Publication | Open Access
Estimating dietary sodium intake in individuals receiving a randomly fluctuating intake.
160
Citations
21
References
1982
Year
Dietary AssessmentNutritionNutritional EpidemiologyDietary ExposurePublic Health NutritionObesitySodium IntakeBody CompositionDietary Sodium IntakeDietary IntakeBiostatisticsNocturnal Urine CollectionsPopulation NutritionPublic HealthChronic Kidney DiseaseMedical NutritionClinical NutritionNocturnal CollectionsPhysiologyNutritional SciencesMedicineNephrologyNutrition Assessment
Previous investigations examining techniques to estimate sodium intake in free-living persons failed to consider a varying intake or were not conducted under circumstances in which the intake was actually known. To examine the utility of 24-hour and nocturnal urine collections as estimation of sodium intake under such conditions, we studied 43 white and black men and women ingesting a known sodium intake for 10 days that was randomly varied daily, with a mean intake of 150 mEq/day + 2 SD (range, 50 to 250 mEq/day). The mean 24-hour sodium excretion (UNaV) per day was and 24-hour UNaV estimated that day's sodium intake accurately for the entire 10 days, the average of several 24-hour collections was required. Nine collections were optimal (r = 0.75). Nocturnal specimens were not helpful; the average of all 10 collections correlated weakly (r = 0.30) with sodium intake. These data suggest that to estimate mean sodium intake accurately in free-living persons, only 24-hour collections are useful, although nocturnal collections are helpful in evaluating compliance with low sodium intake.
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