Publication | Open Access
Quantitative importance of non-skeletal-muscle sources of <i>N</i>τ-methylhistidine in urine
135
Citations
10
References
1980
Year
Quantitative ImportanceUrological ResearchUrologyMuscle FunctionPhysiological ResearchSkeletal MuscleN Tau-methylhistidine TurnoverSkeletal Muscle AccountsPhysiologyApplied PhysiologyMetabolismNeuromuscular PhysiologyMedicineHealth Sciences
Direct measurement of N tau-methylhistidine turnover in skeletal muscle, skin and gastrointestinal muscle indicates that these three tissues contribute only 24.9, 6.8 and 9.8% of the total urinary excretion. Measurement of the decay rate of radioactively labelled N tau-methylhistidine in urine indicates that skeletal muscle accounts for 74.5% of the urinary excretion and this is probably an overestimate. These results suggest that the common assumption, that N tau-methylhistidine in urine originates almost entirely from skeletal muscle, may be wrong.
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