학술논문

Relationships between hydration biomarkers and total fluid intake in pregnant and lactating women.
Document Type
Article
Source
European Journal of Nutrition. Sep2017, Vol. 56 Issue 6, p2161-2170. 10p. 3 Charts, 5 Graphs.
Subject
*BIOMARKERS
*BLOOD testing
*COLOR
*COMPARATIVE studies
*DRINKING (Physiology)
*HEMATOCRIT
*LACTATION
*SPECIFIC gravity
*PROBABILITY theory
*PROTEINS
*URINALYSIS
*WATER-electrolyte balance (Physiology)
*STATISTICAL significance
*OSMOLAR concentration
*DESCRIPTIVE statistics
*PREGNANCY
Language
ISSN
1436-6207
Abstract
Introduction: Previous research established significant relationships between total fluid intake (TFI) and urinary biomarkers of the hydration process in free-living males and females; however, the nature of this relationship is not known for pregnant (PREG) and lactating (LACT) women. Purpose: To determine the relationship between urinary and hematological hydration biomarkers with TFI in PREG and LACT. Methods: Eighteen PREG/LACT (age: 31 ± 3 years, pre-pregnancy BMI: 24.26 ± 5.85 kg m) collected 24-h urine samples, recorded TFI, and provided a blood sample at 5 time points (15 ± 2, 26 ± 1, 37 ± 1 weeks gestation, 3 ± 1 and 9 ± 1 weeks postpartum during lactation); 18 pair-matched non-pregnant (NP), non-lactating (NL) women (age: 29 ± 4 years, BMI: 24.1 ± 3.7 kg m) provided samples at similar time intervals. Twenty-four-hour urine volume ( U ), osmolality ( U ), specific gravity ( U ), and color ( U ) were measured. Hematocrit, serum osmolality ( S ), and serum total protein ( S ) were measured in blood. Results: Significant relationships were present between TFI and urinary biomarkers in all women ( P < 0.004); these relationships were not different between PREG and NP, and LACT and NL, except U in PREG ( P = 0.0017). No significant relationships between TFI and hematological biomarkers existed ( P > 0.05). Conclusion: Urinary biomarkers of hydration, but not hematological biomarkers, have a strong relationship with TFI in PREG, LACT, NP, and NL women. These data suggest that urinary biomarkers of hydration reflect TFI during pregnancy and breast-feeding. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]