The standard error of the mean for excretion of Mg calculated with actual or estimated urine production were almost identical (0.92 vs. 0.97); however, similar standard error of the mean was likely caused by differences in the covariance of urinary Mg concentration with estimated or actual urine output. Based on spot sampling (experiment 2), urinary Mg reached steady state by 2 d following an increase in dietary K regardless of Mg level, whereas excretion of urinary Mg following an increase in dietary Mg continued to increase through 7 d. Estimating nutrient excretion with urinary creatinine and body weight on average is accurate, but variance is likely underestimated. Knowing the time course of urinary Mg excretion will improve the value of using urinary Mg concentration to assess diet adequacy or Mg bioavailability.
Copyright © 2018 American Dairy Science Association. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

Entities:  

Keywords:  creatinine; magnesium; nutrient excretion; urinary marker

Mesh:

Substances:

Year:  2018        PMID: 29525305     DOI: 10.3168/jds.2017-14098

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Dairy Sci        ISSN: 0022-0302            Impact factor:   4.034


  2 in total

1.  Changes in plasma pH and blood and urinary macromineral concentrations in experimentally induced hypocalcemic cows with Na2EDTA.

Authors:  Younghye Ro; Woojae Choi; Junho Park; Eunhui Choe; Danil Kim
Journal:  J Vet Med Sci       Date:  2020-05-25       Impact factor: 1.267

2.  Preliminary study on the effect of season on urinary analytes in healthy Italian dairy cows.

Authors:  Monica Probo; Alessia Giordano; Valentina Rocca; Pierangelo Moretti; Saverio Paltrinieri
Journal:  Vet Clin Pathol       Date:  2022-04-05       Impact factor: 1.333

  2 in total

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