Department of Biobehavioral Health, Pennsylvania State University, State College, Pennsylvania.
Department of Anthropology, Pennsylvania State University, State College, Pennsylvania.
Am J Phys Anthropol. 2019 Apr;168(4):705-716. doi: 10.1002/ajpa.23788. Epub 2019 Jan 31.
Evidence from industrialized populations suggests that urine concentrating ability declines with age. However, lifestyle factors including episodic protein intake and low hypertension may help explain differences between populations. Whether this age-related decline occurs among small-scale populations with active lifestyles and non-Western diets is unknown. We test the universality of age-related urine concentration decline.
We used urine specific gravity (Usg) and urine osmolality (Uosm) data from 15,055 U.S. nonpregnant adults without kidney failure aged 18-80 in 2007-2012 participating in the National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey (NHANES). We tested the relationship of age on urine concentration biomarkers with multiple linear regressions using survey commands. We compared results to longitudinal data on Usg from 116 Tsimane' forager-horticulturalists (266 observations) adults aged 18-83 in 2013-2014 from Lowland Bolivia, and to 38 Hadza hunter-gatherers (156 observations) aged 18-75 in 2010-2015 from Tanzania using random-effects panel linear regressions.
Among U.S. adults, age was significantly negatively associated with Usg (Adjusted beta [B] = -0.0009 g/mL/10 years; SE = 0.0001; p < 0.001) and Uosm (B = -28.1 mOsm/kg/10 yr; SE = 2.4; p < 0.001). In contrast, among Tsimane' (B = 0.0003 g/mL/10 yr; SE = 0.0002; p = 0.16) and Hadza (B = -0.0004 g/mL/10 yr; SE = 0.0004; p = 0.29) age was not associated with Usg. Older Tsimane' and Hadza exhibited similar within-individual variability in Usg equivalent to younger adults.
While U.S. adults exhibited age-related declines in urine concentration, Tsimane' and Hadza adults did not exhibit the same statistical decline in Usg. Mismatches between evolved physiology and modern environments in lifestyle may affect kidney physiology and disease risk.
工业化人群的证据表明,尿液浓缩能力随年龄增长而下降。然而,包括间歇性蛋白质摄入和低高血压在内的生活方式因素可能有助于解释人群之间的差异。在生活方式活跃且饮食非西方的小规模人群中,是否会出现这种与年龄相关的下降尚不清楚。我们测试与年龄相关的尿液浓缩下降的普遍性。
我们使用了 2007-2012 年期间参加美国国家健康和营养调查(NHANES)的 15055 名无肾衰竭的 18-80 岁美国非孕妇成年人的尿液比重(Usg)和尿液渗透压(Uosm)数据。我们使用调查命令的多元线性回归来测试年龄与尿液浓缩生物标志物的关系。我们将结果与 2013-2014 年来自玻利维亚低地的 116 名提斯曼狩猎采集者(266 次观察)成年人的 Usg 纵向数据进行了比较,并与 2010-2015 年来自坦桑尼亚的 38 名哈扎狩猎采集者(156 次观察)的尿液渗透压数据进行了比较,使用随机效应面板线性回归。
在美国成年人中,年龄与 Usg(调整后的β[B]=-0.0009 g/mL/10 年;SE=0.0001;p<0.001)和 Uosm(B=-28.1 mOsm/kg/10 yr;SE=2.4;p<0.001)呈显著负相关。相比之下,在提斯曼人中(B=0.0003 g/mL/10 yr;SE=0.0002;p=0.16)和哈扎人中(B=-0.0004 g/mL/10 yr;SE=0.0004;p=0.29),年龄与 Usg 无关。较年长的提斯曼人和哈扎人的 Usg 个体内变异性与年轻成年人相似。
尽管美国成年人的尿液浓缩能力随年龄增长而下降,但提斯曼人和哈扎成年人的 Usg 并没有出现同样的统计学下降。生活方式中进化生理学与现代环境之间的不匹配可能会影响肾脏生理学和疾病风险。