Detection of Euhydration in Humans from the Diuresis Response to a Water Load

 

Guardado en:
書目詳細資料
Autores: Capitán Jiménez, Catalina, Aragón Vargas, Luis Fernando
格式: artículo preliminar
Fecha de Publicación:2011
實物特徵:Aim: to calculate the minimum amount of water to be ingested in order to find significant differences in one-hour urine volume between euhydrated and dehydrated humans. Methods: Five participants (22.6±2.9 years old, 63.70±13.18 kg; mean±standard deviation) were evaluated following an overnight fast, on eight different non-consecutive days. For the euhydration condition (EuA, EuB, EuC and EuD), they remained seated for 45 minutes. For the dehydration condition (DeA, DeB, DeC and DeD), they exercised intermittently at 33±4°C, 65±6% relative humidity until they were dehydrated by 1% of body mass (BM). The order of treatments was randomized. Next, they ingested a water volume equivalent to 0.5% BM, 0.72% BM, 1.07% BM or 1.43% BM in 30 minutes, under both the euhydration and the dehydration conditions. Urine volumes were collected 0, 30, and 60 minutes after water ingestion. Results: baseline values were consistent among conditions (p>0.05), and there was no difference in water intake volume between the euhydration and the dehydration conditions (p>0.05). There was a clear association between the volume of water intake and urine volume (R2= 0.64, R2a= 0.58; p= 0.001); in addition, this tendency was different between euhydration and dehydration (interaction p=0.005). Finally, ingestion of water equivalent to 1.07% BM or more resulted in a 95% CI for the urine volume difference between euhydration and dehydration greater than 100 mL. Conclusion: the minimum volume of water to be ingested to detect a 100 mL difference in one-hour urine volume between euhydrated and dehydrated humans is 1.07% BM.
País:Kérwá
機構:Universidad de Costa Rica
Repositorio:Kérwá
OAI Identifier:oai:https://www.kerwa.ucr.ac.cr:10669/527
在線閱讀:https://hdl.handle.net/10669/527
Access Level:acceso abierto
Palabra clave:Water intake
Urine
Acute hydration status
Dehydration
Fluid balance
Euhydration