Division of General Internal Medicine, Department of Medicine, Toronto General Hospital and Li Ka Shing Knowledge Institute of St. Michael's Hospital and Division of Nephrology, University of Toronto (MLH), Toronto, Ontario, Canada.
Division of General Internal Medicine, Department of Medicine, Toronto General Hospital and Li Ka Shing Knowledge Institute of St. Michael's Hospital and Division of Nephrology, University of Toronto (MLH), Toronto, Ontario, Canada.
J Urol. 2018 Jul;200(1):141-146. doi: 10.1016/j.juro.2018.02.3092. Epub 2018 Mar 2.
Intermittent fasting and curtailing water intake for extended periods were likely common in Paleolithic times. Today it occurs for religious and dietary reasons. This restriction in intake should cause a decrease in the urine flow rate while raising the concentration of certain substances in urine to the point of precipitation. In this study we measured the risk of CaHPO precipitation following 18 hours of food and water deprivation.
Urine samples were periodically collected from 15 healthy subjects who fasted and abstained from drinking any liquid for 18 hours. The urine constituents Ca, HPO and pH involved in CaHPO formation were measured at various times throughout the fasting day. A comparison was made with control data, which consisted of diurnal urine collections taken throughout a separate nonfasting day prior to the fasting day.
The mean ± SEM urine flow rate decreased significantly from 0.93 ± 0.1 ml per minute in the control group to 0.37 ± 0.05 ml per minute in the fasting group (p <0.05). Mean Na and Ca excretion rates decreased significantly from 127 ± 12 to 54 ± 13 μmol per minute and from 3.2 ± 0.4 to 0.80 ± 0.21, respectively. Mean urinary Na and Ca concentrations also decreased from 161 ± 11.6 to 122 ± 16.0 mmol/l and from 3.7 ± 0.5 to 2.0 ± 0.55, respectively. Urinary pH and the concentration of phosphate, citrate and magnesium were not significantly affected.
Although the steady decrease in the urine flow rate was statistically significant during 18 hours of food and water deprivation, there was no evidence that the calculated risk of CaHPO precipitation in the healthy subjects had increased.
间歇性禁食和长时间限制水摄入在旧石器时代可能很常见。如今,这种情况发生的原因有宗教和饮食方面的。这种摄入限制应该会导致尿液流量减少,同时将尿液中某些物质的浓度提高到沉淀的程度。在这项研究中,我们测量了在禁食和禁水 18 小时后发生 CaHPO 沉淀的风险。
定期从 15 名健康受试者中收集尿液样本,这些受试者禁食并在 18 小时内不饮用任何液体。在禁食日的不同时间测量尿液成分 Ca、HPO 和参与 CaHPO 形成的 pH。将这些结果与对照数据进行比较,对照数据由禁食日前一天单独的非禁食日中收集的日间尿液组成。
平均±SEM 尿流率从对照组的 0.93±0.1ml/分钟显著下降到禁食组的 0.37±0.05ml/分钟(p<0.05)。平均 Na 和 Ca 排泄率分别从 127±12 降至 54±13μmol/分钟和从 3.2±0.4 降至 0.80±0.21。尿 Na 和 Ca 浓度也分别从 161±11.6 降至 122±16.0mmol/L 和从 3.7±0.5 降至 2.0±0.55。尿 pH 和磷酸盐、柠檬酸盐和镁的浓度没有显著变化。
尽管在 18 小时的禁食和禁水期间,尿流率呈持续下降,但没有证据表明健康受试者中 CaHPO 沉淀的计算风险增加。