Amalgam Research Today is a free monthly online journal that collates and summarizes the latest research about Amalgam, including details on dental fillings, dentistry, side-effects. | ||||||||
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The influence of urinary flow rate in children on excretion of markers used for assessment of renal damage: albumin, gamma-glutamyl transpeptidase, N-acetyl-beta-D: -glucosaminidase, and alpha1-microglobulin.Trachtenberg F, Barregard L, McKinlay S New England Research Institutes, 9 Galen St., Watertown, MA, 02472, USA, ftrachtenberg@neriscience.com. The aim of the present study was to examine the influence of urinary flow rate on markers of renal function in children. A sub-study of the New England Children's Amalgam Trial collected 82 pairs of urine samples from children aged 10-16 years: a timed overnight collection and a spot daytime sample collected the following day. These samples were analyzed for albumin, gamma-glutamyl transpeptidase (gamma-GT), N-acetyl-beta-D: -glucosaminidase (NAG), alpha1-microglobulin (A1M), and creatinine concentration. Regression analysis was used to model the effect of urinary flow rate in the timed overnight samples. A paired t-test compared concentrations and creatinine-corrected renal markers between overnight and daytime samples. Albumin, gamma-GT, NAG, and A1M excretion rates increased significantly with urinary flow rate. Their corresponding creatinine-corrected markers did not vary significantly with urinary flow rate, but the creatinine-corrected excretions of albumin, gamma-GT, and NAG were significantly higher in daytime samples than in overnight samples, with the same (non-significant) trend for A1M. The influence of urinary flow rate on creatinine-corrected markers of renal function was markedly less than its influence on excretion rates. Therefore, the use of creatinine-corrected markers seems to be a good choice in practice, with the caveat that daytime and overnight samples are not comparable. Published 28 January 2008 in Pediatr Nephrol, 23(3): 445-56.
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